billski
Active member
Slide out - don't just drop and use your arms/wrists.
I'll bet that many people who have a rough start are victims of not falling properly, thus explaining all the banged up and bruised stories.
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Slide out - don't just drop and use your arms/wrists.
I'll bet that many people who have a rough start are victims of not falling properly, thus explaining all the banged up and bruised stories.
I'll bet that many people who have a rough start are victims of not falling properly, thus explaining all the banged up and bruised stories.
Boarding is tough to switch to as its much harder the first 5 days or so compared to someone's first 5 days on skis ever.
But once you link a couple turns in a row together, snowboarders progress much faster than skiers. You can become an expert rider quicker if you ask me.
That's cause your an old bastard!!!!
The fall I took the last day of the season last year STILL hurts,,,sux gettin old.
f*ckin eh right - old's kool
i hear ya tho, i did a double ejection to face plant hard the first day of last season doing some stoopid sh!t and ended up with a pinched nerve - still have numbness in two fingers :-o
haha yea the mackeral slaps are the one's i remember - catching a toe side edge at speed
Toe side slam is the worst... I blew my shoulder out on one..
Oh yeah. I've fallen face first a few times. Not fun.
I switched 3 years ago from skis to a board. I probably will never go back. I just have more fun on a board, but I'm not sure why.
It hard to explain... But I'm with ya..
You should go back to skiing every once and a while... It is a lot of fun!
I've thought about it and may do that this year. I sold my skis last year when I realized I like boarding more, but may pick up another pair.
problem is - ski technology changes fast.. My issue is all my ski stuff is now old.. And probably dangerous..![]()
Toe side slam is the worst... I blew my shoulder out on one..
Boarding is tough to switch to as its much harder the first 5 days or so compared to someone's first 5 days on skis ever.
But once you link a couple turns in a row together, snowboarders progress much faster than skiers. You can become an expert rider quicker if you ask me.
Dont bother with a lesson for snowboarding. Its all learning balance on an edge. Once you get that feel, and instructor wont make you any better on a snowboard. I feel the exact opposite for skiers. Instruction can be crucial to getting over the intermediate hump.
I agree with your first point (skiing is easier at first, but harder to master. snowboarding is harder at first but easier to master), but disagree that you shouldn't take lessons. Lessons are always a great idea if you get a good instructor, even at an advanced level.
I skied for 8 years, and then I snowboarded for 7 years. I bought skis at the end of 2008/09and used them once, and realized I had completely forgotten how to ski. Last season I put a more concerted effort into skiing again and did probably 20 days on skis and 45 on a snowboard. Skiing started coming back to me after about 4 days on the snow, and I pushed past where I was before after about 10-15 days (and with the help of a bumps lesson).
While I'm happy to do just about anything on a board, I'm still struggling with bumps and tight trees on skis, hopefully this year I'll even it out. I also refuse to do park stuff on skis, it hurts way too much.
If possible, I bring both gear and decide what to do based on the conditions. If there is fresh snow I'm on a snowboard, there is absolutely no comparison between the two sports in powder. I have Line Prophet 100s, which have relatively good float, but it still feels like slogging through mud instead of surfing over powder. If you haven't snowboarded on a day with over 12" of snow and some steep terrain, you just haven't seen all that a powder day can offer.
But on hard pack days, I'd rather have my skis and rip down some groomers at significantly faster speed than you can get on a snowboard. These days if it isn't a powder day I'm on skis, and I assume that will only increase this year being on the east coast instead of the west.
Bumps on skis are a lot more fun (though so freaking hard).
Trees are somewhat of a wash, you can go faster on a snowboard but if you get stuck somewhere, skis are more versatile for getting out of flat spots or getting moving again.
All my snowboard friends are pumped I ski now, because on flat spots I can give them a push or pull.
As for learning, either way you need to put in 5 or 6 days in a single season to get anywhere with it. And you need to accept that you won't be good at the other sport immediately. It takes some grinding to get there.
Is a board setup cheaper than skis? You don't need no stinkin' poles. One more thing not to lose!
Everytime I ski now - I skate off without poles all the time... Pretty funny actuall;y...
Is a board setup cheaper than skis? You don't need no stinkin' poles. One more thing not to lose!