180
Well-known member
Come to Hunter, We'll teach you how to ski moguls. We have 42nd Street now top to bottom moguls!
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Come to Hunter, We'll teach you how to ski moguls. We have 42nd Street now top to bottom moguls!
Rockered skis definitely are a lot more forgiving when you are too far in the back seat
As for the "stopping" because you're getting "out of balance" or whatever. There's "out of balance" and then there's "way, way, out of balance". I feel that the first scenario is something you need to learn to recover from -- anybody who can claim to not be rocked by a bump at some point is going way too cautiously. The second scenario -- yeah, pull it to a stop before you hit somebody or something.
mogulskiing.net has alot of instructional videos for everyone to check out.
Very few could keep up with you..its like when I try to run around with the supercharged 427 corvettes in my slow 92...I see their tail lights once in a while...but 42nd street is one of the best runs to practice, pretty flat and wide enough if you screw up...
in all honesty, you won't learn anything from the internet or Dan DePiro's book regardless of how passionately some may talk it up. Skiing with 180 would be a huge start, but he is about as good as they get. Just get out there and ski.
Seriously? Do not try to learn by reading anything, just go out and practice your old, bad technique?
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Agree entirely (still working on those basics) but I'd have to admit that some trial by fire doesn't hurt.Bumps are complicated. The shape on a trail changes as traffic molds and moves them. What worked at 10am might not work at 2 pm.
Lots of different techniques, and much more has already been said in prior bump threads. My $.02 to the OP is "how fast can you turn?" If you can't turn well with good balanced form at 1 per second, you need to work more on the basics first. Most good bump skiers I see can whip out turns faster than 2 per second when need be.
That's a dirty lie.Bumps are complicated.
This is true.My $.02 to the OP is "how fast can you turn?" If you can't turn well with good balanced form at 1 per second, you need to work more on the basics first.
Most good bump skiers I see can whip out turns faster than 2 per second when need be.