dmc
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Jean-Pierre Skier said:Only an hour or so to go until 'Tini time!
I got a friggin 530 work call with the west coast
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Jean-Pierre Skier said:Only an hour or so to go until 'Tini time!
smootharc said:...another 30 or 40 boards, a box of nails, a few hammers, and a crowd of AZ'ers, and we can build a box around you and your insane obselescence.....just where you, my friend, have belonged since your very first post. The project could be called "Habitat for Insanity"...
P.S. Come to think of it....we should probably build a box for me, too....
Marc said:Why do I get the feeling I've been ridiculed?
ski_resort_observer said:Wow..."obselescence" is one big ass word!
RIDEr said:Real easy answer DMC... snowboarders have more fun in the powder.
While boarding I ski with a great skier. He usually rips up the pow, but in the end our boards float on the stuff (from experience) and flow a lot smoother.dmc said:True - to a certain extent.. But unless you've tried it in powder - how would you know or even begin to understand..
You know how people get all "type A" about powder... Even though they may be having the worst day of their lives they still claim it was the best day...
dmc said:What i love about riding powder is the freedom... You get this feeling that your just standing on the board - you don't feel any stress from your bindings... You apply a little toe or heel pressure and your turning
Absolutely sublime!
Brettski said:I will never board.....
skibum said:Why board?
Because it is the most evolved, efficient, and elegant form of downhill sliding sports. Remember that skiing started as the Norwegian Snowshoe, used for cross country travel. When people decided going downhill was more exhilirating, they changed the equipment to suit their needs. Lifts were built, heels were locked down, boots were stiffened, and poles became vestigial appendages. Boarders have just combined the sliding surfaces into one and lost the poles.
So why didn't we become monoskiers? Because it is an inefficient way of turning the sliding apparatus and pressuring the edge. Too much hip angulation and and too many spastic movements involved. Boarders can initiate and finish a turn with much less effort. Also, think of hiking down very steep terrain. Most people will turn themselves sideways to stay more stable. Facing the fall line will often put you on your ass.
Then think about sliding on an ice patch or on a waxed floor in your socks. The natural way everyone does it is sideways. If you do it facing forward and crouched with your feet together like a skiier, you just look like a goon. Tom Cruise would not have looked half as cool in "Risky Business" had he done it that way.
So if you want to travel across a horizontal landscape in snow, use cross country equipment. If you want up and down, go telemark. If you are riding lifts, then snowboarding is the apex of downhill glisse design.
awf170 said:Maybe the evolved and elegant for of getting down the mountain, but defiantly not the most efficiant. Skiing is overall faster, a lot easier to get over flat spots on the mountain, and takes a lot less effort. In skiing I can stand there and just go straight down at mach 10 with no effort what so ever, with boarding you always working hard and can ever stand up and rest.
dmc said:You couldnt be more wrong.. About some of the stuff..
Skiing does take a lot less effort when it comes to skiing stuff - but for the actual riding part.. I like it much better...
Skis are faster.... Thats why I still ski...
Yes, skiing is more stable at high speeds. No, I can't skate or pole, but I plan ahead and have no problems. Effort involved is probably debatable to the end of time. I was really trying to compare monoskiing to snowboarding at that point of my little essay. When skiing or boarding I can initiate a turn with very little body movement. But in the middle of a turn I would say skiing requires more effort into that one leg rather than the two legs of boarding. Yes, you can go limp on your skiis and still slide down the hill, but that ain't much fun. If you went limp on your board you would catch an edge quick, which would be even less fun.awf170 said:Maybe the evolved and elegant for of getting down the mountain, but defiantly not the most efficiant. Skiing is overall faster, a lot easier to get over flat spots on the mountain, and takes a lot less effort. In skiing I can stand there and just go straight down at mach 10 with no effort what so ever, with boarding you always working hard and can ever stand up and rest.
awf170 said:Just out of curiousity, where am I wrong. I have never snowboarders but this is what I got from skiing with 2 snowboarders for a day.