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mirror70

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Posts posted by mirror70

  1. Burton binding== a trip to the hospital.........unless your weigh under 100 lbs and are a beginner...get RID OF THOSE they are death traps....myself and buds of mine have blown every part possible outta those....after my 3rd bail i went to cateks and have never looked back :biggthump

    I know of about 40 World Cup riders who disagree. If you're breaking bindings like that, it's not because you're a specimen of all that is Man - it's because your equipment is setup wrong, you're riding wrong, or (most likely) both.

  2. I know freestyle is for chimps, apes, and gorillas, but I'm sure that if we all take a moment to lower our noses a few degrees, we'll see that freestyle is a very strong and very important part of snowboarding. Saying otherwise is, well, idiotic. Clearly, since we ride hardboots, we are the smartest people on the hill, so it only makes sense that we would understand the importance of freestyle. Right?

    Now, I do agree that not allowing you to teach anything at all on hardboots is a less than intelligent decision. On the other hand, I do see why AASI cares so much about freestyle.

    The problem that I see is the level system. AASI level 1 means that you can survive a LTR as a student (but not necessarily teach one), and Level 2 means that you are great at carving, great in the trees, and competent in the park. Level 3 means you invented snowboarding.

    If AASI wanted some rankings that actually meant something, they would have opted for more than 3 levels. Even 4 would make a world of difference.

  3. I have to say it's a legitimate idea for an event. It's no different than a halfpipe or figure skating contest.

    Actually, it's quite different. Competitors in a halfpipe contest can do a hundred different spins, inverts, grabs, and combinations of those elements. "Competitors" in cmc's colonic cranium insertion contest can turn left and can turn right. That's the equivalent of a halfpipe comp where only frontside 180s are allowed, and you must do them on the right wall.

    CMC is the kind of person where, if I see him on the hill, I will go inside and change to softboots just to minimize the risk of being associated with him.

  4. 1) Move either the toe or the heel block one step closer. You'll need to switch the screw position for this to either the inside or outside - whichever is the opposite of how you have it now.

    2) Turn your binding a few degrees in that direction. If you had it at a natural spot, your foot wouldn't end up getting turned.

  5. A lady and two young girls (about age 6?) arrive at the unload station on a fixed grip triple chair.

    If the lifties were really on top of their game, they wouldn't have allowed that situation to happen in the first place. A six year old is simply not allowed to ride a lift without an adult, and in a group it must be done in a 1:1 ratio. Rules are rules, even if you're a liftie.

  6. Some people might say that these restrictions are pointless, idiotic, and make a total farce of air safety.

    I say everyone should just look on the bright side: At least no terrorists will die with a clean shave or a fresh manicure.

    Don't you feel safer already?

  7. Rather than leaning forward and having trouble with folding the nose and excessive leg fatigue, you could try moving your stance forward.

    The drawback to doing this is that you don't get to pat yourself on the back every time you say "MADD" and "advanced technique" in the same sentence, but the upside is that you'll ride the board better than those with the shoulder touching fetish.

  8. A lesson in Park City (Park City Mtn Resort and The Canyons) are anywhere between $250 and $350! I never knew they were that expensive!

    Their website says a 1-hr private lesson is $110. While that is higher than many places, it's not too far out of the ordinary. You don't really want to go more than an hour anyway, because there is a limit to how much you can take in at one time.

  9. Mirror- I didn't see any other hardbooters on Sunday. I always feel like the lone rider there, too bad I missed you. I stayed on Sluce for most of the morning...it wasnt' that crowded, mostly had S/CVA kids on it. Do you ride an F2? If so I think I met you last winter. I mostly ride my Donek, and am kicking around there on weekends.

    Yeah, I ride an F2. I think Meghan introduced us last winter?

  10. The video is from this year's Absinthe flick, Futureproof. The linear distance was reportedly well beyond that of Chad's Gap (150ft from end of the kicker to the very front of the landing), so I'd guess the drop was well beyond 60ft. Yes, the rider suffered a season-ending injury from that.

    Damn good flick though. Probably as good as Pop, but with a bit less jaw-dropping air time.

  11. That's part of the "us against them," superior, confrontational attitude which has helped to shove carving into the 0% marketshare niche that it currently is.

    As shocking as it may sound, there are in fact people who like carving AND going through the park, and are smart enough to realize that hardboots and too-stiff boards aren't always the right tool for the job.

  12. I know nothing about Nitro, but I can't imagine why a carver (especially one active here) buying a soft set up would not be looking at Donek, Prior, or Madd?

    I can think of a few reasons, the two primary ones being:

    1) You can't walk into a store and demo a Donek, Prior, or Madd, but you can walk into a store and demo an Atomic, Burton, Nitro, Salomon, etc.

    2) If a carver is looking for a soft setup, then he's probably not looking for an experience which is identical to what he gets on his hard setup. Given that, how are the three board makers you mentioned any different from a more mainstream board maker?

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