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JJFluff

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Posts posted by JJFluff

  1. Hello Minnesotans-

    Headed to the in-laws for the New this year and was thinking about doing some riding on either the 30th or 31st. Anybody thinking of doing the same? They are in Plymouth. Had a good time at Buck a couple years back and rode some wet slush at Afton Alps once as well. Let me know if anyone will be out.

  2. Does remind me of a story.

    Watching a young buck ripping it up at SES a few years back. He was having a great time and really had great style and fluidity. When we stopped to talk, I noticed he was riding relatively vintage gear. I complimented him on his riding abilites and we talked about some of the demo boards he might try. I sensed that a few may have been condisending about his personal gear. I thought it ironic due to the fact he rode at least as well or better than they did on their high end gear. His gear might have fetched a couple hundred total on open market, yet he was having a blast.

    My guess is he did go on to ride even better with the new gear he tried. It did not take away one bit from his earlier turns.

    Hi Bryan,

    I was the guy riding the old burton fp and raceplates that day and still remember talking as well. Hope your leg has healed up well from the 07? SES. I've upgraded a bit but still ride a FP- picked up on ebay, although I did upgrade to the newer style raceplate binding that burton produced.

    But I digress...

    I always read your posts Bryan because you are very respectful to everyone who posts on the site. If more handled themselves the way you do, more would probably hang out and post their thoughts.

    I always try to make the point that if you have the money than spend it however you like. At the same time it certainly is not a necessity to drop 1000 bucks on a board to improve. In my opinion, save the money and spend it on a trip to a resort and rip on what you have. That is always my dillema. If I by a new board I won't be able to get to the mountains to ride it. So I guess I just have to move the family to Colorado so I can stop shopping on ebay. Or, get to SES and hopefully win one. But if I had the money I would spend 800bucks on a board. At this time 250.

  3. I jumped back on a pair of skis and after about 5 hours of riding absolutely love the shaped stick. I am now 33 and the last time I was on skis I was 15. I find that I can really engage the edge better than most and know for a fact that the riding the alpine board for the last 15+ years makes all the difference.

    Engaging an edge (or two) is definately a skill not all can achieve. Some posts have eluded to the fact that 90% of snowboarders can't carve and the same goes for skiers. I have a lot to learn on the skis but after only a few hours being able to lay down "train tracks" in the snow has everything to do with the fact I can carve a snowboard.

    And now I can conclude that riding a race board is much more difficult than laying tracks on a pair of skis.

  4. Wow, after hearing all these complaints I'm glad I wasn't there. Not.

    I've always looked at the banquet cost going towards the chance to win a board or bindings. Who cares about the food. Last year once the beer ran out I bought bottles. Oh well. It helped to ease the pain leaving without winning a board. Then I went out on the town and smiled the whole time because I was in Aspen, Colorado.

    In 05 I bought the package and demoed one board. I would have demoed more but I didn't want to take the time to get setup and lose time on the mountain. So in 07 I just got the lift tickets at a great price. Didn't demo at all, just rode with a ton of people and met some great new friends and caught up with others I met in 05.

    I will say this though, if the St. Moritz ever closes there outdoor pool, I will be pissed.

    See you in 2010, I hope.

  5. This probably won't help much as far as describing technique but I find the days I struggle are the days that I don't go for it.

    Being tentative entering a turn never works out right. You need to have confidence entering and drive into the turn even on the hard stuff that you think might cause you to lose the edge. When you hold back your body position is wrong and not where it needs to be. The place where it is on those perfect snow days.

    So my best advise, be confident and trust the edge, ride consistently both on bulletproof and soft groom.

  6. Here I sit in Wisconsin reading posts of those who will be trekking to Aspen over the next couple of days wishing I was going to be packing to do the same. Whoa is me. But, alas I must stay home and take care of my new 5 month old son. A good consellation none the less but man do I want to be the one flying out this weekend.

    Noah_B-Wcopy.jpg

    Granted he is the best, and soon we will both be at SES but it kills me to not be able to go.

    Anyways, see you in 2010. Enjoy the cord, sun, and company. And keep those knees together for the love of pete.

    Jon

    aka- jjfluff

  7. I was gonna use a golf analogy too...great minds think alike :biggthump

    Was going to mention that It doesn't matter if I use a 20-year old driver out of my stepdad's bag or the newest Burner or whatever...The ball is still going 100 yards into the nearest woods

    True that! At the same time give that 20-year old driver to tiger and he probably get 150 more yards out of it than you would. No offense. :D

    And then, he would give you that club back and respectively say, I think I'll keep using what I got. So yes, the new toys are better, but one can get a lot out of the old if used correctly.

  8. (Please don't take offense, JJ, as I have never seen you ride in person and don't know your abilities)

    JJ has a point in his assertion that we tend to be too quick to blame equipment here. Technique is the key, gear comes second.

    I highly doubt that a beginner to low intermediate rider can tell the difference between a Burton Coil and a Custom Coiler under his feet. You have to get to a certain level of expertise to tell the differences between various flexes and sidecuts. And another level still to appreciate the differences in binding interfaces and materials in the board. Perhaps those questioning the value of higher end boards are stuck in a terminal intermediate rut, not unlike the guy in the other thread asking why some of us choose to ride slopes too steep to carve.

    No offense taken, I agree. I don't question that the board is better. But a expert rider can make a lesser board better too. A beginner to intermediate rider does not need to spend 800+ on a board. They will never get out of it what was put in. It would be like me going out and buying a $35 dollar box of golf balls because Tiger hits them 30yards further. I might as well take the 35 dollars and throw it in the water and save myself some time. A range ball would react the same off my club because of my lack of technique.

  9. never seen Bruce so confrontational, but JJFluff has that effect on people ;)

    JJ...you do know who Bruce is, right?

    Bruce is a board builder. From what I hear a damn good one. I am not questioning his ability that is for sure.

    Just stating the truth....(In most cases) One doesn't need a new board to ride better, One may just want one.

    What I need to do is get a third job so I can keep up with the Jones' :D

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