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JJFluff

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Posts posted by JJFluff

  1. If you take a snapshot of a moment in time, like anticipating a toe turn while finishing a heel turn, you may wind up, for a moment, being in a position that doesn't look too pretty.

    Don't get hung up on looking perfect all the time. Just like the stop motion Home Shopping Network, even the beautiful might look a bit awkward when you freeze the play for a moment.

    push-pull1.jpg

    In this sequence you can see how the entire upper body for a time is behind the board. This occurs while the board is being driven below the body to excelerate through the turn. Early in the turn the body moves forward weighting the front of the edge than moved back as I push the edge and subsequently the board forward through each turn.

    I feel that other stances, ie. "the bomber way" causes me to get "trapped in the turn" as I like to call it. I am always in charge of the turn. Radius, power, direction, and depth. By keeping my body inline I am always in control, in an athletic stance able to weight and unweight on top of the board, which changes the length or cog of mass without moving outside of the edges of my board. I consider it to be somewhere between the "bomber" and "ec" style.

  2. And DO NOT let your leading hand cross over the board. Keep it off to the heel side of the board. The direction that your chest is facing and the direction the board is pointing form an angle. (for some people it's zero) That angle shouldn't change a whole lot from turn to turn (unless you've perfected the EC rotation method, but IMO that's wasted motion).

    toes.jpg

    handoveredge.jpg

    Forgive me carve father for I have sinned.

  3. Whens a good time to ride there? We stopped out there and it was skiied pretty hard.

    Jr.

    I know, unfortunately the size of the hill tends to make that happen. Weeknights are best to keep the onhill traffic low. Once January rolls around the racing clinics hit the hill hard and a lot of terrain gets used up by gate setting.

    I try to get there early and ride for awhile then head out before the crowds arrive. On Saturday and Sunday I ride from 9am to 11:30 that roll out.

    Jon

  4. Each new season I would hope that the new model would be improved, that I wouldn't be handed such an uneven trade- and every year I was disappointed.

    IMHO FWIW, I think that you would be better ebaying your softboot board, and taking that money + $150 buying a better soft boot board...perhaps a boarder cross board with a softer lightweight hard boot... like the Nordica Super Charger.

    Let's not lead this person down the wrong path. Just because you can't ride the board well, doesn't mean nobody can. For instance myself and many others. I can put any board on my feet and ride it well. Practice makes perfect.

  5. I've been riding on ultra primes for the last five or so years. I've always ridden burton boards. Honestly, the last few boards I've bought, have been because I found a board for a good price. If a donek would come along for around $175 I would grab one. But the point being, the board is secondary to ability. And a Burton Fp or Fp prime, are both great boards.

    toes.jpg

    heelside-1.jpg

  6. I actually took all of my photographers pics and made a short movie. This video is in the video section too, but I thought I would post it here as well. These pics were taken with a Canon SLR at SES, then put together in succession in I-Movie on my mac. Turned out pretty cool.

    <object width="225" height="155"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sdsUsnpFX1U"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sdsUsnpFX1U" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="375" height="305"></embed></object>

  7. Here is a compilation of stills that my friend Sonny took of me at the SES. I put them together into Imovie and they turned out pretty cool. Kind of short, but the continuity of the pics in succession almost make a smooth movie. You have to love the Canon 40d

    <object width="425" height="350"> <param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sdsUsnpFX1U"> </param> <embed src="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sdsUsnpFX1U" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="425" height="350"> </embed> </object>

  8. I saw the same as carvedog. You have a slight counter rotation that occurs. Like he said, notice how at the end of the toeside turn your lead hand is moving to the left, while the board still wants to head right. You really want to feel everything working together. One thing that is extremely important to do, so that everything will work together is to look in the direction you are traveling. Meaning on the toeside turn, don't look over your left shoulder down the hill, or down fall line, instead you need to focus in the same direction your board is moving. This will help you to hold the turn longer, allowing the board to finish the turn.

    This is what carvedog is asking to see when he refers to "turn shape". If your head is looking downhill your body will want to move in that direction as well. Not allowing your hips to rotate, or pressure into the turn. When I talk about rotation, it is important to note, that it is very slight. Because if you are moving with the board, than technically, there is no rotation. But you do want to feel the hips slightly pressuring into the direction of the turn, remembering to always focus in the direction of movement, in the direction of the traverse, before transition occurs.

    This of course needs to be applied to both toe and heelside turns.

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