home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!gatech!mailer.cc.fsu.edu!sun13!ds8.scri.fsu.edu!jac
- From: jac@ds8.scri.fsu.edu (Jim Carr)
- Newsgroups: rec.skiing
- Subject: Re: Question to more advanced skiers (bumps)
- Message-ID: <11598@sun13.scri.fsu.edu>
- Date: 23 Dec 92 04:22:45 GMT
- References: <1992Dec21.035423.4667@wam.umd.edu>
- Sender: news@sun13.scri.fsu.edu
- Reply-To: jac@ds8.scri.fsu.edu (Jim Carr)
- Organization: SCRI, Florida State University
- Lines: 56
-
- In article <1992Dec21.035423.4667@wam.umd.edu> bgohari@wam.umd.edu (Babak Gohari) writes:
- >Dear more advanced skiers:
- >I have a sort of important question. I'm a relatively new skier (i.e. been
- >seriously skiing for a little over a year, been skiing as a whole for three)
-
- Hard to know what to make of this -- seriously skiing can mean you spend
- 70 days on the slope last year as a ski bum, or can mean you took a lesson...
-
- >Anyway, I tend to ski mostly blues (or greens even, if they're fun and
- >I don't want to embarrass myself for falling). Let's just say that I can
- >probably ski most blues without falling at a reasonable speed and control.
-
- OK, so you are some sort of advanced beginner, beginning advanced,
- whatever. You can survive on nicely packed, buffed corduroy conditions.
- Not surprising that you have some difficulties in the bumps.
-
- >The question I have though is this: how do you stop on bumps? Usually on
- >normal runs, if I feel I'm going too fast as to be about to lose control,
- >I slow down greatly or even stop (providing that there's no one behind me.
- >I tried that once without making sure, and some snowboarder didn't have
- >anti-lock brakes <grin> so he hit me pretty hard).
-
- Sounds like you need to find a new ski area, or pick better places to
- stop. The best place to stop is one turn before the turn before you
- start to feel you are losing control. This also helps reinforce your
- good habits rather than the bad ones that get you in trouble, and
- allows you to pick a safer spot to the side, out of traffic. Making
- a hockey stop in the middle of any run is dangerous.
-
- > But on bumps, it's very
- >hard. I can't always skid-stop because of the bumps, and snowplowing
- >usually doesn't work at the higher speeds (at least I can't get it to work).
-
- What is clear is that you need to work on your parallel technique. The
- bumps are not much fun until you can make nice tight carved turns with
- a radius equal to the distance from the top of a bump to the valley
- between the moguls. Lessons are clearly called for.
-
- >What I usually end up doing is (now don't laugh) to turn so that I actually
- >start going up the hill and lose the momentum. This sounds stupid, and
- >looks even worse, so my question is: is there any other way to stop on
- >bumps, especially many mini-bumps in a cluster? Thanks.
-
- You are to make a careful detour around those poor baby bumps, so that
- better skiers can nurse them into adulthood before the groomers get them.
- You should, of course, crank a turn off of each of those babies, one
- right after the other, and jump over any that get in the way. But when
- in a major panic, there is nothing like a turn uphill to slow down.
- Just watch out for the person in front of you, with similar skills,
- who might make a sudden traverse into *your* path with the same move.
-
- --
- J. A. Carr | "The New Frontier of which I
- jac@gw.scri.fsu.edu | speak is not a set of promises
- Florida State University B-186 | -- it is a set of challenges."
- Supercomputer Computations Research Institute | John F. Kennedy (15 July 60)
-