home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: rec.skiing
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!agate!dog.ee.lbl.gov!hellgate.utah.edu!fcom.cc.utah.edu!fcom.cc.utah.edu!jon
- From: jon@zeus.med.utah.edu (Jonathan Byrd)
- Subject: Re: Question to more advanced skiers (bumps)
- In-Reply-To: bgohari@wam.umd.edu's message of Mon, 21 Dec 1992 03:54:23 GMT
- Message-ID: <JON.92Dec23150759@zeus.med.utah.edu>
- Sender: news@fcom.cc.utah.edu
- Organization: University of Utah
- References: <1992Dec21.035423.4667@wam.umd.edu>
- Date: 23 Dec 92 15:07:59
- Lines: 42
-
- In article <1992Dec21.035423.4667@wam.umd.edu> bgohari@wam.umd.edu (Babak Gohari) writes:
-
- [stuff deleted]
-
- 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 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.
-
- If the bumps are coming at you too quickly, find a bump run that isn't
- quite so steep. If a run is simply out of your league, you have no
- hope of skiing it gracefully. When totally outclassed by a bump run,
- people tend to slide down the downhill faces of the bumps with their
- skis sideways. Good skiers rightfully cringe when they see such
- people hacking up a field of beautifully carved bumps.
-
- I would advise you against spending too much time worrying about
- methods of controlling your speed. In my opinion, the phrase
- "controlling your speed" is really a euphemism for fighting the
- mountain. Good skiers fight the mountain as little as possible by
- skiing at the natural speed of the slope. Thus, they tend to ski
- steeper runs at higher speeds, regardless of the presence of
- obstacles. Their eyes can pick a route on the fly, and their bodies
- can respond quickly because they aren't wasting effort "controlling
- their speed." Of course, this philosophy presupposes that people have
- the sense to stay on slopes that they can handle.
-
- Having said all that, here's some practical advice: When I start to
- ride the ragged edge in a bump run, I often pick the nearest soft
- looking bump, and hit the top with my skis almost sideways, and a firm
- pressure centered on my feet. Blasting the bump flat helps me dust
- off a little speed. It is better if you don't try to use this
- technique to stop all at once; just use it to slow down enough to
- recover and pick your route. This is NOT a good skiing technique, but
- a desperation measure in case you make a mistake.
-
- --
- jonathan byrd
- jon@apollo.med.utah.edu
-