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- From: gunn@cucbs.chem.columbia.edu (John Gunn)
- Newsgroups: rec.skiing
- Subject: Re: Question to more advanced skiers (bumps)
- Message-ID: <1992Dec30.162159.739@cucbs.chem.columbia.edu>
- Date: 30 Dec 92 16:21:59 GMT
- References: <9212291554.AA15363@ejvdev4>
- Organization: Center for Biomolecular Simulation
- Lines: 38
-
- In article <9212291554.AA15363@ejvdev4> pwagner@ejv.com (Peter Wagner) writes:
- >I ski the bumps okay, but never get enough ski days in to really
- >master them (I ski only about 7 days/season, but I've been skiing for
- >over 25 years, since I was 3). I often feel like I'm really fighting
- >when I'm skiing serious bumps. I *definitely* should take a lesson,
- >as I'm never quite sure what the proper technique is. Could some bump
- >master explain where and how you want to make your turns in the bumps?
- >Thanks!
- >
- > >p
-
- Well, I could, (and I'm sure lots of people will) but it would be like
- telling you to drive the Indy 500 by making 4 lefts on each lap. It is much
- more important to be able to make the right kind of turn first, than to
- worry about picking the best line. I couldn't really tell you what to
- work on without seeing how you ski. That is the biggest advantage of
- lessons -- your instructor may not be the greatest skier in the world, but
- at least he will be out there looking at you.
-
- I'm a firm believer in the principle that if you can make good short-radius
- turns on a groomed intermediate run, then you can learn to ski just about
- anything else with a little practice. The flipside of that is that if you
- can't make a good turn on a groomed run, then no amount of hurling your
- body down a steep bump run will make you an expert skier. Of course that's
- a gross generalization, but I think it's wrong to think about bump skiing
- as being inherently different. It just exposes the flaws that are already
- in your technique that you usually get away with.
-
- As a final note, I think that a very important factor in being able to
- ski comfortably in bumps is the ability to make a turn anywhere on the
- hill. If you are relying too heavily on using the bumps to help you turn,
- then you will lose your balance every time the rhythm changes.
-
- --
- John Gunn, Ph.D | "A casual stroll through the lunatic
- Columbia University, New York, NY | asylum shows that faith doesn't
- Center for Biomolecular Simulation | prove anything."
- and Head Coach, Ski Team | - Friedrich Neitzsche
-