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Question from Newbie~
Hi guys,
I'm a newbie in snowboard. I played it once and attended an introduction lesson. This is really an interesting sport! I definitely will play it again~ In the lesson, I learned zipzap slide, then S-shape slide. However, I found a big difficulty in S-shape slide. It's really hard to take balance and look at the front when I slide "facing the hill". I felt many times and made only one time success. Can anyone here share me the skills or experience? One more question, where do you guys come from? I am from Hong Kong. Thanks! |
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Question from Newbie~
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#3
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Question from Newbie~
On Sep 27, 9:41 am, Christian Georg Becker -
berlin.de wrote: schrieb: Hi guys, I'm a newbie in snowboard. I played it once and attended an introduction lesson. This is really an interesting sport! I definitely will play it again~ In the lesson, I learned zipzap slide, then S-shape slide. However, I found a big difficulty in S-shape slide. It's really hard to take balance and look at the front when I slide "facing the hill". I felt many times and made only one time success. Proper feeling for the board/the edges comes with time. Took me old guy at least two weeks to start boarding without falling every 100m. And you pay with bruises Although I found it more difficult to ride on the flat base. Needed on long and slow slopes, especially in beginner areas. And getting the board to run again, once you have fallen, is difficult Can anyone here share me the skills or experience? One more question, where do you guys come from? I am from Hong Kong. Germany. Hong Kong? At least I can go by car/train to a mountain Krischan Thanks for your reply. I do think more practice is needed. I can slide slowly without falling. But I just can't control myself to go faster, and fall, haha. I'm gathering more information for improvement before my next trip. Yup, I'm from Hong Kong. I played snowboard once in a trip to Canada . And I plan to play it again in Shenzhen, a city in China near Hong Kong. I know there is artificial site there~ |
#4
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Question from Newbie~
wrote in message ... On Sep 27, 9:41 am, Christian Georg Becker - berlin.de wrote: schrieb: Hi guys, I'm a newbie in snowboard. I played it once and attended an introduction lesson. This is really an interesting sport! I definitely will play it again~ In the lesson, I learned zipzap slide, then S-shape slide. However, I found a big difficulty in S-shape slide. It's really hard to take balance and look at the front when I slide "facing the hill". I felt many times and made only one time success. Proper feeling for the board/the edges comes with time. Took me old guy at least two weeks to start boarding without falling every 100m. And you pay with bruises Although I found it more difficult to ride on the flat base. Needed on long and slow slopes, especially in beginner areas. And getting the board to run again, once you have fallen, is difficult Can anyone here share me the skills or experience? One more question, where do you guys come from? I am from Hong Kong. Germany. Hong Kong? At least I can go by car/train to a mountain Krischan Thanks for your reply. I do think more practice is needed. I can slide slowly without falling. But I just can't control myself to go faster, and fall, haha. I'm gathering more information for improvement before my next trip. Yup, I'm from Hong Kong. I played snowboard once in a trip to Canada . And I plan to play it again in Shenzhen, a city in China near Hong Kong. I know there is artificial site there~ Here in the US, we refer to it as "riding" a snowboard. I highly recommend taking lessons from a good instructor. You will learn way faster, and fall a lot less if you learn the right way to initiate turns. Some basics to think about: Initiate turns by twisting the board. If you are crossing the slope on your heel edge, push down with your front foot toes while you continue lifting the back foot toes. This will release the front edge of the board while the back edge continues to be engaged. The front of the board will start to slide downhill more than the back, beginning the turn. You can also twist the front foot in the direction you want to turn to help this along. As the turn continues, perhaps when the board is pointed down the hill, start pushing down on the back toes, which will complete the change onto the new edge. It is important not to do this too early. From a toe edge "traverse" do the opposite. Lift the front toes to initiate the turn. If you have a board to try this on, you should be able to see the board twist as you push down or lift up on your front foot toes. As you get better, you can add movement of your knees to add force to the edging action, moving the front of your knee towards or away from the snow. |
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