Ski Club 2.0 Home
Snow Reports
FAQFAQ

Mail for help.Help!!

Log in to snowHeads to make it MUCH better! Registration's totally free, of course, and makes snowHeads easier to use and to understand, gives better searching, filtering etc. as well as access to 'members only' forums, discounts and deals that U don't even know exist as a 'guest' user. (btw. 50,000+ snowHeads already know all this, making snowHeads the biggest, most active community of snow-heads in the UK, so you'll be in good company)..... When you register, you get our free weekly(-ish) snow report by email. It's rather good and not made up by tourist offices (or people that love the tourist office and want to marry it either)... We don't share your email address with anyone and we never send out any of those cheesy 'message from our partners' emails either. Anyway, snowHeads really is MUCH better when you're logged in - not least because you get to post your own messages complaining about things that annoy you like perhaps this banner which, incidentally, disappears when you log in :-)
Username:-
 Password:
Remember me:
👁 durr, I forgot...
Or: Register
(to be a proper snow-head, all official-like!)

General knee support

 Poster: A snowHead
Poster: A snowHead
Hi, last year in Chamonix I had a few problems with my right knee i.e. after a day's worth of hard skiing it became quite painful and extremely difficult to ski on. So much so that I had to nurse myself back down the slopes. I was able to ski on it again the following morning but then the problem came back for the afternoon session. I guess it's a stupid question asking what this pain was / what the cause was (but I'll ask it nevertheless)...

Anyone got any advice to prevent this from happening this coming season? Is wearing some form of knee support a good idea, and, if so, any ideas what is best (not looking to spend loads!).
I remember my dad simply bandaging up his knee to give added support but I must admit I am absolutely clueless.

Cheers
ski holidays
 Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person
Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person
simplyme, in short, see a physio.
snow conditions



Terms and conditions  Privacy Policy