Poster: A snowHead
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I've been sking now on 4 occasions and off to Les Arcs for new year this year but i'm finding that my turns and strong and controlled when turning right but not quite so good when my weaker left foot is the higher. Is this something that others at this level suffer or from?
If anyone has any tips on improving this it would be much appreciated.
Thanks
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Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person
Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person
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LloydShort, the ski instructors will be along with some suggestions - but one useful one, told to me many years ago, was always, always, always, to make your first turn on the weaker side, and to stop that side too, when just waiting for friends etc (if you have to do an emergency stop, e.g. to avoid skiing over a cliff or a 3 year old, you'd naturally use your stronger side). When turning, it's the outside foot (the downhill foot once you've turned) that's doing the work, generally.
maybe book a couple of private lessons next trip, and tell the instructor you'd like to work on your "weaker" side (we've all got one).
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Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see?
Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see?
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I suffered from that and if I've had a long hard day it comes back. I take it as the signal to head home.
If your stronger on right turns, thats when your left leg is doing more work.
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You need to Login to know who's really who.
You need to Login to know who's really who.
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If you have any pictures or video of you skiing it might help to see what's going wrong.
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Anyway, snowHeads is much more fun if you do.
Anyway, snowHeads is much more fun if you do.
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A lot of people, at all levels of ability, have a weaker side and a stronger side. In terms of addressing your weaker side I don't think there's a magic solution, but if you're practicing anything make sure you do a little bit of extra work on your weaker side.
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Might be worth checking your alignment on both sides. Having to "correct" (perhaps without realising that you're doing it) a ski that is over- or under- edged throughout the turn makes a "strong" turn more difficult than it needs to be.
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Thanks for your help all, sounds like more practice is the key. Perfect excuse for more sking.
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You'll get to see more forums and be part of the best ski club on the net.
You'll get to see more forums and be part of the best ski club on the net.
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I haven't tried this for skiing but am going to now that I have thought about it.
One of my other activities is a martial art and this shows sidedness quite starkly. My instructor told me that to some degree focusing on the weakness was futile, particularly if you ended up frustrated with it. So here is the trick. you train your strong side both directions. In this particular case it was punching but it has worked for other more complex moves and I will try to translate to skiing.
What you do is while undertaking the action on your good side (good turn) concentrate on feeling the weak/poorly coordinated side- location of the leg for and aft, hand, tipping, direction, what it does moving through the turn, etc. Don't worry or even think about the other turn for now just hold onto the mental picture/feeling you are building up. It would be best if you could do it without the weak turn in between but that could be difficult. Having built up a strong mental image of the weak side of the good turn try the turn in the weak direction and concentrate on matching your good/dominant side (probably but not necessarily the inside) to the image that you have of the weak side of your strong turn. Don't think about your weak side just let it happen.
What you should find is that by correcting the dominant side of the weak turn the weak side seems to correct itself. Or at least a chunk of itself. At least 50% should be in the right place, and as the rest is connected to it possibly 75% actually gets there. that just leaves a small amount for conscious fettling.
As I said, haven't tried it for skiing but will be this weekend but it worked amazingly well for what I was doing MA wise. Worth a try. I can see it being harder to do skiing because of the balance issues.
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I've adopted a radical solution to this common problem: I have an injured and therefore somewhat weakened 'strong' ankle - it's evened things out no end!
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snowHeads are a friendly bunch.
snowHeads are a friendly bunch.
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I'll give the drills ago and let you know how I get on, thanks for all the tips all though i might have to call the injury idea planB but will keep it mind thainks again
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