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Get off that plateau
Top British Ski Teacher Sally Chapman gives you some quick tips and advise on how to
become an all mountain skier and get off that 'plateau' !!
ifyouski.com has teamed up with Sally Chapman to offer some expert advice and tips. She will regularly be contributing tips from her new booklet 'tips, tactics and techniques' throughout the season. Have you reached that 'Plateau' but do not fancy standing around in a foreign ski school waiting your turn? Do you need some tips to help you gain more control and confidence on those steeper, bumpier and harder slopes? There are now many experienced British and European set ups in Europe who can offer you this expertise and push your expectations higher giving you more confidence to really ski and explore the mountain as possible. So why do we reach such a 'plateau'... and how do we exit it !
Where does this perception come from? In many European resorts you often see ski instructors skiing in front of their class with their legs very close together. Skiers of less ability then try to copy them. This can lead to learning 'plateaus', making it very difficult to progress further. It is useful to know how these ski instructors learnt to ski themselves. Most of them began as children in the local 'club des sport' racing around slalom poles. They would adopt a very stable stance to cope with the rigours of slalom racing. Once they had become very, very experienced skiers, after countless years of skiing, did they then become ski instructors and choose to ski with their legs much closer together. It is a good idea to look at these instructors when they are performing in difficult conditions as opposed to skiing on easy slopes in front of their groups. If you had the opportunity to see these instructors really performing you would see them adopting a very different stance. A stance that enables them to 'be ready', to react and move. 'Getting Ready' To Perform
Points To Remember
Do you try and perform the same turn all over the mountain? The development of more radically designed, cut and sized skis has given skiing a further boost towards a new more 'fun & freeride' approach, encouraging skiers to experiment and gain more confidence at speed, at turning and at edging. Most importantly skiers have the opportunity to become more versatile on the mountain rather than sticking to cardboard cut-out, highly stylised techniques. Once your perception of the 'parallel turn' has been established as 'just another tool to get you around the slopes' and not the 'be all and end all', then hopefully you will start to explore all the 'tools & movements' that can move you towards a more improved, confident and versatile skier.
Start making changes!So start making changes in your skiing by focusing on different movements that may help in the vast array of conditions that you are confronted with on the slopes. By challenging yourself to be more adaptable, your skills will increase, your confidence with it and your style will look natural and not contrived. Become more versatile!Remember - skiing is like a gym - you need to vary exercises to strengthen all areas rather than repeat a few favourite movements. Here are just a few of the great ways to start to become more versatile on the slopes, giving just a few 'tips and techniques' that can be thought about in different conditions because that is what skiing on a mountain is all about!!! General Tips to start you on the versatile road…
For more information about Sally Chapman, her 'Tips, Tactics and Techniques' booklet or Inspired to Ski, click here. Other articles from Sally: Making Curves |
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