Although I cannot visualize your progress in B-tele skiing very well, it seems that you are on the right track to achieving your goal.tkarhu wrote: ↑Tue Dec 19, 2023 9:19 am
I intentionally put my outer ski on its inner edge initially. I do that with a short mountain-side-of-body contraction often. Or by focusing on the inner edge of my outer leg foot sole.
By contrast, according to b-tele instructions, you should re-direct your skis by pivoting and bent-ski-releasing. However, if you watch the first video above, even TH himself "squats" as late as close to fall line. At the slow speed, it seems he initiates turns in some other way first.
It may be he initiates the movement by central body movements, like an initial mountain-side-of-body contraction. In terms of ski-snow interface, side-of-body contractions and extensions produce carving. Or maybe he initiates the video turns just by starting to sweep. I guess the sweep also means partial carving, because you sweep with a foot inner edge there. Or maybe he releases edges just by relaxing his legs. When skiing faster, bent-ski-release may be a major factor. It looks like re-direct and release mechanisms vary within b-tele.
When I started to make a sides-of-body-tilt, when sweeping, I managed to drop intermediate steps of weighting from my skiing. Sometimes I just flow from a turn to another with the sides-of-body-tilts now. Currently, weight often flows from outer ski to inner ski with each sweep. That makes it feel a bit like XC skiing, or kayaking. A fast pace of alternating sides may add to such feels.
I have added also another intermediate step to b-tele instructions. Before starting a sweep, I extend my legs. That seems necessary because my sweeps end up in a slightly squatted position, with contracted ankles. I end up there because I pressure my braking ski with extensions from knee up only. My ankles are somewhat bent and heel down in my current tele stance.
The extension of legs gives you some space to free-fall and down-unweight release. Actually the second video a-tele skier does that, too. So I still "pump", move up and down vertically like the second video skierYet my pumping feels more subtle. By the way, what might make the second video skier look a bit clumsy is that he has his weight forward, so his skis start to slide forward, when he is expected to skid.
I would not even call straigthening your legs "impulsing". But maybe b-tele elegance comes from omitting such unnecessary intermediate steps?
One of the easiest ways to confirm how well you have mastered B-tele is by skiing on powder snow that is less than knee deep and making continuous turns. If you feel different sensations of floating and find that the turns are easier to execute, then those are proofs of improvement in your technique. B-tele skiing with light gear is especially enjoyable.
