This is the World Famous TelemarkTalk / TelemarkTips / Telemark Francais Forum, by far the most dynamic telemark and backcountry skiing discussion board on the world wide web since 1998. East, West, North, South, Canada, US or Europe, Backcountry or not.
This is the World Famous TelemarkTalk / TelemarkTips / Telemark Francais Forum, by far the most dynamic telemark and backcountry skiing discussion board on the world wide web since 1998. East, West, North, South, Canada, US or Europe, Backcountry or not.
This is the World Famous TelemarkTalk / TelemarkTips Forum, by far the most dynamic telemark and backcountry skiing discussion board on the world wide web. We have fun here, come on in and be a part of it.
Ahahahaha! It might come sooner than you think... As we just got a nice 8" of fresh snow...
Worked 2 hours shaping the jump yesterday... It should be 'open' really soon...!
/...\ Peace, Love, Telemark and Tofu /...\ "And if you like to risk your neck, we'll boom down Sutton in old Quebec..."
I got to thinking about those guys going into a tele pose after each hop even though they land parallel...
I bet they have to with those boots and bindings. They need to absorb the energy from the hop and set the ski edge but if they purely bent at the knee parallel alpine style they'd risk a major face plant because their boots and bindings have almost no stiffness in the forward direction (duh). By going into a tele pose they can flex, set their edge and absorb the jump whilst keeping stable. Think about ski jumpers... they would have the same issue and they are free heel and always land in a telemark pose. I'm sure the first guy not to has the facial reconstruction to prove otherwise.
So yeah... I think it's necessary with that gear. I'll never know because I'll never ski that type of terrain
Last edited by MikeK on Sat Dec 13, 2014 6:41 pm, edited 1 time in total.