Year in review: What did you learn?
Posted: Mon Mar 14, 2016 10:48 am
Took my first hike a Hollister yesterday and it was completely bare, pretty dry too. Not quite enough for biking but close. Got the bike out yesterday and rode miles of tractor roads along some boring cornfields. Such is mud season.
Really beating around the bush to the point. Skiing is long dead here. A couple resorts still have a little base but I just got a report from a friend and they are down to bare spots already.
Really though, even though skiing was brief I had a lot of good skis this year and learned a lot of new things. Most of which was more advanced skiing with NNN-BC. I skied once with pins and fat skis all year and in comparison to the skis, boots and bindings I had been using it felt really easy. That tells me something. Tells me that I've been learning something by skiing how I had been.
One big takeaway this year was just shooting steep stuff with skinny skis. Make big turns, head for the gaps. It's scary, it's wild, it's fun. For some reason it's hard to get your brain to accept that you can stay up on the skis and ride them through the trees at that speed, but you can. Pick your line, use the Telemark to keep balance, stay on your edges and you're always ready to maneuver. Best way I found to build confidence in this is find areas where you have some runout at the bottom where you can bail if you get out of control.
Second big takeaway was really feeling the rear ski on the long, cambered boards. When you feel it, and feel it bending, it's great.
Third thing is, and it's obvious: use the right skis for the snow. Skied a few days where I forcing a particular ski to get some time on them and feel their limits. You don't really know those limits as well until you try them, but when you find them, you appreciate your quiver. It's also made me realize a really wide, short ski with some rocker would be advantageous for the lake snow. The wider S Bound does well, but it's doesn't have the float to keep you up and going fast downhill when it's the really deep fluff.
Really beating around the bush to the point. Skiing is long dead here. A couple resorts still have a little base but I just got a report from a friend and they are down to bare spots already.
Really though, even though skiing was brief I had a lot of good skis this year and learned a lot of new things. Most of which was more advanced skiing with NNN-BC. I skied once with pins and fat skis all year and in comparison to the skis, boots and bindings I had been using it felt really easy. That tells me something. Tells me that I've been learning something by skiing how I had been.
One big takeaway this year was just shooting steep stuff with skinny skis. Make big turns, head for the gaps. It's scary, it's wild, it's fun. For some reason it's hard to get your brain to accept that you can stay up on the skis and ride them through the trees at that speed, but you can. Pick your line, use the Telemark to keep balance, stay on your edges and you're always ready to maneuver. Best way I found to build confidence in this is find areas where you have some runout at the bottom where you can bail if you get out of control.
Second big takeaway was really feeling the rear ski on the long, cambered boards. When you feel it, and feel it bending, it's great.
Third thing is, and it's obvious: use the right skis for the snow. Skied a few days where I forcing a particular ski to get some time on them and feel their limits. You don't really know those limits as well until you try them, but when you find them, you appreciate your quiver. It's also made me realize a really wide, short ski with some rocker would be advantageous for the lake snow. The wider S Bound does well, but it's doesn't have the float to keep you up and going fast downhill when it's the really deep fluff.