This video was surprisingly useful. I still haven't got consistent 3s in the air and I think this video points out all the different things that I seem to do wrong in the air. Also, I don't know why I'd never thought to try this trick - looks like once you've got this one dialled doing them off kickers etc. will just be easier (but as you say this is nice way to practice because you don't need a kicker and there's low consequence). Thanks for making this!
Thanks for the concern. Only managed to do a 180 as anything more than that had my skis all tangled up lol... Thought skating and snowboarding were going to help but skiing is a different animal. O well the ski trip was fun
Newly subs here awesome vids..pls do more tricks for beginner in the park(literally easy as some vids are easy for them but hard to copy ).thnks and good luck..
Thanks for the video. I struggle to get the rotation round when on flat ground or stationary, I can barely get past 180 - feels impossible haha. I can do 360's when I get a bit of air though. Any tips to improve rotation? Thanks
Is it normal, that when doing 3s just on your feet, it is more difficult to land balanced? i alway tumble over to one side... My sense of balance seems to be shit
well it depends on a lot of things, not just how many tricks you can do. What matters most is how well you have marketed yourself. For example I know kids who have thousands of instagram followers and get 5k-10k views on their videos and have small sponsors and only do like dope 7's and 9's with maybe a dub. I also know kids who can do all four 9's and multiple dubs who do not have sponsors. It is all about how well you market yourself
I appreciate the tutorial but I think telling people to learn threes flat before threes on jumps is poor advice. On flat ground it's nearly impossible to get your shoulders square over your feet for landing (for example, when you land in the video your upper body is still around 270), whereas on a jump the extra hangtime makes it easier to get squared up and stomp.
I appreciate the comment but I never really said you should totally do this before trying it on a jump. But in case some kids have never tried them, doing them on knuckles or flat ground or even little side jumps mentally will be a lot easier. At the end of the day these tutorials are just ment as guidance for people who struggle
I’m learning them on flat and can get a full 360 into a bank and slightly over 270 on flat. I don’t have the balls to send it on a jump quite yet but come from a strength background so it works for me. Pretty much no risk in injury which is a huge plus. Everyone is different
colby grimble its all in your brain. Maybe take a day off and just ski normally and then try it again. Or you can try it into soft snow on your own jump.
Yea I could look into making a video review on them but in the mean time, I am riding the 2018 Faction Candide 1.0s this upcoming year and they are a really nice all around ski. They preform really well when I'm on the east coast shredding rails and they do just as well in Colorado when doing doubles of 60 foot jumps. They have a 90mm under foot which is ideal for me. I personally do not like a ski too fat or skinny underfoot so 90mm is my suit spot (that is my personal preference though). The ski is very flexy but not noodle like. It has spring which is why it holds together longer than my past skis.
With practice you don't need to jump. You can slide your skis around, just being careful to keep the out side edge on the outside as you come around 180 degrees. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-YkhAsPCpHTI.html
You tilt on your nose when you are spinning and if you have stiff ski you do the same but you pop on your nose not tilt its mutch harder with stiff skis