First powder video I have watched of many where I actually learned something useful! I live in ski country and am looking forward to trying this technique.
I improved my skiing balance (base of support + center of mass) by snowboarding. Having your legs locked & no poles forces the brain to maintain balance without increasing your base of support by widening the stance or by pole planting or pole dragging. Deep powder requires balance to float on the snow. Be careful of tree wells & snow immersion suffocation. Great video.
This was really god. I enjoyed it very much. May I suggest one new idea that can help a lot! This is dorsal flexion of your ankles. You press your feet upwards inside the boots when you ski in powder. This will create an ankle flex and also it lifts up the ski-tips so that you push your skis upward in the snow by your body. This is usually called "virtual bumps" Dorsal flex will prevent the skis from running ahead of your body even if you push your skis forwards, instead, they will go upwards in the snow. As soon you need an unloading of your ski-pressures, a knee flex, you use a dorsal flex of your feet with force.
Thank you Janos. Lifting up the foot inside the boot, similar to leaning back for a short moment, helps to get the skis back up if the tips are about to dive. In general though i always want to keep my foot in touch with the boot, the footbed and would only use this as a move to get the tips back up. The virtual bump you refer to, the knee flex to create unloading is something you can also see me do in the run that is used as the thumbnail of the video, further down, closer to the camera. More on this can also be found here: Flex to Release vs Up and Forward ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-bySjAQqp-Os.html Thanks for you comment. Greets, Klaus
That porpoising movement is fun and all but it's so strenuous. I know I'm skiing the powder when I cannot see my skis. This is throughout the process, top to bottom. If the skis are submerged all the way down, that's a good run. New school shapes do this with aplomb. Front side carvers are for the groomed runs.
Great tips! It's very beneficial to understand the physics of powder under your ski: you're actually compressing it to build a small "groomer" for yourself as you go. P.S. I would argue that there's no new movements (skills) as opposed to on-piste skiing, but it is a different technique though.
Clear and Simple to understand ! I just would add that for Off Piste the skier should also do not forget his brain on top of the rescue equipment and the guide. ;-)
So after you push down to create a hard base in the snow, what are you doing exactly with your legs/feet to initiate the next turn? Are your just simply turning your body and skis or is it something different? Happy skiing! 😊
After you have found the plattform you can use it to move up and forward to create release and turn the skis. Same movement as in this drill ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-0eXnB04zKqE.html , only that you then use the release to turn the skis a bit. Just try to turn your legs and not your body. Have fun skiin! :)
Skiing on an Armada powder skies with more then 110 cm under the foot (like in your example) is not the same with skiing in the powder with a Volkl Racetiger with 66cm under the foot ( like in your exemple when you rest). Armada is a rocker ski that is not stocking in the deep snow while the Volkl Racetiger slalom ski is a camber one that get stock in deep snow and doesnt matter how much presure you bring with your ballance. In deep snow you don't carve like on piste, you have to float with the knees close and for this reason you need a wide pair of skis under the boots. I don't say is not possible to ski on powder with carve slalom skies for piste if you are an expert and you are in confort with high speed as to float, but for a guy that is taking ski lesson that is an horrible experience. So my first advice to ski in powder is to better use powder skies ( preferred rocker or camber-rocker at least).
Dear Paul, the turns at 2:40 are on the Völkl Racetiger with 66mm under foot. The other skis used are an Atomic Allmountain and a Völkl powder ski with 100+mm. I agree that it does make it easier to ski powder on a wider ski and I explain that at 3:45. No matter what skis you use it is key that you are using the correct technique as especially on the wider skis it would be easy to just lean back and wiggle the tail. That's what this lesson is about. Greets, Klaus
@@KlausMair Dear Klaus, if you can learn an intermediate skier, to ski in deep powder with SL carve skies 66 cm under the foot with your tehnic, i'll give you 2000 euros. If not, you give me 2000 euros. Do you accept the challenge ?
Buy some bungy cord and tie(not to tight) your knees together, go easy on the pitch of the slope.You'll be amazed how it unitizes the legs which gives you a wider( mono ski effect) platform to work with your pressure control movement pattern.Try it you'll like it
Pushing the snow together is fine in that little bit of wet snow, but in waist deep plus, super dry snow, you don't ever push... You pull and move to where you are going, with rhythm!... You never get out of the snow! Come to Jackson Hole!
I hope i can ski Jackson Hole one day. I think this applies just as much to waist deep powder as it does to knee deep. Also in powder skiing there is more than one way of doing it. A good skier uses and blends different techniques. I think you can see the push as well as the pull that you are reffering to in the turns from 2:40 on. The powder lesson on the DVD/ondemand video covers this more. Thank you for your input. Come to Austria!
Deepest snow I ever skied was Colorado blower chest deep back in mid-90s, before wide skis. I can validate your skills/techniques work there too. I am very impressed with the quality of your instructions. You are a fantastic skier! Check out Olympic and WC champ Debbie Armstrong with 8-9 year olds. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-c2ScKSMGvtc.html
Yes the technique stays the same, you would only steer the skis more out of the fall line / finish the turns more so you can control the speed. Increase the steepness gradually.
Great teaching sequence! Too bad you didn't have real powder snow to demonstrate in! LOL. The purist definition of powder skiing it that it happens when you are no longer skiing on the base but floating in the medium. Your idea of building a platform under the skis as you turn still holds, the only difference is that it is even more fun in deep powder!
Hi Najla, beginners first need to learn how to ski on an easy, groomed beginner runs. Falling is definitely less painful if you pick a day with some soft, fresh snow but it helps if it is groomed to make it easier. After learning the skiing basics and progressing to safely being able to ski blue and red runs you can start to work on your skiing in ungroomed snow. Ideally with just a little bit of fresh, on a run that is not too steep together with a great coach. Thank you for watching. Klaus
Power skiing is for advanced skiers and require different skis (wider). Beginners should be on the Green trails, then easy blue, more difficult blue, etc.
Servus Klaus, ganz dufte jemacht (Vatti war Berliner). Gruesse aus den Rockies. Would hope you've skied the real dry fluff in UT, CO, ID, WY & MT. Am an ole mntn goat w/ a bum knee from volleyball, can't do the hard leaning carving but still do the deep & steep in the trees on the ♦♦ in 2-5' of fresh pow. Face shots: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-2vdhG0m6lEo.html A little wider stance & standing always over the sweet spot is advised here - don't kiss a tree. ;-) The pitch changes all the time in the trees - great fun. Am 6'4" (192 cm), 195 lbs & skiing 186-192 skis 100-122 underfoot. Spent last season in Solitude on Headwall & in Honeycomb Cny. Back to Alta now. Have a great off-piste season.
Please don't teach by advanced narrow turns with body constantly facing downhill, they give little control over the speed. In fact, newcomers are extremely cautious and wish to maintain maximum control over their speed, so they only perform wide turns with their upper bodies rotating with their waists, parallel braking at every turn. Narrow powder carves provide no help to powder beginners.
Well Inigo you obviously got that wrong and I am very sorry that you are teaching skiers to turn with their bodies so they can make it down a powder run. The technique all respected ski schools in the world are teaching is based on ski fundamentals that will help you do well in the powder as well as on any other slope. Just because turning with the body helps a beginner make it down a powder run does not mean that it has anything to do with skiing (also taking the skis off and rolling down sideways works). Doing full body swings might help beginners to get down but it won't help them to further improve and creates movement patterns that will be very hard to change again later. Many self taught skiers get this part wrong and then wonder why they can only make it down a powder slope and still struggle to ski it. This was one of the key points that i tried to make with the video by also showing what many do and demonstrating what you should not do so skiers hopefully choose to take a good lesson and learn how it is done most efficiently.