Advices

Guma317CV

Member
Hello everybody..i've just bought my first pair of freestyle ski..i've jump sometimes,making some tricks,but i'm a complete rookie..someone could give me some advices to improve my style,making new tricks(starting from 360 done/closed)???thank you so much..sorry if i made some mistakes but i'm italian..

Respect, GUMA
 
where some baggy clothes cause it looks cleaner and more steezy and watch some videos on how to the tricks and just go out and practice
 
not just huge cloths, specific huge cloths, solid tall tees, underarmor tall tees, 4bi9 anything, lrg hoodies, huge hoodies but not wide length, and nice gear ie: goggles, helmet, and such
 
don't wear tall tees, they just look fucking retarded, imo... but anyway, really the best way to improve your freestyle is to take a lesson, because if you try to learn on your own you will not only progress much more slowly but you will have a higher chance or hurting yourself. A safe way to start off, would be to get good at skiing switch(backwards), because many tricks require you to land backwards or take off backwards.
 
You should join the cults called "ask Turpin", and "Trick tip forum"
Asking for help and watching skiers do what you want to do right before you do it also help.
You could watch ski videos as well, just to get it engrained in your mind how to do the tricks. And to get them looking better just do them over and over.
 
Talk to people. Seriously. Find the group of people who look like they know whats up, and be friendly. Also, Don't worry about what other people think about you while you're progressing. No one cares. If you fall doing something easy, laugh it off and try again. You'll progress a thousand times faster if you do that.

Don't stress about looking cool right away, get the basics down, shred hard, and have fun. You just started one of the greatest things on this beautiful earth. Congratulations. :D
 
Yesterday i went jumpin' in park for the first time..and i had some problems stomping the 360..i got the spin,but i land backseet..how to be more balanced??sometimes it also happens me to not stop the spin after landing..how to stop the rotation???

Thanks
 
Put more pressure to your toes as you pop off the lip, and also spot your landing helps ending the rotation
 
if yourt really over rotating (before you land) you can open up (like do a spread eagle) at the end of your rotation... it may not look good but then you dont die at least...
 
So, essentially you need to look legit to be legit. (E-Sarcasm). No, get some decent skis, I'm sure you can get some off B/S/T, get a crew of friends, have fun and ski a lot! You'll gradually develop style and new tricks once you get better and go on NS at a ridiculous rate.
 
When i'm doin my spin,i can't focus on the ground to land to get a better balance..how could i do??is there any little thing to do to make this easier???
 
i think 360 is kinda easy, just pop and spin, and ur head should follow the spin. usually for beginners, their head just stopped spining once they finished half of the rotation.
 
thats good that your trying some 3's. My advice would be to jump more forwards when you go off the lip and when you land try and absorb it through your legs so your not slipping backwards. Also as mentioned, try and land in a nice wide stance, not to wide though
 
i used to have this problem wayy backjust do not throw it as hard with ur upper boddy the spin will still come around
 
The thing when your learning spins that is key is to simply practice the spin over and over again. Eventually you will get the rotation down and start to feel more comfortable doing it.
 
I take no Credit, Just copied from Trick Tip forum.

There are more and more freeskiers every single day of this season, and many of them discover NS. What is the easiest way to figure out a trick tip? Well, on here as of now, it's the trick tip cult. However, I feel that a beginner's guide in the forums would be a great use of space, rather than debating whether tight pants suck or whether someone should use poles or no poles. So if you're new to here, welcome! If you're not...well check this out anyways! Feel free to add suggestions, I’m no expert.

There are two main rules in skiing:

(1) Have fun

(2) Don't forget rule #1

If you forget those two ideas, then you have lost the entire purpose of skiing altogether.

I’m assuming you know how to ski if you're on newschoolers. You don't need much real turning or carving form to ski park, however, it DOES help. I suggest you don't spend all your time in the park and have some fun outside of jumps, rails, and other manmade features. Just watch Idea, a film by Eric Iberg, if you want to see how cool and fun that can be. Butters and cliff drops galore.

Trick Tips

To start out, you should probably learn the basics: popping, spinning, and sliding rails.

Popping

This is the most essential skill in park skiing. Ultimately, when you approach the lip of a jump…jump! Use your quad muscles like you would to jump off the ground to do a slam dunk. Then bring your knees up a bit, and there you go. Steeeeezin.

Why: This skill helps you center yourself for spins, and also to balance yourself in the air. It also provides an element of safety, as it sets you up with the angle of the jump and the landing, rather than the jump throwing you wildly and you losing control, and possibly overshooting. A bit technical, but hey! Might as well throw in a bit.

Spinning

Every spin has the same basic technique, especially after the 360. The basic technique is: wind up accordingly to how big your spin is, pop, spin, spot the landing, and stomp it.

180: The 180 is the easiest spin to do on small jumps. It’s just a half rotation, landing backwards. You might want to have some twintips before doing this (although I’m guessing you have some already.

When you get to the lip:

(1) pop, (2) look behind you to spot your landing, and (3) turn your shoulders that same way. Your skis should follow your shoulders. Keep on looking backwards until you stomp that 180 and then depending on how comfy you are with switch skiing, you can either turn around to normal stance again or stay in the switch position.

360: This has generally the same principle as any spin, although it is probably the most widely done “first trick” that a park skier, or any freeskier, learns.

When you get to the lip: (1) pop and tuck, (2) Turn your shoulders with your head, and try to look all the way back around you. Your skis should follow. Finally, (3) when you see your landing coming, straighten out your legs again and touch down smooth.

For going past the 360, you need to set your spins a bit harder. That means turning your shoulders a bit harder, and turning your head to search for that extra 180 or 360 degrees of rotation past the initial 360, to make a 540, 720, or even a 900. There are variations on spins too, such as corks and bios, which are off-axis rotations, and misties, rodeos, flatspins, and d-spins, which are all inverted spins.

Rails

The technique of sliding rails is much simpler than spins, in almost every way. However, rails are metal, and spins are in the air. Therefore, your surface is slippery and you will need good balance to be good at it.

What to do:

(1) Pop off the lip to the rail like you did for jumping

(2) Turn 90 degrees sideways, either left foot or right foot forward depending on how you naturally are inclined.

(3) Keep even balance on both feet. For me, I try to keep a bit more pressure on the forward foot, because it keeps me from slipping backwards off the rail.

(4) When you come to the end, hop off and turn 90 degrees again to land either switch or normal.

It may sound difficult, but it’s really not, depending on the rail. There are many variations as to what you can do on the rail, such as varied degrees of spins on and off rails, and switch-ups, which is when you are sliding a rail and you jump mid-slide and turn 180, landing mid-slide again on the same rail.

Backcountry Tips

If you’re new to the backcountry, this is not always about fun. It’s sometimes about proving to yourself that you can do something, conquering a fear, or just going out there for bragging rights; skiing the gnarliest and the steepest lines.

There are basic guidelines you should know:

(1) ALWAYS, ALWAYS have a buddy (or two)

(2) Take a shove, probe, and transceiver. It’s worth it. Just read about all the people that die in avalanches and such.

(3) Look before you leap. Make sure you know where you’re going and don’t huck anything that you haven't scoped out.

Powder

This is by far the most fun aspect of skiing. Face shots, floating, whatever words that can maybe describe this heavenly experience of powder are not enough. But it is tough work to ski it, and even though you don’t have to know how to ski it, it’s here for you.

When you drop into a powder run, remember that falling doesn’t hurt. This means that you should play around as much as you can in the snow and try new things. It also means that it works your calf muscles…a lot.

(1) While skiing powder, you should keep a neutral stance, or even lean SLIGHTLY back. Too far back and it’s just bad form, especially when you want to hit a cliff, which I will talk about next.

(2) Use your ankles to push the nose of your skis upwards. You don’t want your tips to dive, because digging your skis out of powder is not fun.

(3) Try to keep your hands up and forward, and like skiing normally, use them to help you turn.

(4) Always face down the fall line (unless skiing switch).

Those are some basic tips, you can probably figure out yourself how to have a fun time in powder though. Stay chill!

Cliffs

Hucking cliffs is gnarly. And I mean, uber gnarly fun stuff. Not for n00bs at all.

Tips for hitting cliff (with help from Holte):

(1) Have your hands forward

(2) Be balanced

(3) Spot your landing when you are taking off, so that you can follow yourself all the way down.

(4) Don’t go slowly off of the lip. You may hit rocks or a hole at the bottom of the cliff if you do.

(5) Land as far forward as you can without risking tip dive into the snow. That can hurt. However, landing in the backseat (leaning back) can destroy your calf and knee muscles. In addition, you’ll be out of control the first few turns afterwards if you don’t injure yourself.

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And that’s all I have for now, guys! Feel free to add in any tips you may have for BEGINNERS ONLY!

Hope you all enjoyed.

- Matt
 
Check this site out on Youtube and click around on specific tricks. This site really helped me get an understanding for them all but you don't fully know until you try. So watch some of these and start with the pretty basic tricks like 180s or just sliding a small box. Then you can work on technicality as you improve and work your way up to larger features. Hope it helps you out.
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