Corks by the next year

sullivano*b

Active member
i can 3 on pretty much anything and i've done 1 clean 5 and a bunch of not so clean but with good tight boots and a sesh i'd have those np. do you think if i had help from some homies who were good i could cork 3 or cork 5? i heard it's easy to overrotate a cork 3 into a 5 but idk if that's true. i'm tryna think what i might have by the time i'd be hopefully headed to windells for the first time. i'm gonna be skiing killi a lot more for the first season and i think i know enough/have talked to enough people over there that i could find someone to help me a ton but is it reasonable?
 
topic:sullivanobrien_ said:
i can 3 on pretty much anything and i've done 1 clean 5 and a bunch of not so clean but with good tight boots and a sesh i'd have those np. do you think if i had help from some homies who were good i could cork 3 or cork 5? i heard it's easy to overrotate a cork 3 into a 5 but idk if that's true. i'm tryna think what i might have by the time i'd be hopefully headed to windells for the first time. i'm gonna be skiing killi a lot more for the first season and i think i know enough/have talked to enough people over there that i could find someone to help me a ton but is it reasonable?

Just start carving your 360s and 5s everytime and the cork will come
 
Just gonna be honest, probably not unless you make some crazy strides in progression. Cork 3s are an entirely different beast. Most people I know find cork 7s are actually the easiest because of the way the axis works.

or you can just carve real hard on a normal 3 and look at the ground while grabbing your boot and pretend it’s a cork 3.
 
14303625:270on420out said:
Just gonna be honest, probably not unless you make some crazy strides in progression. Cork 3s are an entirely different beast. Most people I know find cork 7s are actually the easiest because of the way the axis works.

or you can just carve real hard on a normal 3 and look at the ground while grabbing your boot and pretend it’s a cork 3.

This ^^

Also the bigger you’re able to take your 3’s the more naturally corked they can get from what I’ve seen, like if you really try and float one out you can get kinda off axis unintentionally
 
14303625:270on420out said:
Just gonna be honest, probably not unless you make some crazy strides in progression. Cork 3s are an entirely different beast. Most people I know find cork 7s are actually the easiest because of the way the axis works.

or you can just carve real hard on a normal 3 and look at the ground while grabbing your boot and pretend it’s a cork 3.

I relearned 3s this year by carving and I just look at the knuckle and get a little bit of a wobble. Cork 5s on the other hand can be done in a completely different way, like more of a Flippy/ loopy rotation.
 
As other people mentionned yeah cork 3/5 are a lot different. Carving your 3s and 5s are probably the best way to start learning to do them but I wouldn't expect you to land proper corks next season. Just focus on cleaning them and it will honnestly come naturally from seasons to seasons. Adding a lead grab can also help giving the off axis feel so lead safety is probably your best bet. There's always the possibility to just send it and see what happens but I would suggest you to get some clean 3s and 5s with a few different grabs first
 
Cork 5 is definitely the easiest cork imo. Cork 3 is a little tricky to learn cause you have to lean into it just right and fight a bit to prevent yourself from taking it to 450 or all the way to 5. I learned mine by first hucking some underflips on a pretty small but poppy jump (the bottom of a halfpipe would be money if you have access to one). Underflips are nice to start with cause they are pretty easy to understand and learn on tramp before taking to snow. Also the rotation is super similar to cork 5, just a bit flippier. Once you get those down take it to a jump you can carve off and you’ll go cork 5 easy.
 
When you do upright spins, you counter the pitch of the jump to stay upright. In a backflip, you'll let the jump do the work and keep your body perpendicular to the jump if it has enough kick. Get good at upright 7, then do one where you don't counter the pitch and pull your legs up to grab at 3. Important thing is to not drop your shoulder early or you'll end up doing a weird mork/bio.
 
Get to a trampoline and get comfortable with anything you want to try first. Also yes, do way more straight spins before you worry about changing axis. Axis is another variable you're throwing into the mix. 540's should be every try no effort at least before you try some corks. Most common corks are 5 or 7 to begin with.
 
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