DAE feel like knuckle huck has made park crews lazy?

ColinMatthew

New member
Does anyone else feel like the knuckle huck rising to prominence as a major event of the xgames has given park crews at their local resorts an excuse to be lazy?

I love the knuckle huck event as well as buttering over knuckles myself from time to time, but I feel like the promotion of a "roller" or "knuckle" from a once side-hit-feature to a now-perceived-as main feature as the result of the xgames has given local park crews the excuse to no longer put the effort into actually making jumps and quality park set ups in which an amateur can progress.

Park crews will just push snow, that could have otherwise been used for both a jump and a knuckle, into a roller that would be barely workable as a feature for a professional let alone a progressing amateur. A roller or knuckle isn't really great a progression feature to begin with. The creativity and prowess observed in the event hosted by the xgames was gained practicing on a wide range of real features.

I empathize with the plight of small resorts in regions affected by lack of snowfall or climate change. I grew up in coal country southeastern PA. That being said, plight should be treated as plight, not romanticized and/or used as an excuse for mountains with adequate resources to skimp on building actually progressive set-ups. The people who have to work harder to get better because they come from a place that lacks the resources to build adequate park set ups WISH that weren't their situation to begin with. It's why you see the professionals like Tom Wallisch, who grew up in western PA, move away to Utah when given the opportunity.
 
Maybe, but honestly most rollers I see that are deliberately built are usually waiting zones before a string of features
 
topic:ColinMatthew said:
Does anyone else feel like the knuckle huck rising to prominence as a major event of the xgames has given park crews at their local resorts an excuse to be lazy?

I love the knuckle huck event as well as buttering over knuckles myself from time to time, but I feel like the promotion of a "roller" or "knuckle" from a once side-hit-feature to a now-perceived-as main feature as the result of the xgames has given local park crews the excuse to no longer put the effort into actually making jumps and quality park set ups in which an amateur can progress.

Park crews will just push snow, that could have otherwise been used for both a jump and a knuckle, into a roller that would be barely workable as a feature for a professional let alone a progressing amateur. A roller or knuckle isn't really great a progression feature to begin with. The creativity and prowess observed in the event hosted by the xgames was gained practicing on a wide range of real features.

I empathize with the plight of small resorts in regions affected by lack of snowfall or climate change. I grew up in coal country southeastern PA. That being said, plight should be treated as plight, not romanticized and/or used as an excuse for mountains with adequate resources to skimp on building actually progressive set-ups. The people who have to work harder to get better because they come from a place that lacks the resources to build adequate park set ups WISH that weren't their situation to begin with. It's why you see the professionals like Tom Wallisch, who grew up in western PA, move away to Utah when given the opportunity.

What hill are you riding at where they're just dozing knuckles and calling them features all season? If anything they're pushing knuckles so they can push lips and build a jump line. I could see like a mountain with a really small park budget/staff just pushing some of those as features, but if that's the case screw it, work with what you got
 
Not sure if knucklehuck has anything to do with it but my local park crew stopped building jumps all together this year and started only opening the park 2 days a week.
 
My man you are lucky you did not grow up skiing parks in the noughts (2000-2010). So many local parks were so bad it was comical. Everything today is miles better minus some big parks losing funding (but really it just seems like the crews relocate)
 
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