Park skiers at what age did you start to ski park?

SirBuckles

Member
As much fun as skiing regular runs and powder which in my opinion really is the best part of skiing I would like to get somewhat good at park skiing. It seems fun and I would like to be able to do something. I'm not that old (16) however I have no tricks in my arsenal. I was wondering from the people who consider themselves pretty good at skiing park what age did yous start, and how long did it take to land simple tricks? Simple tricks could include a 180, 360, or maybe a safety grab.
 
Last year was my first season skiing at all and I can now do all of those! Considering youve skied before, it won't take long. :)
 
13063467:slayaa said:
Last year was my first season skiing at all and I can now do all of those! Considering youve skied before, it won't take long. :)

That's good to hear. How long did you spend working on tricks and how much time did you spend on just downhill skiing?
 
13063480:SirBuckles said:
That's good to hear. How long did you spend working on tricks and how much time did you spend on just downhill skiing?

Don't ration out your time and try and do too much. Meet some people in the park, ski with them, have fun. Tricks and skills in general will come.

Honestly that's the best way to progress imo. The more you ski the better you'll get. Don't sweat it just have fun. If you can try and learn from the better kids in the park. Push yourself to try new shit
 
13063480:SirBuckles said:
That's good to hear. How long did you spend working on tricks and how much time did you spend on just downhill skiing?

Don't ration out your time and try and do too much. Meet some people in the park, ski with them, have fun. Tricks and skills in general will come.

Honestly that's the best way to progress imo. The more you ski the better you'll get. Don't sweat it just have fun. If you can try and learn from the better kids in the park. Push yourself to try new shit
 
13063480:SirBuckles said:
That's good to hear. How long did you spend working on tricks and how much time did you spend on just downhill skiing?

Don't ration out your time and try and do too much. Meet some people in the park, ski with them, have fun. Tricks and skills in general will come.

Honestly that's the best way to progress imo. The more you ski the better you'll get. Don't sweat it just have fun. If you can try and learn from the better kids in the park. Push yourself to try new shit
 
I started when I was 16, now I'm 23. By now I can do 7's and switch 5's with grabs so I'm intermediate or whatever.

First season I managed 180's on small bumps, park jumps scared the shit out of me.

Second season I got 180's on park jumps. I also did my first 360's, they were flaily and corked(landed backseat constantly), because I had bad air awareness.

Third season I got better at 3's(grabs) and started landing 5's(which became my plateau trick for a while), also got more confident trying stuff on bigger jumps.

Then for couple of seasons I kind of slowed down trick wise, but I became more fluent/stylish(in my mind)/better overall skier.

Last two seasons were awesome, I got so many new rail tricks it's nuts and 7's, sw 5's with grabs, so I'm pumped for winter.

I'd say don't overstress about tricks, just challenge yourself and your friends/skibuddies and have fun skiing.
 
I really started at 15, I am 20 now. 16 is a good age, we all wish we had started younger, but all of us are only getting older.
 
I started when I was 17 (im 19 now) and i progressed pretty fast i think. Anyways i can do 900s, cork 9s and a bunch of other stuff. i am in no way stylish but it suits me. Trampolining really helped for my progression too.
 
Been skiing since I was 2 so I am confidently a really solid skier all over the mountain. didn't start park though till I was ~14-15. Got pretty good but kinda faded out when I was around 21. Though still love ripping the park once and a while would rather ski all mountain at this point.
 
I don't consider myself pretty good at skiing park, but I'm going to answer your question anyway

Started at 14 or 15. Was decent at rails for a little while. Never got good at jumps. Started being able to do big 3's probably 2-3 years in. That's about as far as I got. 7-8 years later i'm still not good at jumps
 
13063553:SteezyJibber said:
I don't consider myself pretty good at skiing park, but I'm going to answer your question anyway

Started at 14 or 15. Was decent at rails for a little while. Never got good at jumps. Started being able to do big 3's probably 2-3 years in. That's about as far as I got. 7-8 years later i'm still not good at jumps

Just to add to this, I started skiing when I was really young
 
I became interested about park at age 12 probably, I'm 15 now. So, basically I started getting serious about it last season when I was 14. It took me until the one or two seasons to finally get threes stomped on small kickers.
 
The first time I hit a jump and a box I was like 7. But I didn't really start riding park until I was 16, almost 17.
 
i got a pair of snowblades in like 2000 or something? Had been in the "snowboard park" before that though on straight skis as a little kid
 
13063547:KravtZ said:
Been skiing since I was 2 so I am confidently a really solid skier all over the mountain. didn't start park though till I was ~14-15. Got pretty good but kinda faded out when I was around 21. Though still love ripping the park once and a while would rather ski all mountain at this point.

All mountain is more fun from what it would like and adding a few tricks while skiing around the mountain is one of the reasons why I learn. If you have seen This sander Hadley videohttp://vimeo.com/85012142 it probably wouldn't be good as him, but doing stuff like that to spice up skiing around the mountain.
 
13063518:Suusataja said:
I started when I was 16, now I'm 23. By now I can do 7's and switch 5's with grabs so I'm intermediate or whatever.

First season I managed 180's on small bumps, park jumps scared the shit out of me.

Second season I got 180's on park jumps. I also did my first 360's, they were flaily and corked(landed backseat constantly), because I had bad air awareness.

Third season I got better at 3's(grabs) and started landing 5's(which became my plateau trick for a while), also got more confident trying stuff on bigger jumps.

Then for couple of seasons I kind of slowed down trick wise, but I became more fluent/stylish(in my mind)/better overall skier.

Last two seasons were awesome, I got so many new rail tricks it's nuts and 7's, sw 5's with grabs, so I'm pumped for winter.

I'd say don't overstress about tricks, just challenge yourself and your friends/skibuddies and have fun skiing.

^ this
 
Going hard and taking the hits is more important than starting early if you want to be decent imho.

I started skiing park a few years ago, but only got good when I started taking it seriously.
 
Going hard and taking the hits is more important than starting early if you want to be decent imho.

I started skiing park a few years ago, but only got good when I started taking it seriously.
 
I started last year(at age 16)after snowboarding for a couple of years... I got down some of the basics on rails and jumps and started trying flips towards the end of the season. Granted I had been snowboarding park and had learned a lot of stuff on trampoline anyways, you can get passably good in one season. Just ride with people who are better than you and make sure you are having fun and not stressing yourself out with trying new tricks and you will be good.
 
Started back in 8th grade which is lie 13 or 14, I'm 16 now and i learned pretty quick on rails but jumps.... my home mountain hasn't had one in 4 years so i suck at them
 
I started to dabble in the park at 15 - learned some sketchy 360s and hit some boxes - when I got my first season pass. Skied only a handful of times when I was 16 due to injury and never once hit a jump, then when I was 17 I really got into the park. I'm 18 now and will be 19 for next season.

It kinda depresses me when I think about where I'd be if that dude hadn't taken me out and ruined that season... I was so stoked to start learning park tricks that year.
 
I seriously started park skiing when I was 15, four years latter I've landed all the basic leftside cork/inverted flips and can double. I'm really not trying to claim here. My point is that if you put your heart, and a bit of testicles into it, you can progress as fast as you want, age excluded. 16 is not late at all you can be doing some pretty cool shit in a year or two.
 
i switched from snowboarding to skiing when i was about 14 or 15 now im 19. first year learned 180s 360s front 270s then 2nd year i learned frontflips and more rail tricks
 
13 ish for me but honestly if you already know how to ski, doing those tricks should not be hard at all, just find a very small park jump or side hit and you'll be able to get them
 
i started skiing when I was 5 but didnt start park skiing until 14. In my first year I learned 3's and learned how to hit rails. I also learned backflips that year but thats because my home mountain had an airbag.

For your first year the best idea which is what I wished I did is just focus on learning to hit rails and easy stuff on them and on jumps learn spins with basic grabs and try to learn un-natual spins too. dont worry about corks,backflips, flats, rodeos, or any of that stupid shit cause that will mess up your fundamentals. Im now 17 and can rodeo's and do flats and shit but for a while I couldnt do upright 540's and 720's which is pretty sad. All those inverts and corks will be easier if you learn the basics first.
 
when i was about 10 soooo like 4 years ago, man i can remember when i did my first 180 i thought i was like a god.
 
I was about 14 when I got into park skiing. I took me the entire season to learn how to spin, I didn't even approach boxes until I was 15 or so.
 
I've been skiing since I was 13 (I'm 15), kind of started park this year (I don't spend a lot of time in the park) but I landed 360s on my first try. Wasn't pretty, but i landed it.
 
im 16 and last season was my first. i rented a bit and got the basics, and then last minute asked for some park skis for my birthday. my first season and im able to do small-medium ish jumps, safety grabs, a japan grab, a sloppy blunt, 90 on 90 off forwards and backwards, 180 on small features (tried a 360 a few times and didnt quite get it) and i can ALMOST 270 off. i fucking love skiing and ive never loved anything more in my life. im obsessed and thats how i progressed.
 
I was a mogul skier up until 13. I would play around in the park, throwing 360s and whatnot. I couldn't even hit a rail.

14: hit smaller sized flat rails, and down rails. Straight aired larger jumps. Occasional pencil 5. Extremely occasional (yet very sloppy). Frontflip.

15. Hit all rails in park. 270s off. 5 with grabs off larger sized jumps. Frontflips off knuckles.

16: rodeos, 7s with grabs, flat 3s. Swaps, 270s on. Better style, etc

Everyone progresses at different rates though. I know a kid who was throwing dubs his second year of park.
 
I started around 13, you should be able to land some of those simple tricks withing the first year or two but learn at your own pace for sure
 
13063866:Sir.Steezealot said:
I seriously started park skiing when I was 15, four years latter I've landed all the basic leftside cork/inverted flips and can double. I'm really not trying to claim here. My point is that if you put your heart, and a bit of testicles into it, you can progress as fast as you want, age excluded. 16 is not late at all you can be doing some pretty cool shit in a year or two.

Putting balls into is important. I do have to man up a bit. I was thinking about pro skiers and trampolines and I was on one today for the life of me I could not to the backflip every time I would try I would just stall my jump and do some half ass spin. I do need to build up my courage a bit for doing the cool stuff. However I do not think a crazy amount of courage is required for a 180 or 360 it just takes practice.
 
Started skiing when I was 5. Started park at 16 and didn't progress much and don't care...because I enjoy pow more and ripping groomers here and there.

I still have fun doing basic 3's, 1's, buttering on anything possible, ripping groomers switch. And basic 2's out and switch ups/surface. I'm now 24 and don't care much to progress as much as all the kids these days. I'm going to try and attempt cork 3's this year though, which are by far one my favorite tricks.
 
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