Short poles

tbh, long poles are for rookies. you can ski everything and anything with shorter poles....its simply a much more efficient way of skiing. People don't ski on 210cm skis anymore.....why use 130cm poles
 
ask the person "Why do you have long poles?"

most will shut their trap and look the other way.

but in reality why I use short poles is because I hate poles. I used to ski poleless but sometimes you need the fucker to get around, thus short poles are there when you need them but don't get in the way when you don't
 
instead you awkwardly bend the fuck over and try to push on the snow with your 3 inch poles?

it used to be that poles actually HELPED you ski, which is why jibbers are physically incapable of skiing down a groomer after their laps of straight airs and shitty grinds through the park. it looks super cool when you stick your feet together, cup your dick with your free hands, lean back, and slide down some ice
 
I use to belive this but its wrong :( When you pole plant with short poles it drops your shoulders and makes it much more common to let your hands getting behind you, trowing off your form and your balance. So now I have my 42 line darts and a pair of 48s for "real" serious skiing.
 
This is how I do it.

It's become a personal preference now.

I tried short poles for big mountain once, terrible idea on my part. Same with powder.

I find using short poles for park gives you the illusion of having poles and helps with your spinning, but it's all in my head really. It'd be just the same as no poling in park.
 
I have two pairs of poles, When I ski park I use my little poles because they don't get in the way as much(They are still very bent) and when Im skiing pow/trees/actually turning I use longer poles.
 
Long poles have too much swing weight, weigh too much, and get caught up on shit, at least for me.

People get a lot of flak when using short poles out of the park. Haters gonna hate.
 
These kids could have had midget sized poles and they still wud hav looked gay just because of the song they're skiing to.
 
idk what theyre called but my buddy has these poles that go from like 40cm to 100 that way he can ski pow and park without changing poles
 
telescopic?
and forget pole length, whats with people not having pole baskets of any sort? to me, that affects the use of a pole more than the length.
 
Well I'll tell you that if your mountain has a bubble chair, you will be the only one able to put your poles under you normally without the bubble hitting them.
 
I use short poles because I havent bothered to get new ones for a few years. On steep and technical shit I find myself reaching a little more and being prone to getting off balance with the upper body. For the park, short poles are a staple tho
 
Ive also heard that using long poles while skiing switch is dangerous because your tip can catch and hurt your wrist. I can imagine it happening but I have no experience.
 
If you got big poles in the park, you're trying to compensate for something. Short poles for my hung riders!
 
Yuh no if youre not using short poles youre kinda dorking yourself in the park. Like swinging full sized poles around for a 450 off is impossible
 
14000475:LucaPerr said:
Yuh no if youre not using short poles youre kinda dorking yourself in the park. Like swinging full sized poles around for a 450 off is impossible

Naw it’s not impossible I’ve done it
 
14000475:LucaPerr said:
Yuh no if youre not using short poles youre kinda dorking yourself in the park. Like swinging full sized poles around for a 450 off is impossible

Pole length is purely preference. I tend to ride a bit of everything, and my only pair of poles are adjustable BD touring poles. At 120cm's they have given me no problems with lacing 4's off rails as well as bigger spins on jumps. It's all about how you ski, buddy.
 
13730986:The.Fish said:
Ive also heard that using long poles while skiing switch is dangerous because your tip can catch and hurt your wrist. I can imagine it happening but I have no experience.

This part is actually true and ive done it. You catch your tip riding switch and the pole can jab your face or armpit, But short poles for all mountain riding are a no go.
 
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