Whats better for faster progression, rope tow small park (hill), or slow lift big park (mountain)?

JoshyJ

New member
I rode Little Switzerland for 2 years in Slinger, WI and progressed really fast and learned a lot of new tricks. Last year i moved to Keystone and rode the park they have that has much more features and larger jumps. The amount of laps I was getting in was greatly decreased and despite having an amazing park at my disposal i wasn't progressing like I would like.

Wondering what the general opinion was
 
You go to park city or breck and there are 10 year olds doing doubles. Big parks with lots of features facilitate faster learning.

But if someone really wants to progress and learn stuff they're going to do it anywhere. Out west the features are all bigger, but it's like they're usually set up nicer and smoother than hills without as many terrain park resources. You'll adjust to the size of the features and probably be learning new tricks before long.
 
Its the skier that matters. i dont even have a local resort but i still manage to learn tricks on my summer setup
 
You can learn stuff anywhere. The smaller parks generally do not have the jump size or variety. As far as rails it's a toss up. In a big park you're getting massive rail variety and hitting several in a line. For example, you might hit 5 down rails in one run. You might not get in as many laps, but if you learn a trick and then try it on every rail, in about 3 runs you're doing it in your sleep. You're also able to stop and hike features.

A rope tow park has the ability to get up to an obstacle fast like hiking without tiring yourself out. Lots of laps, but less flow and variety. Easy to find people because the park is tiny.

Honestly crowd size is what I would care more about. I've ridden some of the biggest and smallest parks out there. I enjoy both.

Progression really depends on you, and what motivates you.
 
Small rope parks get very rutted and much icier than bigger parks with chair access. It makes falling on small rail tricks more painful which really destroys your confidence. On the better end, you get a full day's worth of mountain park skiing in 90 minutes.
 
13492354:theabortionator said:
You can learn stuff anywhere. The smaller parks generally do not have the jump size or variety. As far as rails it's a toss up. In a big park you're getting massive rail variety and hitting several in a line. For example, you might hit 5 down rails in one run. You might not get in as many laps, but if you learn a trick and then try it on every rail, in about 3 runs you're doing it in your sleep. You're also able to stop and hike features.

A rope tow park has the ability to get up to an obstacle fast like hiking without tiring yourself out. Lots of laps, but less flow and variety. Easy to find people because the park is tiny.

Honestly crowd size is what I would care more about. I've ridden some of the biggest and smallest parks out there. I enjoy both.

Progression really depends on you, and what motivates you.

Honestly there is actually a decent amount of flow to most parks, especially in MN/WI. I have been out west multiple times and enjoy the Midwest parks more. You know everyone there and the vibes are awesome. Seasoning a rail is so sick and so much hype. I couldn't agree more about jumps, there is no variety and they are usually built like crap
 
13492757:Swandog7 said:
Seasoning a rail

Italian seasoning is good on a rail, although I kind of dig cajun seasoning a little more. Either way it's a rail and it will probably taste good even without seasoning, just be sure you have a little salt on it.
 
13492764:john18061806 said:
Italian seasoning is good on a rail, although I kind of dig cajun seasoning a little more. Either way it's a rail and it will probably taste good even without seasoning, just be sure you have a little salt on it.[/QUOTE

I like when its salted more. Makes it very smooth and a gives it a nice kick to it, not to sweet, not to sour.
 
topic:braidigan said:
I rode Little Switzerland for 2 years in Slinger, WI and progressed really fast and learned a lot of new tricks. Last year i moved to Keystone and rode the park they have that has much more features and larger jumps. The amount of laps I was getting in was greatly decreased and despite having an amazing park at my disposal i wasn't progressing like I would like.

Wondering what the general opinion was

Rope tow, no competition. There's just no way anything compares. You can get in 200 laps a day, or you can just lap various rails for 10 minutes and nail new tricks on each of them.
 
13492273:ButtahMastah said:
You should hike rails. Hiking and hitting one rail helps to keep you focused when you really want to learn a new trick.

For Me its the opposite. I much prefer hot lapping for learning tricks. I far overthink things when hiking. When you can ski as fast as possible, no music, just hitting natural features and completely clearing your mind, then the park tricks will come easier. You may not be 100% consistent at retarded rail tricks/swaps using this method, but in the long run who cares how many switch ups you can do. Just ski fast, have fun, try tricks you're comfortable with and in no time you'll be the best skier on the mountain
 
For it it depends on the day and the park layout. Sometimes I'll just go fast and think of random tricks to try on the way down. If I fall I'll just speed to the next rail. Sometimes you get really close and just rip out of your bindings and run back up for another go.
 
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