Great to hear that you are a music lover. Be sure to check out my Blanco Post Office video and also my latest Dire Straits tribute cover Brothers in Arms, released today :)
most common mistake i see ... not learning the basics .... glad to see you keep reenforcing this view with your videos ... all i know is .. if you can't do it on the baby hill you sure as hell won't be doing it on the green ... or blue ... or black ... or double black (and when you get to this stage, black, it best to go in stages, start from the bottom up - perfect it on the bottom where it usually not so steep and progress up to the top - same with moguls, start at the bottom 6-10 and work your way up, but perfect the bottom first) .... great video, again. I show people this drill and others like it, on the baby hill and 5 minutes after i leave, they on the black trying to do it .. and they can't even do it on the baby ... do it till you can do it in your sleep then progress .. to the green ... and then ... not saying don't try it on the tougher stuff, but when practicing and doing drills it best to work your way ... up ... and this is one of the most important drills out there for carving, cuz this is the best way to "FEEL" the carve actually happening and how it should feel to be "constantly" on edge and because you are on the baby hill, where speed and terrain is very easy, you have the time to actually concentrate on what is actually happening and how it feels and how it should always feel, and if you don't have this "FEEL" imprinted in your brain and muscle memory you'll never carve to the fullest extent.
Wow, what a great comment. Everything you say is absolutely true. But people think that once they carve all their problems are solved. Its the opposite actually. Just like you pointed out. Thanks for doing so :)
By the way, did you watch my 3 Levels of Carving video? This drill was actually in that video at first but it didnt make the final cut as the video was too long.
@@Triggerboy62 Definitely, more you learn, the more there is to learn ... especially carving ... i've seen all your videos, i learn a lot from you, really appreciate all the time and effort you spend doing these ... thanks.
I am still a beginner, only couple of days of skiing last year. But I watched so many videos on skiing, I am pumped and eager to try things out. Can not wait for the winter.
Alek and Nein, great to hear you are all fired up for this season. My carving videos should get you carving. Note that if you put your skis on edge they will turn very tightly and then stop. You probably need to point the skis more down in the fall line than you are prepared to do at first. Let me know how you progress. Reg, Tom
Thanks, and thanks for asking. I have been using a Sony FDR AX53 for followcam and when holding it by hand as the stabilizer is so incredible powerful. However, the steady cam function broke a few weeks ago as I accidentally dropped it on the floor. Now I'm using the bigger Sony FDR AX700 mainly on a 3-pod and my older Panasonic HDC SD700 for on the fly shooting as it fits in my pocket. So called CamCoders all of them.
@ Tiggerboy62. Thank you for this informative video. I have learned a great deal about carving from watching your videos. When I carved on a green trail (USA), I didn't have the problem of brushing snow with my ski ( Head Kore 85 W Women's Skis 156cm). However, when I skied on (USA) blue trails, I always had a brushing snow problem. Is my ski a cause of the problem? BTW, I am 175 cm (170 lbs). Thanks.
Thanks for watching my videos and for leaving a comment. No, the skis should not be a problem. Most likely you are not patient enough at the top of the turn. Speed will be building up and you want your skis to turn but be patient. Let the skis turn. Dont force the turn. I have a new carving lesson coming up soon. Hopefully you will be able to learn from it a bit more. Cheers, Tom
Thank you for watching. If you are beginner you should watch my wedging videos and try to figure out how your body should move. Send me a video and I will give you some feedback.
@@Triggerboy62 Thanks, I live in Rovaniemi so I'll try to ask again after Easter 👍. I'm a beginner (started last November) and I've never received a lesson (just 45 min to learn how to take the skilift and to wedge) then I skied a lot during the winter but still can't carve 🙄
Great question. Yes, I wiggle my toes inside the boot to keep them warm. But seriously, some coaches are very much into moving the foot and the toes inside the boot. Your coach was probably asking you to lift your toes inside the boots in order for your ankle to flex and pull you forwards. Maybe he thinks you are sitting back a bit too much. You can also move your ankle inside the boot but it is a bit more tricky. I made a video of it a few years ago and have been planning on remaking it with a proper voice over. Let me know is you want a link to it. Reg. Tom
@@jameswhite3rd-xgnfbm sorry, took me a while to find it myselfe. I have a few videos out there hahaha.... here: ua-cam.com/video/hkFTUVRIqqY/v-deo.html
Tom, I demoed a race ski in a ski only resort, and it is much easier to hold the edge then my all mountain ski ... does that mean I need to tune my skis? I do feel like the edge is not as sharp as before...
as a racer, race skis are just naturally easier to hold a edge on. They are built to hold an edge. Tuning free skis would help with grip though. If you need tuning gear recommendations I could help.
Yes, you need to tune your edges. I tune them after every time I have skied. Almost. At least if its icy or we have had a training session or a race. Even between runs. We are now talking amateur level. The pros have different skis for riding the lift hahahaa. But race skis will always be better on a groomer. I use only racing skis. I do not own all mountain skis. I ski bumps, powder, crud, ski school.... everything with a pair of 165 SL skis. A couple of times I have rented wider skis but my default skis are racing skis.
Triggerboy62 I race in northern Vermont council in the US. Where mikeala is from. I tune and was every day because of the harsh snow conditions. I have all the hand tuning gear plus some electric stuff. If u were looking for a starter pack, “racewax” makes a very good value starter pack. It is not as good as swix or Tokyo or holmenkol but it gets the job done.
Triggerboy62 every 3 days I use an electric ski sharpener to start then I daimond stone them with a medium or course stone, then with fine or x fine, and I finish it off with ceramic
Hi there After Corona I would go to ski in Finland So i want to know ' until when you can ski ' and ' specific ski resort name ' Also i would see ya in person If you can
@@jucktv1629 good resorts in Finland are Levi and Ylläs. March and April would be best months except this year with Covid messing things up. Sure we can ski together if all stars align. Send me email tdk.skiracing@gmail.com
Thanks! I don't know what I was thinking. Problem with many different languages but its of course no excuse. Thanks for being so observant and pointing it out and thanks for watching :)
This is a really cool trick. Some of my friends afraid of putting skis on edges and gain speed. They should see this video
Thanks for watching. Yes, show them. There absolutely no danger they will fall over or pick up too much speed.
I also like the music in your videos. It gets me the western vibe.
Great to hear that you are a music lover. Be sure to check out my Blanco Post Office video and also my latest Dire Straits tribute cover Brothers in Arms, released today :)
You are making it even fun!
most common mistake i see ... not learning the basics .... glad to see you keep reenforcing this view with your videos ... all i know is .. if you can't do it on the baby hill you sure as hell won't be doing it on the green ... or blue ... or black ... or double black (and when you get to this stage, black, it best to go in stages, start from the bottom up - perfect it on the bottom where it usually not so steep and progress up to the top - same with moguls, start at the bottom 6-10 and work your way up, but perfect the bottom first) .... great video, again. I show people this drill and others like it, on the baby hill and 5 minutes after i leave, they on the black trying to do it .. and they can't even do it on the baby ... do it till you can do it in your sleep then progress .. to the green ... and then ... not saying don't try it on the tougher stuff, but when practicing and doing drills it best to work your way ... up ...
and this is one of the most important drills out there for carving, cuz this is the best way to "FEEL" the carve actually happening and how it should feel to be "constantly" on edge and because you are on the baby hill, where speed and terrain is very easy, you have the time to actually concentrate on what is actually happening and how it feels and how it should always feel, and if you don't have this "FEEL" imprinted in your brain and muscle memory you'll never carve to the fullest extent.
Wow, what a great comment. Everything you say is absolutely true. But people think that once they carve all their problems are solved. Its the opposite actually. Just like you pointed out. Thanks for doing so :)
By the way, did you watch my 3 Levels of Carving video? This drill was actually in that video at first but it didnt make the final cut as the video was too long.
@@Triggerboy62 Definitely, more you learn, the more there is to learn ... especially carving ... i've seen all your videos, i learn a lot from you, really appreciate all the time and effort you spend doing these ... thanks.
I'm struggling with curving, i think my problem is small edge angle but I will try your drill this winter thanks for this.
I am still a beginner, only couple of days of skiing last year. But I watched so many videos on skiing, I am pumped and eager to try things out. Can not wait for the winter.
Alek and Nein, great to hear you are all fired up for this season. My carving videos should get you carving. Note that if you put your skis on edge they will turn very tightly and then stop. You probably need to point the skis more down in the fall line than you are prepared to do at first. Let me know how you progress. Reg, Tom
@@Triggerboy62 Thank you sir, will do. Ski heil!
Great points for skiing !
Thanks :)
=Very helpful. Thank you.
Glad it was helpful! Thanks for watching and happy Eastern :)
Thank you man! Will try
Greetings from Russia, anyway!
Thank you for watching. Good luck :)
Hi! It's always great to watch your videos! Thanks for the instructions. I'm wondering what equipment you used for taking videos.
Thanks, and thanks for asking. I have been using a Sony FDR AX53 for followcam and when holding it by hand as the stabilizer is so incredible powerful. However, the steady cam function broke a few weeks ago as I accidentally dropped it on the floor. Now I'm using the bigger Sony FDR AX700 mainly on a 3-pod and my older Panasonic HDC SD700 for on the fly shooting as it fits in my pocket. So called CamCoders all of them.
so we carve only one one ski and the other one follows?
Yes. Thats a good starting point. If you have a hard time understanding carving then this drill is very good. Cheers, Tom
@ Tiggerboy62. Thank you for this informative video. I have learned a great deal about carving from watching your videos. When I carved on a green trail (USA), I didn't have the problem of brushing snow with my ski ( Head Kore 85 W Women's Skis 156cm). However, when I skied on (USA) blue trails, I always had a brushing snow problem. Is my ski a cause of the problem? BTW, I am 175 cm (170 lbs). Thanks.
Thanks for watching my videos and for leaving a comment. No, the skis should not be a problem. Most likely you are not patient enough at the top of the turn. Speed will be building up and you want your skis to turn but be patient. Let the skis turn. Dont force the turn. I have a new carving lesson coming up soon. Hopefully you will be able to learn from it a bit more. Cheers, Tom
@@Triggerboy62 Thanks. I will try to be patient and hope your suggetion will fix my problem.
Tom, I am beginner and i have big problem with separation down/up body.
Thank you for watching. If you are beginner you should watch my wedging videos and try to figure out how your body should move. Send me a video and I will give you some feedback.
Hi Tom, are you in Levi now? Is it possible to receive a live lesson? Tnx
Sorry, not now. Going there after eastern. Are you there now?
@@Triggerboy62 Thanks, I live in Rovaniemi so I'll try to ask again after Easter 👍. I'm a beginner (started last November) and I've never received a lesson (just 45 min to learn how to take the skilift and to wedge) then I skied a lot during the winter but still can't carve 🙄
Do you do anything with your toes inside the boot because according to my coach you lift them to the top of the boot in some way
Great question. Yes, I wiggle my toes inside the boot to keep them warm. But seriously, some coaches are very much into moving the foot and the toes inside the boot. Your coach was probably asking you to lift your toes inside the boots in order for your ankle to flex and pull you forwards. Maybe he thinks you are sitting back a bit too much. You can also move your ankle inside the boot but it is a bit more tricky. I made a video of it a few years ago and have been planning on remaking it with a proper voice over. Let me know is you want a link to it. Reg. Tom
@@Triggerboy62 id love a link to it, thanks for answering so quickly too
@@jameswhite3rd-xgnfbm sorry, took me a while to find it myselfe. I have a few videos out there hahaha.... here: ua-cam.com/video/hkFTUVRIqqY/v-deo.html
@@Triggerboy62 thank you
Nice video. I have a question. Where is your weight placed? On the outside ski being edged or the inside ski being the stabiliser?
Great question. On your inside ski. Cheers, Tom
Tom,
I demoed a race ski in a ski only resort, and it is much easier to hold the edge then my all mountain ski ... does that mean I need to tune my skis? I do feel like the edge is not as sharp as before...
as a racer, race skis are just naturally easier to hold a edge on. They are built to hold an edge. Tuning free skis would help with grip though. If you need tuning gear recommendations I could help.
Yes, you need to tune your edges. I tune them after every time I have skied. Almost. At least if its icy or we have had a training session or a race. Even between runs. We are now talking amateur level. The pros have different skis for riding the lift hahahaa. But race skis will always be better on a groomer. I use only racing skis. I do not own all mountain skis. I ski bumps, powder, crud, ski school.... everything with a pair of 165 SL skis. A couple of times I have rented wider skis but my default skis are racing skis.
@@trevorquinn2839 Great, please tell us what kind of tuning gear you use and a bit how you tune as well :)
Triggerboy62 I race in northern Vermont council in the US. Where mikeala is from. I tune and was every day because of the harsh snow conditions. I have all the hand tuning gear plus some electric stuff. If u were looking for a starter pack, “racewax” makes a very good value starter pack. It is not as good as swix or Tokyo or holmenkol but it gets the job done.
Triggerboy62 every 3 days I use an electric ski sharpener to start then I daimond stone them with a medium or course stone, then with fine or x fine, and I finish it off with ceramic
ha, I did the same drill 9 years ago :)
Yeah, its an old drill. I was looking for the original demo here on YT from years ago but didnt find it.
Tha from korea
Then where r u ?
Finland :)
Hi there
After Corona
I would go to ski in Finland
So i want to know ' until when you can ski ' and ' specific ski resort name '
Also i would see ya in person
If you can
@@jucktv1629 good resorts in Finland are Levi and Ylläs. March and April would be best months except this year with Covid messing things up. Sure we can ski together if all stars align. Send me email tdk.skiracing@gmail.com
Очень красиво !
Thank you :)
'Stabiliser' not 'steering wheel' I think.
Thanks! I don't know what I was thinking. Problem with many different languages but its of course no excuse. Thanks for being so observant and pointing it out and thanks for watching :)
The ski is so short! Under the chin. Hmmm.
Yes, but that is the maximum length for mens SL skis. They say the ski doesent know how tall you are ;)