So glad to see you continuing your videos, they are awesome!!!
@dj_617
3 жыл бұрын
Great. I especially like the fact that your skiing looks so relaxed and almost effortless.
@douglasmauger7078
3 жыл бұрын
I like the videos very professional and full of of good ideas and practical tips
@rogerramjet6809
3 жыл бұрын
Awesome video Warren. I love how you simplify the movements and summarize them in to three simple aspects. And I looked at your play list. Wow! Totally incredible!! It's fantastic to see how you look at real clients and analyze their movements to create better skiers!!
@jayuthman
3 жыл бұрын
Amazing video and ski instruction ! Thank you
@Christine_Davidson
3 жыл бұрын
This is a great series Warren! Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
@roy87345
3 жыл бұрын
Awesome and super helpful
@mrnoodle43
3 жыл бұрын
you make it very easy to feel what what one is watching. Beautiful skiing warren. haven't had the pleasure of watching you ski bumps and off piste but I'm sure its poetry in motion...great series and thoroughly enjoyed meeting you this winter. Ski ya soon sir
@warrenjobbitt
3 жыл бұрын
Bumps and off-piste coming in May!
@anthonysears871
2 жыл бұрын
Ok. So finally an instructor that can really ski! DIsgard 99 percent of other vudeos. They are ridiculous!
@gogglebro9421
3 жыл бұрын
Warren, I have a couple of questions for you. When you're turning, are you pushing away your outside leg or moving your body inside to create the leg extension? I've taken many classes and been told to keep the upper body quiet. However, I've come to believe that countering with the upper body is not passive, but a dynamic activity. Can you describe to me how you yourself know when you have the right amount of counter (or counter rotation)? Thank you. /Marshall
@JanosKoranyi
3 жыл бұрын
May I give you one thought. The question here, is what you think the upper body is? Do you mean that the hips are part of the upper body or not? My point is, that the counter must happen to the hips and you should not do any counter with your shoulders. Let your legs and hips do the counter. If you agree you can continue to how you can create a counter. There are 2 options, both can help. 1. You pull back your new inside ski when edging it, at your transition, then when you edge your outside ski you increase the speed of it, by tuning your outside hip into the turn, until apex. These movements will create some counter. 2. You turn your outside hips less fast than your skis turn until apex. The main goal is to have the same direction of the skis and of the body (it is called square) at the apex of the turn. After apex you let your inside ski move faster than your outside ski and you counter-rotate your hips until the edge change.
@gogglebro9421
3 жыл бұрын
@@JanosKoranyi Janos, thanks for your explanation regarding how to counter. I wasn't actually asking how to counter. I was asking Warren how he decides for himself how much counter to dial in. I recognize that this might not be a very good question to ask nor if phrased properly. Regarding your description, I can picture how you ski and walked through it to understand your technique. May I ask, when and where you learned to ski with this style? /Marshall
@JanosKoranyi
3 жыл бұрын
@@gogglebro9421 1. The amount of the counter depends on the shortness of the turn you plan to make. The sorter the turn the more counter you must make. This is separation. 2. Some counter is necessary for all good turns that are intended to be parallel. 3. The idea of speed modifications of the two skis is not new at all, Telemark started this before the time of carving skis. 4. The force you use for speed modification should be highest at the edge change and decrease to zero until apex. To much speed modification creates skidding of the skis. Only with Telemark skis you can make a high degree of speed modification. 5. Yes intended speed modification may create a special stile sometimes. I have been using this for 3 years now.
@gogglebro9421
3 жыл бұрын
@@JanosKoranyi Janos, it's very kind of you to share your thoughts with me. The process has helped me to consolidate my understanding and let me share it with you. I thought about how I've increased counter and it's effect on my skiing. Increasing counter shifts my weight to and improves my balance over the outside ski. Meaning that counter influences how pressure is applied to the skis, in particular lateral pressure and using counter to create a strong base of support over the outside ski. So counter is a technique used in achieving the basic ski skills or skiing fundamentals. Distilled down to it's simplest expression, the amount of counter that results in optimizing balance is the goal.
@JanosKoranyi
3 жыл бұрын
@@gogglebro9421 Your way of thinking is all-right. Let me give you an alternative option how to think! At the very start of a parallel turn your torso should take over the middle point of your skis in the direction of the fall-line and also take over the skis int the ski-turn. So the torso turns before the skis turn and comes also ahead of the skis first. Then the torso guides the skis, pulls the skis into a similar turn that the torso already has made. This goes on until apex. Until apex you turn your torso less than you turn your skis (this is a counter). After apex, you should prepare the next turn, by a counter-rotation of your torso to the opposite direction than the skis turn to. This counter-rotation is made partly by your hips that you rotate and partly by the fact, that the inside ski has a shorter way to go than the outside ski, so a ski-lead after apex will help you to create the preparation of the next start of turn. So separation has only a secondary effect on the ski pressures, the most important part is to put the torso into a good turning phase both before and after the apex.
@dasalpengluhen1747
3 жыл бұрын
Good description. I would like to add an important detail, that lots of skiers do not understand - or their coaches. It is important to transfer the weight to the new outside foot early - and even earlier, the faster I am. But: It is also important or even more important concerning the basic technique to be able to distribute the weight equally an both feet until the skis move/fall in the turn If we push too hard and at least too early with the new outside foot, no beginner or even advanced skier will be able to get back to the outside foot along the turn. At least very often the inner shoulder falls down or the hip moves inside much too early. We have to learn to use the downhill force, not just to try to control it.
@anthonysears871
2 жыл бұрын
If 99 Percent of skiers. This includes pros. Had half this amount of edge and pressure management skill. They would freak half way through turn 1. ha!
Пікірлер: 25