![]() |
|
| how to snowboard equipment reviews shopping deals about snowprofessor |
How to carve on a snowboardCarving is a great ‘next step’ once you’ve mastered basic turns. Carving means your snowboard will tip on edge and you’ll cut across the snow without skidding. Carving is a ton of fun on groomers and handy on hard snow, because your edge cuts across with less slipping. You’ll go faster and have more control on groomers. If you plan on progressing in freestyle, you’ll carve in the half-pipe and when spinning off jumps. In this episode, we introduce simple steps to learn carving and tips to improve. Carving is something we already do instinctively. On a slippery hill, you slide down if your feet are flat, but you can really get traction when you tip your feet up and dig into the snow—same with your snowboard edges. In a skidded turn, your snowboard slides over the snow leaving a swish-shaped track. For carved turns your edge digs into the snow leaving a thin arc in the snow. Carving requires just two steps: Tipping your snowboard on edge and adding extra pressure. Step 1—Practice tipping your snowboard on edge. Step 2—Carved traverse For a toeside traverse, keep your ankles and knees bent and tip your snowboard on edge by driving your knees into the hill. Add more pressure to your front and back toes…then try adding less (notice that you don’t grab the snow as well when you reduce the pressure). What happens if you reduce the edge angle? On a heel traverse, think of sticking your butt out to tip your snowboard on edge. You should feel like you’re sitting into a low chair and your calf muscles should be pressing on your high-backs. Add more pressure to your heels…then less. You want to experiment to find the right amount of pressure and tilt so you cut across the hill without skidding. Have a look at your track. If it’s a nice, thin line—you got it. If it’s wide and feathery, keep working. Step 3—Carved garlands
Step 4—Carved single turn
If you do it right, the turn will feel sharp and fast and you’ll leave a clean, thin line in the snow. Do the same thing heelside.
For larger turns, tip the snowboard on edge and add steady, gradual foot pressure to your edges. For smaller turns, tip your board on edge and quickly apply pressure. Step 5—Link carves together
Gradually reduce the length of the traverse between carves and soon you’ll be linking them together. Carving properly takes lots of practice, so dedicate a few runs each day to until you feel comfortable. As you progress, you’ll feel the power and speed that comes from carving up groomers. Next step: Experiment with your knees |
|||
| beginner lessons | |||
| intermediate lessons | |||
| all mountain riding | |||
| snowboard tricks | |||
| equipment | |||
| intermediate lesson videoshow to carve experiment with your kneesdynamic snowboarding | |||
| Copyright 2008 SnowProfessor.com | about SnowProfessor | terms of use | privacy policy | home |