English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

When Getting off a chairlift on a snowboard, do I ride flat or on an edge? When I ride flat, I catch an edge and eat it. What should I be doing? Thanks!

2006-10-07 04:43:08 · 9 answers · asked by Anonymous in Sports Winter Sports

9 answers

The key to getting off the chair is to be sure you have all your weight on your front foot. As this is the only foot firmly connected to the board it only makes sense that this be the foot you would want to invest all your attention to. And yes, I would focus a bit more energy to your toes. You don't necessarily need to be up on edge but having your weight a bit more on edge will lessen the chances of catching an edge.

Your back foot is just along for the ride. Untill you are comfortable riding one footed don't get too complicated. Don't try to stop, don't try to turn and do not take that back foot off the board. Most chair off ramps are pretty mellow and you'll coast to a stop before you need to really do anything. Another technique I employ while skating is to use my backfoot behind my heel edge while pushing instead of on my toe edge. This eliminates any twisting and you can balance a lot better.

EDIT: I hope Ace Elliot never teaches anyone I know...

"If all else fails, bring a buddy and grab onto them to help you stay up, it helps to have someone to hold yourself up on if you can't ride down"

Great technique.

2006-10-07 05:00:35 · answer #1 · answered by Paul G 5 · 0 0

I teach snowboarding professionally, so i know what i've saying. heres a few pointers:
Keep your board flat,
keep your center of gravity between your feet, (if you have it solely on your front foot, your board can spin out, at least if you have it waxed properly)
don't look down (your head weighs somewhere around 10 pounds, you look down and all that weight goes over your toe edge)
turn after you slow down a little, (a little ways from the ramp usually works)
turn using a slight bit of edge, (if you go on edge you'll gain speed and go straight, just do a like you do when you start a "J" turn regularly, roll pressure onto your front toes)
Leave your back foot on the stomp pad, (see that little black grippy thing, thats what its there for)

If all else fails, bring a buddy and grab onto them to help you stay up, it helps to have someone to hold yourself up on if you can't ride down

Getting off the lift is hard, even the experienced shredders can fall doing it, just practice a bit, and clear out of the drop zone quick.

Good luck!

2006-10-07 13:23:47 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

a large component to lift dealing is getting off the challenge, with a snowboard it could be an ungainly, tedious job, yet with my award triumphing, as considered on television, 9 step application, you may also take excitement in thankfully driving out the chairlift into the sundown! a million) imagine of the landing as a runaway, and your snowboard as a airplane about to land. 2) Align the nostril to the runaway and raise it up really, clone of pilots do with their planes. 3) As you're waiting to the contact down, practice your self and raise the restrain bar. 4) Brace for landing and position your unstrapped foot between your bindings, on the point of the unstrapped binding. 5) Land, and upward push up preserving maximum of your weight on the strapped leg. And use your again (unstrapped leg) for help, firmly pushing again antagonistic to the unstrapped binding for stability, it helps to have a stomp pad the position you could position your unstrapped foot yet is in simple terms no longer required. 6) position your again hand (left hand if you're goofy, suitable hand if you're ordinary) on the again relax of the chairlift and push your self ahead 7) journey off preserving your weight on your strapped (the front) leg 8) Arrive at a threat-free region, seem again and amaze your self for pulling off a textual content e book worth dismount. 9) Rinse and repeat. do not ignore to take each and every of the credit given through onlookers, spectators and impersonators.

2016-12-04 09:10:03 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

All good answers. The one thing I didn't see mentioned that has helped me is actually putting some pressure from your unstrapped foot against the inside of your binding. Allows you to really sink a bit and still maintain that control that the previous posters were mentioning.

2006-10-13 17:06:36 · answer #4 · answered by martoq 1 · 0 0

Mostly flat. One boot isn't in, so you don't have much control. Snowboarders dismounting a lift reminds my of Goony Birds landing...basically a little out of control.

2006-10-07 04:58:41 · answer #5 · answered by powhound 7 · 0 0

flat. youll trip over your edge if you do it on an edge. you should keep it perfectly flat. this might take some practice though. keep at it

2006-10-07 04:56:13 · answer #6 · answered by iisasnowboarder 3 · 0 0

flat absolutely and use your free leg on the board to balance

2006-10-07 12:33:30 · answer #7 · answered by John K 2 · 0 0

i had the same problem as you; have your weight tilted just a little to one side, prefferably on your toes, then loop around and fasten up the boot buckles

2006-10-07 04:54:28 · answer #8 · answered by cubscaps33 5 · 0 0

I pretty much do both just before my somersault into the nearest tree and burying myself.

2006-10-07 21:39:00 · answer #9 · answered by Rick 7 · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers