Not a bad stance but not a perfect stance. More of your momentum your gravity can be used in the carving by not moving your hips so much that your at such a steep angle compared to your legs.
In that movement forward and stacking your outside leg at the top of the turn, where under your (outside) foot do you feel most of your pressure? I try to concentrate on just below the arch, at least that’s where I want to be at the apex, but in a long turn with that forward motion I wonder if the weight goes from metatarsal via under-arch to heel? I’m trying to figure out at what point in the turn what part of the sole of my outside foot is carrying the most.
Love the question. Personally I want to feel the most pressure under the front part of my heel all of the time. To me if I feel this I know I have control over the ski. I hope that helps.
@@JoshuaDuncanSmith Aha- I assume the forward motion at initiation phase happens for you without an “accent” under the big toe metatarsal - great primer to get off the dreaded “front-of-the-boot” -stance so many people have. Thanks.
The body sits on the inner leg, and the outer leg steers like a canoe paddle. This is how instructors who did not learn physics at school ride. Here is the carving: czcams.com/users/shortsJ_cZwHQBe0k
Love a good static stance to feel the proper positioning.
🎉🎉 great video! Can’t wait to try!
Thank you. Let me know how it goes
Not a bad stance but not a perfect stance. More of your momentum your gravity can be used in the carving by not moving your hips so much that your at such a steep angle compared to your legs.
😊😮❤🥰👍
In that movement forward and stacking your outside leg at the top of the turn, where under your (outside) foot do you feel most of your pressure? I try to concentrate on just below the arch, at least that’s where I want to be at the apex, but in a long turn with that forward motion I wonder if the weight goes from metatarsal via under-arch to heel? I’m trying to figure out at what point in the turn what part of the sole of my outside foot is carrying the most.
Love the question. Personally I want to feel the most pressure under the front part of my heel all of the time. To me if I feel this I know I have control over the ski. I hope that helps.
@@JoshuaDuncanSmith Aha- I assume the forward motion at initiation phase happens for you without an “accent” under the big toe metatarsal - great primer to get off the dreaded “front-of-the-boot” -stance so many people have. Thanks.
The body sits on the inner leg, and the outer leg steers like a canoe paddle. This is how instructors who did not learn physics at school ride.
Here is the carving:
czcams.com/users/shortsJ_cZwHQBe0k