Saturday, April 18, 2009

Out of Season Snowboard Lesson

With the northern hemisphere season winding to a close and snowboarders putting their gear in to storage for the summer, or planning that trip to the southern hemisphere slopes and meeting up with crew there, and the southern hemisphere riders waiting in eager anticipation for those first lines of freshies on their favourite slope. Now is not the time to forget about snowboard lessons or keeping in shape for the up-coming seasons, whether they be 1 month away or 6 months. By practicing the skills learnt in snowboard lessons, you keep your body and mind connected so that your technique will never diminish, in fact it will only strengthen your skills. So get out there and keep learning and teaching your body and mind with snowboard lessons that you don't even have to do on the slopes of a mountain.

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Snowboard Lesson – Halfpipe Riding

As you progress through snowboard lesson after snowboard lesson, you may find yourself drawn towards the halfpipe. Before dropping in make sure your comfortable with free-riding other types of terrain on the mountain, switch-stance riding and launching airs. As usual, it is important to start of slowly, so set up your body position as you would for launching an air. Avoid letting your arms fall behind, as that is when most crashes happen.
Approach the wall at a 15° angle down the fall line, this gives you more hits and helps you maintain minimal speed. Visualize what you want to accomplish. Ride up the wall in a relaxed manner, start to tilt your snowboard from your edge onto your base. To turn, you must first up-weight, drive your forward shoulder downhill and rotate 180°. As long as your riding on your base, your snowboard will automatically follow your upper body movement. Put yourself back into that initial body position and aim for the next wall.
To get air, as you get to the top of the lip spring up and extend your body, and rotate through the 180° by turning your body as one unit. It is exactly the same as the snowboard lesson for launching airs, but your plane of travel has shifted to a vertical axis. Landing is slightly different. Whilst still in the air resume your initial knock-kneed body position facing the way you want to go, allow your snowboard tail to touch down first and have your upper body prepared to compress to absorb the landing.
To get a great snowboard lesson and improve your riding skills, click here, and be the best rider you can be.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Snowboard Lesson – Air Time

Launching into the air on a snowboard is a natural progression that should be undertaken once you've taken a snowboard lessonor two, and are now comfortable with linking turns and stopping. Start with small moguls, banks or headwalls with safe landing areas. A couple of speed checks though the launch area will familiarise you with what lies ahead. Look for modest downslopes for smooth landings and relax.
As you approach the jump lay your snowboard flat to the snow to provide maximum speed, bend your knees into a knock-kneed position and assume a low, tucked position. Your arms and hands should be in front of you body at the same width as your shoulders. For maximum air, you need to time your lift-off with a full body extension (an Ollie), swing your arms up and spring off the snow as you reach the crest of the jump. In the air, keep your weight centred and bring your knees up towards your chest. Don't lean over or bend from the waist, this will put you off-balance. Use your hands for balance at first, once you've found your balance point then start trying grabs. To land, drop your back leg slightly and let the tail of the snowboard touch the snow first. Let gravity bring the rest of the board down smoothly, keep your knees bent and absorb the landing. Keep your hands in front of you and avoid "butt-checking" your landing.
To dial in snowboard lessons like this one before you even hit the slopes, Click here, and be on your way to becoming a master of snowboarding.

Monday, February 23, 2009

Snowboard Lesson – Balance

Balance is one of the most important tools you need for snowboarding, and this is one snowboard lesson you can do from home. Proper body position is the key to clean, powerful turns. You can practice getting the correct body position in a hallway or some other place where you can catch your balance. I'd suggest a carpeted hallway as your edges will quickly ruin a polished wooden floor, or may slip out from under you on pristine marble.
To begin your snowboard lesson at home, strap into your board, with your boots on, and stand in a relaxed position, knees bent so you could absorb terrain with your lower body. Now pretend you are making a turn. Your aim is to get as much angle on the board without touching the walls for balance and then hold it for as long as possible. To do this properly you must tilt the board with your knees and keep your hips and shoulders in a vertical line. This snowboard lesson works for toeside and heelside turns in soft or hard boots.
When you take this snowboard lesson to the snow, as you make your turn, the goal is to keep your hips and shoulders vertical throughout the entire turn. Your knees tilt the snowboard and your arms stay in a relaxed position facing down the hill.
Don't lay over the carve! Although it is fun it is not the best way to hold an edge and can see you eating snow more often than not. If your shoulders dip then it should be to the outside of the turn, not the inside. This is called counter-balancing and one of the best techniques to do this is to imagine that you're holding a heavy bucket of sand in your outside hand. Try holding it out as far and as low as you can. You may think your over-compensating, but you're really lining up your balance correctly. If your still at home doing your snowboard lesson in the hallway, your could use a real bucket of sand to counter-balance, just don't drop the bucket and spill the sand all over the carpet.
To learn more techniques and rapidly improve your snowboarding skills, all from home, click here and start your ultimate snowboard lesson.


Saturday, February 14, 2009

Snowboard Lesson - Powder Riding

If there's one thing I love about snowboarding, then it would be have to be laying a fresh line down on fresh snow ... not just any snow ... crisp, dry, fluffy back-country powder snow. The smile it puts on my face, looking back up the slope I've just ridden down with my mate, is one of pure ecstasy. Laying down that perfect arc into deep powder gives a true feeling of accomplishment and I know that without that snowboard lesson that arc wouldn't look that perfect... In fact, it would probably have meant me in a heap at the bottom of the slope and rag-doll marks, from the entry point to the slope, all the way down, ruining that pristine slice of natures' beauty.
While its more than fine, if not fun (sometimes), to take a tumble in deep powder, knowing that by taking a simple snowboard lesson I would be able to lay down something of beauty (the perfect arc) is far more appealing. It would look great in a photo shot or in a video
So get that snowboard lesson and you'll be charging down the deep slopes and laying down the perfect arc too.
Mantra: There are no friends on a powder day!

Monday, February 2, 2009

Snowboard Lesson - Are you Goofy?

I'm often asked by new-comers to snowboarding "How do I know if I'm goofy?", there's no true answer to this question, especially nowadays with switch-stance riding being common place and the better you get at both ways, the better rider you'll become. So I usually suggest a snowboard lesson to get you riding both regular and goofy (forwards & switch).
Most riders will always favour one way or the other, if you've come from a surfing or skateboarding background you'll probably have a fair idea which foot forward you prefer. Although, some of the best riders I know are regular (left-foot forward) riders of a snowboard but ride their skateboards goofy, for them it's all about the foot they like pushing with on the snow and concrete.
A good test is to stand still and relax, then get one of your mates to push you from behind, the foot that goes forward to re-balance yourself, 9 times out of 10, is the one that you should put as your front foot on your snowboard. I did this test once with a newbie who over-thought it too much and never put the same foot forward to balance themselves once, I sent them for a snowboard lesson instead, it was much easier to let a paid instructor deal with a tricky customer than eat into my riding time. Even the instructor got frustrated and told them to trade in the snowboard for a set of ski's, that way there'd be no argument as to which foot went forward!

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Snowboard Lesson

Hi there all! If you've just started out snowboarding or have been doing it for ages the merits of a snowboard lesson should not be over-looked. I've been snowboarding for over 15 years now and when I first started there weren't that many instructors around to even get a snowboard lesson from, I wish there had been as it would of made my progression through the sport so much easier.

Nowdays, instead of the "trial by error, watch your mates, hope like hell you get down the mountain in one piece attempts", there are plenty of qualified instructors at ski-resorts to get you going or help push you to the next level of snowboarding. I recommend, even after 15+ years, getting a refresher lesson at the start of every season and another mid-way to push you further. Of course, if you're only doing 5 or 6 days in a season then perhaps only the first snowboard lesson is for you.

If you're a 5 or 6 day rider or perhaps 3 or 4 weekends and a mid-winter break from work for a week then you really want to maximize your time on the mountain. To be honest, who really wants to sit around getting cold while the instructor tells you to "keep your knees bent and look over your shoulder to the direction you want to go". You want to be out there ripping it up with your mates, shredding lines and laughing all the way to the lift-line.

Well.... now you can maximize that time, by getting the snowboard lesson at home, getting the fundamentals down then dialling them in on the hill. The team at Snowboard Addiction have put together a fantastic snowboard lesson package for first timers, riders who want to ride like the pro's or those just wanting to push their boundaries just that bit further. The lessons come in readable manuals, videos and podcast which you can wack on your Ipod and listen to while you ride, DVD's and even one to one phone tuiton. The prices are fantastic, cheaper than lessons at a resort where you'll have to try and remember everything you were tought. In fact with these lessons you can go back over and over and learn at a pace that is going to suit you. Click here to improve your snowboard skills now.