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stepchild

SnowJapan Member
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Posts posted by stepchild

  1. spot on oyuki k.

     

    you've got to learn to ollie on flat and on little bumps first. not on a kicker. chaotic - go on transworld snow or something, they'll have a far better explanation of an ollie than i could offer. plus it takes ages...

     

    meanwhile, as a learner, you don't want to be worrying about ollieing when you first hit a kicker. it takes a lot of coordination to ollie at first. whilst you're learning to ollie on flat and off small bumps, hit the smallest kickers in the park. don't think about jumping, think about control. i see so many learners hitting kickers and hucking off them. the first few times you hit kickers you want to be in control on the take-off, in the air and on the landing. keep your balance centered and your knees bent when you're hitting the kicker. there's nothing wrong with riding over it the first few times, getting a little bit of air and landing with control.

    when this feels right, and you are ollieing on the piste with contol, combine the two. but only when both of them feel ok. ollie off the lip.

    but don't jump the gun. don't go trying to learn to ollie off a kicker. it'll end in tears.

     

    enjoy.

  2. gamera - both times i was well over a foot away from the other person and i think that the time when i was on the chair lift i wasn't even obstructing their vision. i, also, wouldn't want someone's hand in my face but i really don't think that i was very close to them.

    also, it seemed to occur really quickly in both cases, almost like an unconscious reaction. i wish that my japanese was efficient enough to politely ask what the deal was but unfortunately it isn't. i might actually try some empirical research and start pointing near people and seeing what happens...

  3. for starters make sure you approach the jump straight, don't carve in and don't be on either edge, be centred. don't try and jump too much, just cruise over at first. as you leave the jump, don't lean back, lean a slight bit forward. most learners land really heavily on their tails, you want to land only slightly tail first.

    i also think it really helps to hang the crotch of your trousers past your knees and have chains and stuff hanging out of your pockets. i could also recommend a gold tooth or two and hanging about in a gang. these should all help you snowboard better.....

  4. you might be able to apply for a 6 month or 1 year working holiday visa without a degree but this varies from country to country. my girl hasn't got one (degree) and can't get a working visa or working holiday visa (because of her country) and we have tried literally everything to get a working visa and have failed miserably. you could always do a year-long japanese studying course, the student visa allows part-time work (i think) but when you get a job they'll probably let you work over the hour limit. other than that, come out here and work under the table. good luck

  5. I was on a chairlift the other day, with my girl to my left and two j-girls (strangers) to my right. my girl and i were talking about the rideable terrain that we could see, we were scanning for lines and as i described one i pointed over to it, at about half past one (if straight up the lift is 12 o´clock) and as i pointed the j-girl to my right knocked my hand out of the way pretty hard. she didn't say anything though. thing is, i didn't point at her, i was clearly pointing at the mountain, and my hand was only slightly across her left arm, but at least a foot away from touching her.

     

    this also happened in tokyo, waiting to cross a road and seeing a funny neon sign, i pointed it out and again a japanese guy whacked my hand down, even though i wasn't that close to touching him and was pointing up a building so was clearly not pointing at a person.

     

    i understand that pointing at people in japan is considered rude, but what's the deal with just pointing at inanimate objects?? anyone got a clue what i'm on about? i asked some of my japanese friends and they haven't got the foggiest....

  6. yeah, fair play, they are nutters but if you've ever seen any footage of the Verbier Red Bull Extreme contest then you would hopefully agree that the guys who head out to Verbier do way gnarlier stuff. the mountain is about 5 times as large and every line that you can possibly take is incredibly exposed. the year that i was there to watch they had very little snow, people were stacking on one cliff and then sliding off the next one. ridiculous, try and check some footage out.

  7. Toque, am I correct in thinking Whistler is coast range BC? because if i am, i never experienced the quality of snow in whistler that i am in japan. i did, to be fair, go over on one of the 'el bloody nino' seasons, but i went for the season and it was never as light as the stuff i've ridden here. i heard that it's way lighter in the interior, banff, fernie etc.

    my main problem with whistler was the heavy snow, the locals seemed to agree with that, along with the poor ratio of bluebird to overcast days. i've ridden way better pow in both japan and france than i did out in whistler.

     

    sanno - thinking about it, i got a piss cheap deal on a hotel room in chamonix right at the end of the season, it was the 2001-2002 season when we had a 2foot dump on the 5th of May!!! so yeah, you can get really lucky and score a cheap place and some powder!

  8. in most french resorts you pay about 24,000yen for a week ticket. or usually about 6000y for a day pass. you can get cheap accomodation if you stay in places called 'pierre et vacances' which is a massive hotel chain all over the french alps. you can also bung loads of extra people in the room. otherwise you can stay in various hostels for 4000yen or thereabouts. food in france is quite a bit more expensive than here but way better. also, go to somewhere like the 3 valleys, les arcs, chamonix, tignes, val d'isere and the terrain will blow you away, if you've done most of your riding over here in japan that is. the thing with large french resorts is that they hike the prices up during the holidays, a lot, so definitely check out when they are and avoid them. unless you want to hang out with shed loads of chain-smoking parisians who actually wear blinkers when they ski.

    going to italy, you can get decent terrain for a fair bit cheaper than france.

    damn i miss the alps...

  9. it sounds as though whistler is having a really hard time at the moment. my friend who is out there now said that the south facing mountains have literally no snow on them. ouch.

     

    i paid the equivalent of 4000yen to ride a place in the uk called tamworth dome. it's fake snow, but bad fake snow, or was when i used to go, on par with tama (rip). a 15 second run with a crap dendex kicker. then back to the lift.

  10. The Life of Brian was also banned in England for a number of years. Scandinavian countries always feature very, very high in the quality of life indexes that come out every year. The suicide rate is really high in Finland, i think it's Finland, because they have so much darkness over the winter that everyone hits the bottle hard and it gets pretty depressing. that's what my girl tells me.

    she's a skandi, from iceland and pretty damn happy. from what i know about scandinavian countries the system works pretty well. good health care for everyone and a pretty equal distribution of wealth. fine ladies too!

  11. yeah, i've never seen so many cars with shotgun passengers playing with toddlers on their laps. sometimes one kid on each knee, ridiculous, especially on the expressways. i often see kids clambering about all over the backseats too. mental. belt up.

  12. i will never ride without a helmet again after my buddy clipped his friend as they rode along side by side. they both crashed, one guy got up immediately, the other was in a coma for about 3 weeks and it took nearly a year to fully rehabilitate.

    i think the whistler park has the answer. if you want to ride the advanced park you have to wear a lid, no ifs, no buts. so even the pros wear them. as a result, all of the kids see the pros doing all of their sick riding wearing helmets and so it's instantly 'cool' to wear a helmet. job done. so many people wear them in whistler, especially the youths.

    of course there are loads of slams where a helmet wouldn't do a fat lot of good but it's got to increase your chances of walking away, especially with run ins with trees, rails etc.

     

    one other thing, so many japanese riders i know wear full body armour, shoulders downwards. fair enough, but they refuse to wear a helmet. so they are acknowledging the inherent dangers of snowsports yet are ignoring their most vulnerable organ. their noggin. what's it all about?? i personally am surprised that more people here don't wear lids seeing as shaun white is idolised here and he has his own signature helmet and is always donning it for comps and vids.

    i tell all of my mates to put a lid on. even if it just means getting up and riding on instead of that 'i'm going to take it easy for the rest of the day' after a slam it's worth it.

    get your lids on.

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