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marnix

SnowJapan Member
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Posts posted by marnix

  1. There are a number of backpacker places in Wanaka. The youth hostel was one of the places with the best atmosphere, but I heard a lot has changed since I was there ('97).

    The clubfields in the direction of Arthur's Pass are great for terrain. I really liked Temple Bassin because you have to walk 40 minutes just to get to the lodge and tow-rope.

    Cragieburn is famous for steep and extreme terrain. Glen Plake used to be a member there or some sort.

  2. Daver I agree with you, you can't just do drills and let the client find out how to implement them themselves and I think the Japanese teachers will agree with you too. But I think it is more a difference of teaching methodology between countries. I assume Japanese ski instructors are taught to drill til they drop (or the client) and then (finally) start skiing. So don't blame the teacher per se. After 80 or so years there is still not a single worldwide supported methodology. Every country with some selfrespect has their own methodology. Next year the interski convention will be in Korea have a look at the style differences and methodology differences between countries there and you will see there isn't just a single road to improve a person from beginner to advanced.

     

    Your methodology would be Part-Whole-Part. The Japanese will be P-P-P-P-P-P-W-P-P-P-P-P the Austrian will be P-W-W-W-W-W-W-W-W*. What is best depends on what you want to get out of it.

    In Austria skiing is just a way to make through a boring day until the apresski starts. In Japan it is all about the perfect turn. Yours is more about effectiveness. It all works (except the Austrian method)

     

    * This is not the officially taught methodology but the actual way it is 'taught' by most teachers.

  3.  Quote:
    Originally posted by daver:
    a good teacher will have you skiing a lot, and will not waste your time performing drills that isolate an action unless it is completely necessary.
    Drills and personal attention are much more effective than skiing behind a teacher. It really depends on where you are on your learning curve whether skiing a lot makes more sense than drills, but no matter how good you are any drill can make you better where as just following a teacher doesn't.
  4. If you really like high speed middle and long turns then I have a REAL ski for you for a good price.

    With real ski I mean numbered, hand finished racing atelier Dynastar Skicross Pro 188 from 2 years ago. Only been used twice in world cups. This ski will hold the edge no matter what and is incredibly stable but still easy to handle even in shorter turns. Nothing like you have ever skied on before.

  5. I use 1-day disposables and I think they are so much better than the month lenses I used before. You don't notice them at all and actually feel a lot less 'suffocating' then other thicker lenses.

     

    I switched to 1 day disposables because I had problems with infected eyes from sand blown into the lenses in dusty, dry places.

    When I travelled through south amercia I could only use 1 lense (and so see good with only 1 eye) for 3 months. By the time my infected eye was healed the other got infected and so on.

     

    contacts aren't great but I just can't get used to wearing glasses. It gives me a headache after a morning wearing them.

  6.  Quote:
    Originally posted by le spud:
    Plucky - glaciers in Austria (I can never remember the names), Zermatt, Vorab (Flims). There are quite a few.
    Zermatt and Flims are in Switzerland.

    austria:
    Kitzsteinhorn (Kaprun)
    Dachstein
    Hintertux
    Solden
    Stubai
    Pitztal
    Kaunertal
    I might forget 1 or 2

    Spud if you are based in Dusseldorf why not go to the indoorslope in Neuss or a little bit further north in Bottrop (owned by Marc Girardelli). It is good for practicing.
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