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unit

SnowJapan Member
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Posts posted by unit

  1. I agree, anyone who says women skier/boarders are inferior really does have no idea! I've boarded with plenty of girls that have just blown me away, so fast and heaps of style!

     

    I've taught my girl to board this season. It's amazing how far she's come in just a few months. She's come from pulling the "kowai kowai!" just skating around on her first day to charging the powder in the trees with me last Sunday. She's got the full "Gambatteru" attitude, which has hepled but she's definitely progressed faster than most guys!

    I'm so stoked pulling up after a wicked line to look back and see her charging down with a big grin on her face!

    clap.gif clap.gif

  2. Not that I'm advising you to go this way, it's a matter of preference, but if you don't want to get a fish/swallow tail, most board manufacturers do normal shaped boards which are designed to give you the float in the pow but still get you around everywhere else. They usually have a nice wide nose and a taper front to back.

    I've got a burton cascade 163 that I ride when the pow is really light and deep. It actually handles better if I keep the bindings setback just behind center rather than right back. Heaps of float, even landing big jumps the nose rarely digs in. It ploughs over the tracked out crud like a tank too. However because of the length, if the trees are tight, it is a bitch pushing the turns out. Which is why I've actually spent more time on my custom 156 lately which I can throw around in the trees no worries. I weigh 73kgs and the 56 still gives me enough float for most conditions. I've got a jeenyus 56 also but it sucks in powder so I think the shape of the board is more important than the length.

    I think The next stick for my quiver will be a fish or swallow tail like montoya's talking about. The cascade feels a bit like I'm driving a bus around a rally car track when I'm in the trees.

  3. I've scared myself enough recently into forking out the money for some sort of back brace. I'm looking at getting one of those dainese body armour jackets. The main reason I'm thinking about it is to protect my spine in case I get bent over backwards like a scorpion off a jump. The thing is most of the jackets designed for ski/snowboarding don't have a waist band. Whereas the mountain bike/motorcross safety jackets do. By my thinking when things do go wrong and you need the support but there is no waist band firmly holding the spine brace in place, it will probably just slide up your back and be useless. wakaranai.gif

    Do they leave the waist bands off the snowboard/ski models because they restrict your movement too much?

    Anyone use them or know anything about them?

    Any advice would be appreciated. The staff in most japanese snowboard shops might as well be flipping burgers for all they actually know about the gear they are selling.

  4. Yamakashi pull ya head out ya arse mate, I was just takin the piss. I don't give a rats arse where ya from!

     

    I'll translate this one so no sooks gets their undies in a knot:

     

    Wake up, I was just joking, so relax. I don't care where you're from!

     

    I was just trying to squeeze all the slang toque mentioned into one line! I was making a joke of aussies more than anything.

     

     

    \:\) \:\)

  5. I've had so many sick lines since I've come to Japan it's hard to say.

    One memory that has always stuck is my first taste of powder at treble cone. It was my second week of boarding and until then all the other places I had been were like mountains of boiler plate. It dumped overnight, the sun came out in the morning,soooo good.

    I've had heaps better lines since but that feeling of getting freshies for the first time I'll never forget.

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