My thoughts on the point about learning "right" from the start on Gammes as opposed to a turnier ski. I don't think you are more likely to develop bad habits on a single camber ski than you would on the Gamme. In fact I think the opposite might be more common. I will agree that if you learn on single camber skis you may need to learn an extra trick or two to get a dbl camber ski to turn.tkarhu wrote: ↑Sat Jan 14, 2023 1:41 pmI do somewhat agree. On the other hand, good side of learning with Gammes is that you need to learn it right from the start. Yes it does take time and energy, but so does learning away bad habits.lowangle al wrote: ↑Sat Jan 07, 2023 10:02 amDOUBLE CAMBER SKIS ARE THE MAJOR OBSTACLE IN MOVING FROM XC TO XCD. It can be done with a much larger commitment in time, energy, and risk of injury.
For the risk of injury... A season pass sounds frightening! With double camber skis, a small kids' piste would be relevant at a downhill ski center. Maybe after learning more at bunny hills and in the backcountry where nobody is watching, I would feel comfortable at green or blue pistes among people.lowangle al wrote: ↑Sun Jan 08, 2023 8:44 amIt doesn't have to take 30 years to learn. With the right gear, good instruction and a season pass you could figure it out in a season.
For learning turns, Gammes are still a lot easier than most double camber skis. Gammes have 14 mm of sidecut and steel edges, which help a lot. Not to forget nordic rocker, that @fisheater mentioned.
But what you learn with Gammes, you can somewhat use with XC skis.
Video says there are three main XC competition downhill techniques:
- snowploughing
- skidded parallel turn
The skidded parallel turn seems to use same tricks as a double camber telemark turn: pressuring and edging ski rear ends. In XC downhill with skate skis, I have started to do that. It is nicer to go downhill in a skate lane because there is always more snow than down in the tracks. If there is some crap in your way, you can go around it better without tracks. It just feels good to have more control with your skis, too. Before I started to learn telemark, I always just ran in tracks and hoped the best.
- step turn
Sure Gammes are not a downhill ski for all conditions. I go downhill with them only in good conditions, and in easy places. When snow is hard or heavy, I go skate skiing, nordic ice skating, or classic skiing. Or stay indoors
I'm sure that the sidecut and rocker make the Gamme easier to turn, that's why it's there. But I would think that on hardpack you still need to squash down that underfoot camber to carve.
For my statement about learning in one season at the resort, I was thinking it would be best on heavier telemark gear not light xc oriented stuff.
One point about that video. Those xc step turns are nothing like a telemark step turn, they are not even similar.