Help diagnosing Telemark errors, please!
Posted: Sun Jan 15, 2023 6:08 pm
Working hard to get better! My goal this winter is linked turns where I want them, without fighting the skis, on moderate slopes with a few inches of powder. This might be ambitious or even impossible but I'll save jumps, jump turns, drops, blacks, etc., for next year!
Today I had the fortune to be at a ski area prior to the lifts opening. I decided to try some laps on the learning slope (not the bunny slope!) with my Alfa Free/Falkentind 62. The slope is about 1/2 mile long, 50 yards wide with variable cross slope pitch, moderate slope angle, some nice sweeping turns, fresh corduroy down the middle, variable depth powder on the sides. It's a little on the steep side for a learning slope compared to others I've seen. Because of the slope I put on 58mm Xskins trimmed to the heel. (Made a huge difference! Thanks @lilcliffy . Because I was lapping I left the skins on for descent. I know this slows me down and I think it might be affecting the turns.
On the one hand, I'm making progress. When I got to the bottom after my first run, during which I felt I was fighting the skis the whole time, I looked back up and, lo and behold, the line looked quite nice! Linked esses all the way down. I was able to manage three laps before the lifts opened, 3 miles of linear, about 1,000 feet of elevation. I went in and out of the powder, some of which swallowed my skis, between some trees, and generally did okay. This was the first time I've ever been on a slope like that and I didn't fall. But there are some issues that are plaguing me.
First question: I feel like I'm fighting the skis the entire time. They have a mind of their own. I just don't have a good feel for how tight my legs should be during a descent. In order to keep the skis aligned like I want takes a lot of energy flexing my legs, calves, and feet, to maintain angle and alignment. I feel like the skis ought to be more stable than that, though, honestly, they never were when I skied Alpine, either. My primary misgiving is that everyone else seems to be so smooth and at ease. Are they fighting too? I didn't grow up doing this with a dad or mom coaching me through these basics.
Second question: When tuning I'm working had to press the ball of my foot down while simultaneously weighting both feet equally, while simultaneously angling the skis onto their edges and keeping everything straight. And... I'm turning. I can definitely turn, but... as above, seems like it should be coming easier. Does this sound like the right sequence of events? Turning isn't really a problem, maintaining control and direction through the turn is the problem. I don't even know when I'm on my edges. Is that when the radius of the esses looks the same?
Third question: When turning right, in telemark stance, working to weight equally, pressing ball of trailing foot down, my darn right ski (trailing ski) wants to rotate counter clockwise. The tip keeps wandering in towards the other ski and I have to spread my legs and it just turns into a damn pizza! I feel like I'm 6! But most 6 year olds are better skiers than me. This doesn't seem to happen when turning left.
Fourth question: When turning left I keep turning (waaaaay) past the fall line until the rear of the skis start to give way and the whole operation turns into a parallel stop. I think I'm just a big chicken and am skiing across the face of the slope instead of DOWN it. But when fighting to control direction, surrounded by trees, the logical part of my brain keeps telling me to control speed. Is this just something that I'll get used to as I do this more? I remember learning to ride motorcycles in dirt and feeling leery of sliding the back tire or reflexively slowing down when the trail above turned to jagged rocks. Over time I learned to control that slide and use it to my benefit, and trust the suspension over the rocky spots. Both have made me better and faster but my first instinct (which I have learned to shut down) is to hit the brakes.
Today wasn't a disaster even if I'm making it sound like it. Most of it went well! Three miles and just shy of 1,000 feel of elevation in an hour is, I feel, not bad. Love skiing the powder. Always on the lookout for stashes and chutes of powder. So much smoother and more controllable. And I never fell. But I need to get more stable and quicker in transition, of course, coming out of turn fighting to get everything lined up makes the transition slow to develop. Maybe I need to be falling more?
Thanks so much to you guys for helping me get going, find equipment, provide information so that I can analyze, give encouragement so I don't give up, and stories for something to shoot for. I owe many, many beers or Scotch, whatever is your poison. If you're in Northern Utah, you know who you are, send me a PM. Drinks are on me.
Today I had the fortune to be at a ski area prior to the lifts opening. I decided to try some laps on the learning slope (not the bunny slope!) with my Alfa Free/Falkentind 62. The slope is about 1/2 mile long, 50 yards wide with variable cross slope pitch, moderate slope angle, some nice sweeping turns, fresh corduroy down the middle, variable depth powder on the sides. It's a little on the steep side for a learning slope compared to others I've seen. Because of the slope I put on 58mm Xskins trimmed to the heel. (Made a huge difference! Thanks @lilcliffy . Because I was lapping I left the skins on for descent. I know this slows me down and I think it might be affecting the turns.
On the one hand, I'm making progress. When I got to the bottom after my first run, during which I felt I was fighting the skis the whole time, I looked back up and, lo and behold, the line looked quite nice! Linked esses all the way down. I was able to manage three laps before the lifts opened, 3 miles of linear, about 1,000 feet of elevation. I went in and out of the powder, some of which swallowed my skis, between some trees, and generally did okay. This was the first time I've ever been on a slope like that and I didn't fall. But there are some issues that are plaguing me.
First question: I feel like I'm fighting the skis the entire time. They have a mind of their own. I just don't have a good feel for how tight my legs should be during a descent. In order to keep the skis aligned like I want takes a lot of energy flexing my legs, calves, and feet, to maintain angle and alignment. I feel like the skis ought to be more stable than that, though, honestly, they never were when I skied Alpine, either. My primary misgiving is that everyone else seems to be so smooth and at ease. Are they fighting too? I didn't grow up doing this with a dad or mom coaching me through these basics.
Second question: When tuning I'm working had to press the ball of my foot down while simultaneously weighting both feet equally, while simultaneously angling the skis onto their edges and keeping everything straight. And... I'm turning. I can definitely turn, but... as above, seems like it should be coming easier. Does this sound like the right sequence of events? Turning isn't really a problem, maintaining control and direction through the turn is the problem. I don't even know when I'm on my edges. Is that when the radius of the esses looks the same?
Third question: When turning right, in telemark stance, working to weight equally, pressing ball of trailing foot down, my darn right ski (trailing ski) wants to rotate counter clockwise. The tip keeps wandering in towards the other ski and I have to spread my legs and it just turns into a damn pizza! I feel like I'm 6! But most 6 year olds are better skiers than me. This doesn't seem to happen when turning left.
Fourth question: When turning left I keep turning (waaaaay) past the fall line until the rear of the skis start to give way and the whole operation turns into a parallel stop. I think I'm just a big chicken and am skiing across the face of the slope instead of DOWN it. But when fighting to control direction, surrounded by trees, the logical part of my brain keeps telling me to control speed. Is this just something that I'll get used to as I do this more? I remember learning to ride motorcycles in dirt and feeling leery of sliding the back tire or reflexively slowing down when the trail above turned to jagged rocks. Over time I learned to control that slide and use it to my benefit, and trust the suspension over the rocky spots. Both have made me better and faster but my first instinct (which I have learned to shut down) is to hit the brakes.
Today wasn't a disaster even if I'm making it sound like it. Most of it went well! Three miles and just shy of 1,000 feel of elevation in an hour is, I feel, not bad. Love skiing the powder. Always on the lookout for stashes and chutes of powder. So much smoother and more controllable. And I never fell. But I need to get more stable and quicker in transition, of course, coming out of turn fighting to get everything lined up makes the transition slow to develop. Maybe I need to be falling more?
Thanks so much to you guys for helping me get going, find equipment, provide information so that I can analyze, give encouragement so I don't give up, and stories for something to shoot for. I owe many, many beers or Scotch, whatever is your poison. If you're in Northern Utah, you know who you are, send me a PM. Drinks are on me.