bluedigger.com bluedigger.com
Search:    Site Home -> About Us -> Privacy -> Terms & Conditions -> Add Your Link -> Submit Article   
Add Url
 

Companies & Business

Entertainment

Fitness & Health

Tour & Travel

Children & Teens

Computers & Networking

Healthcare & Medicine

Employment & Careers

Technology & Science

Vehicles & Automotive

Shopping Online

Finance & Investment

Fashion & Relationships

Politics & Government

Games & Play

Sports & Adventure

Issues & News

Self Enhancement

Home & Garden

Food & Recipe

Property & Estate

Creative Arts

Education & Reference

People & Communities

 

Site Home » Sports & Adventure » Adventure Sports
 

Expert Skiing Demystified

 
Author: Jim Safianuk

Let's clear up some of the terms associated with downhill skiing. When put in the proper perspective, expert skiing is very different than advanced or extreme skiing. The definitions below are based solely on my observations over the years, and are not cast in stone.

Expert Skiing

Expert skiing means being adept at handling varied terrain and different snow conditions on marked trails. The terrain may include steeps, trees, and moguls, or a combination of the three on black or double-black runs. Snow conditions might include hard pack, ice, crud, or powder, as well as groomed or un-groomed snow.

Expert skiing requires that you make quick adjustments to your speed, turn radius, and balance to maintain control at all times. The challenge for the expert skier is to ski all the terrain in the descent of the mountain.

The essence of expert skiing is to be able to comfortably handle a run with a 40-degree pitch containing dense trees or tight moguls on un-groomed snow when there is no way out on either side.

Advanced Skiing

The term advanced level skiing is usually reserved for the higher level steps or classes normally associated with ski school programs. Here, the terrain may consist of blue or black runs, widely-spaced glades, and smaller bumps on intermediate-level slopes.

In addition, snow conditions are normally hard pack and groomed. At this level you would be comfortable skiing mid-radius parallel turns on groomed hills.

Extreme Skiing

This term is the domain of the daredevil. These guys are the ones in the Warren Miller movies. They normally ski off-piste and in the back country, but can also be seen dropping off of steep cliffs in the back bowls at some mountains.

I have the utmost respect for extreme skiers. They are one part tough, one part skilled, and one part courageous with a sprinkling of nuts thrown in for good measure. Extreme skiing is usually out-of-bounds skiing and risky, to say the least. Besides, we all have a job to go back to the next day.

Author Bio:

Jim Safianuk

Jim Safianuk is an online writer who has written extensively about the sports of inline skating and downhill skiing. He draws his experience, ideas, and zest for both sports by being an avid, inline skater in the summer, and a certified ski instructor and racing coach in the winter.

In addition, Jim is currently the Inline Skating guide for the online magazine About.com where he's gained extensive experience as a writer and editor of inline skating articles, tips, how-tos, reviews, and quizzes.

He graduated from the Long Ridge Writers Group in 1999 with a Diploma in Article Writing and from George Brown College with a Certificate in Technical Communications in 2000. This provided the background he needed to write the prose contained in his articles, newsletters, and e-books, and the procedures found in his lessons, modules, and courses.

In 2002, Jim graduated from Centennial College with a Foundation Certificate in Web Programming, which set him up well for the development of his own web sites, feedback mechanisms such as forms, e-zines, and RSS feeds, and the delivery of information products.

Jim has recently published a new, web-based, training course for the 2004-2005 ski season entitled Skills of the Expert Skier. He decided to write the course because he wanted to fill a void that he feel exists in recreational skiing. There are coaches at the local, regional, and national levels who train adults to become slalom racers, mogul experts, and aerialists with an eye towards World Cup competitions. There are instructors at ski resorts, camps, and clubs who teach adults to be good parallel skiers on groomed trails. But what happens to the adult skiers who aspire to become experts on moguls, in trees, and down steeps? Who can they turn to for guidance?

He is convinced that the single, biggest factor is that these skiers know they need help, but can't find anyone to turn to for guidance, weekend to weekend, month to month, and year after year. But this is not there fault. A void exists. That's why he wrote Skills of the Expert Skier.

You can search for this article using: history of adventure sports, new zealand adventure sports, how have adventure sports developed
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
NCAA Weekly Dish - 02/11/06
 
NBA Odds: Why Is Vegas So Good?
 
Traditional Archery And Target Panic: Shifting Your Focus
 
Gymnastic Camp: 5 Reasons Not to Attend / Pick a Gymnastics Camp
 
Correct Ways to Grip a Golf Club
 
The English Cricket Team - World Beaters, or Just Another False Dawn ?
 
Learn Mountain Biking
 
Formula One: German Grand Prix 2006 Qualifying
 
Bat Certification - Ball Exit Speed Ratio (BESR)
 
Information on Mark Cuban - Part 1
 
 
 
 
 

All About Bull Fighting

The Golden Rule for bull fighters is: Always Kill the Bull!. If you don't, he will be much smarter f ... - John T Jones, Ph.D.
 

Scuba Diving Dry Suits

Proper attire is a very important consideration for a scuba diver. Here is a brief guide to dry scub ... - Rick Delaney
 

Minnesota Vikings Player Personnel Gets Big Boost In Hiring Of Rick Spielman

It was May 3rd that saw the fall of the Minnesota Vikings, vice president of player personnel Fran F ... - Mark Barnes
 
 

World Cup 2006 Preview - Switzerland

Switzerland qualified from the same group as Group F opponents France and also remained unbeaten in ... - David Walker
 

Foote Notes: Buffalo at New England

The AFC East will take center stage when the Bills and Patriots collide for this week's installment ... - William Foote
 
 
Site Home -> Privacy -> Terms & Conditions  
© 2008 www.bluedigger.com All Rights Reserved.