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casualHonestly, skiing moguls makes you realize all the flaws in your skiing. I was a very proficient groomer skier for years growing up on the east coast skiing the poconos. Parallel, linked, carved turns all day.
I moved to Taos in 2006 and quickly discovered I was actually a terrible skier. The moguls showed me how backseat I was in steep terrain, how poor my upper and lower body separation was, how much I struggled to stay in the fall line and commit my upper body to it, etc. it even made me realize how shittily fitted my boots were because nothing makes you realize that like swimming around in boots getting tossed in the moguls.
Over ten years later, and i ski a shit ton of steep bumps (not like mogul courses, but naturally bumped up, uneven and irregular bumps on pitches around 40 degrees and a bit above) and my skiing has totally transformed.
I'm not hating, but inguarantee there's a lot of people on NS who would be very humbled trying to ski natural bumped up steep terrain.
Sometimes bump skiing can be miserable, but other times it's a fucking blast.
I prefer untracked powder tho 😛. Being able to ski bumps competently helps a shit ton when it comes to skiing tracked powder and mashed potatoes too.
brett_fisherrespect to mogul skiers. i like rolling through the course at hood after they leave its fun but i couldn't do it all the time its something fun to rip on the way to the park.
DeepskierSun valley bump skier here. We are stronger in numbers than park skiers. Granted I'm one of those too so. I kind of do it all so im bias. Except racing fuck that shit. buncha pricks.
SkiBum.Fuck Sun Valley, bunch of pricks there
avardaCan anyone confirm or deny if there are designated mogul runs at the following resorts which I'm hitting up this winter;
- Lake Louse
- Sunshine Village
- Breckenridge (swear there was a small run last time I was here 2 years ago)
- Keystone
- Park City/Canyons
- Whistler (cant remember from last time I was out here because it was spring)
- Heavenly (again, swear there was a small run last time)
I know I could easily search this, but would rather some 'local' insight.
Already buzzing for winter!
avardaCan anyone confirm or deny if there are designated mogul runs at the following resorts which I'm hitting up this winter;
- Lake Louse
- Sunshine Village
- Breckenridge (swear there was a small run last time I was here 2 years ago)
- Keystone
- Park City/Canyons
- Whistler (cant remember from last time I was out here because it was spring)
- Heavenly (again, swear there was a small run last time)
I know I could easily search this, but would rather some 'local' insight.
Already buzzing for winter!
MeenaSmallsah, rolling through after it was slipped? I hear they love that!
reeskiI don't hear much chatter on here about bump skiing. I'm an old school EC skier and would say that I ski bumps 65% of the ski day when conditions provide. If i'm on the WC I will pick pow of course first, if no pow I' m looking for moguls on the side of trail and steeps. Do people out West still hit bumps anymore? And how many EC's are still bumping? Just a thought.
codizzlewhere do you ride mostly on the EC?
casualHonestly, skiing moguls makes you realize all the flaws in your skiing. I was a very proficient groomer skier for years growing up on the east coast skiing the poconos. Parallel, linked, carved turns all day.
I moved to Taos in 2006 and quickly discovered I was actually a terrible skier. The moguls showed me how backseat I was in steep terrain, how poor my upper and lower body separation was, how much I struggled to stay in the fall line and commit my upper body to it, etc. it even made me realize how shittily fitted my boots were because nothing makes you realize that like swimming around in boots getting tossed in the moguls.
Over ten years later, and i ski a shit ton of steep bumps (not like mogul courses, but naturally bumped up, uneven and irregular bumps on pitches around 40 degrees and a bit above) and my skiing has totally transformed.
I'm not hating, but inguarantee there's a lot of people on NS who would be very humbled trying to ski natural bumped up steep terrain.
Sometimes bump skiing can be miserable, but other times it's a fucking blast.
I prefer untracked powder tho 😛. Being able to ski bumps competently helps a shit ton when it comes to skiing tracked powder and mashed potatoes too.
-eREKTion-Mammoth doesn't seem to have a bump culture at all. It's a skill that I wish I had for sure, I put in about 10 strictly bump days this past season but I'm still a ways from the aesthetic zipper-line that I'm aiming for. Also, steep bumps... ain't nobody got time for that.
.lenconThere's a reason people like Tanner Hall, CRJ, and others were/are so good.
Guess I should ski more moguls on the slow days..
dan4060Amen to this.
I will add another name, Jonny Moseley. He was probably the best all-around skier in the world around 2002. He could dominate in big mountain, watch TGR's the Realm and see him hold his own in AK with Jeremy Jones and Jeremy Nobis, he won medals in park, and he not only won gold in bumps but also fundamentally changed the discipline in 2002. What guys are doing now, off axis 7's in bumps, is mind-blowing and should be credited to Moseley. He also won an xgames medal back in the day. He just might be the best skier ever to step foot on the planet.
ozzywrongCandide is the best.. he was French and I think junior world champion for moguls when he was like 14 .. Moseley was amazing though ... too 3 to 5 ever all round 100% mogul skiing is fucking so hard.. I did it for years and only got semi good at it.. to become an Olympic level mogul skier is almost the equivalent of becoming a world tour level surfer or top 20 PGA tour level golfer .. it's up there with skateboarding, golf and surfing as one of the top 5 most technical sports on earth.
avardaCan anyone confirm or deny if there are designated mogul runs at the following resorts which I'm hitting up this winter;
- Lake Louse
- Sunshine Village
- Breckenridge (swear there was a small run last time I was here 2 years ago)
- Keystone
- Park City/Canyons
- Whistler (cant remember from last time I was out here because it was spring)
- Heavenly (again, swear there was a small run last time)
I know I could easily search this, but would rather some 'local' insight.
Already buzzing for winter!
casualHonestly, skiing moguls makes you realize all the flaws in your skiing. I was a very proficient groomer skier for years growing up on the east coast skiing the poconos. Parallel, linked, carved turns all day.
I moved to Taos in 2006 and quickly discovered I was actually a terrible skier. The moguls showed me how backseat I was in steep terrain, how poor my upper and lower body separation was, how much I struggled to stay in the fall line and commit my upper body to it, etc. it even made me realize how shittily fitted my boots were because nothing makes you realize that like swimming around in boots getting tossed in the moguls.
Over ten years later, and i ski a shit ton of steep bumps (not like mogul courses, but naturally bumped up, uneven and irregular bumps on pitches around 40 degrees and a bit above) and my skiing has totally transformed.
I'm not hating, but inguarantee there's a lot of people on NS who would be very humbled trying to ski natural bumped up steep terrain.
Sometimes bump skiing can be miserable, but other times it's a fucking blast.
I prefer untracked powder tho 😛. Being able to ski bumps competently helps a shit ton when it comes to skiing tracked powder and mashed potatoes too.