At , head coaches and believe that skiing should be fun. Strange, an Olympic ski coach, and Caston, a professional skier, teach the fundamentals to everyone from junior FIS racers to recreational adults during听weeklong sessions at Oregon鈥檚 Mount听Hood. They operate听on the assumption that you won鈥檛 work hard听to improve if you don鈥檛 enjoy what you鈥檙e doing, so they try to foster a genuine love of the sport. Unlike more traditional race camps, the two听mix big-mountain techniques, freeskiing, and hitting jumps into their campers鈥櫶齞ays on the snow.
Even if you鈥檙e more powder hound than ski racer, a little听expert help can identify bad habits and make听you a safer, more solid skier. Since in-person coaching is听harder to come by these days, we asked Strange and Caston to lay out the core principles of good skiing听for you to practice as soon as you hit the slopes.
Train for Balance
When you鈥檙e moving听through variable terrain, you鈥檙e constantly reacting: you鈥檙e听adjusting your turn shapes and absorbing changes in snow conditions, all while staying upright and moving downhill. The best skiers are light on their feet, making even听tricky terrain look easy, because unexpected forces and impacts don鈥檛 throw them off balance.
Strange鈥檚 favorite balance drill is to practice skiing on one foot at a time. The easiest听version of听this听is to simply听practice standing still on one ski for about 30 seconds听and then switching legs. Try it in the lift line if you鈥檙e feeling bold. If that鈥檚 too easy, find a wide groomer and see how well you can听pick听up your inside ski as you turn, keeping your weight on your outside ski. Focus on keeping your hips level with each other听and both your hips and shoulders facing downhill. If you want to challenge yourself more, ditch your poles while you make those turns, or try the drill with your boots unbuckled.
Move to the听Beat
Making a confident, well-balanced turn is step one. Linking that turn with another, and another, is where you really start to grow as a skier. Consistent, clean turns should feel rhythmic,听like you鈥檙e skiing in time with a metronome.
To work on establishing and maintaining that rhythm, Caston has his campers focus on pole planting. As you near the end of, say, a left-hand turn, reach forward with your right hand and plant the tip of your pole firmly downslope. This marks the midpoint of your next turn. You鈥檒l ski听around that point听and, toward听the end of that right-hand turn, reach out and plant with your left. Keep your elbows gently bent听and your hands out in front of you听at about waist height. Rather than thinking about what your skis are doing immediately under your body, you should always be thinking鈥攁nd looking鈥攁t least a half turn ahead. Confident pole plants help you do that.
Find a wide groomer and practice switching up your turn size: make five short radius turns听followed by five big wide ones, emphasizing your pole plants, and keep alternating. Count them off in your head, doing your best to hold听a consistent rhythm. If you lose it, stop and start over. If that feels too easy, try it in variable conditions or through bumps.
Ski with Your Edges
If the flat bases of your skis are always flush to the ground, you鈥檙e sliding, not skiing. As your skis flex听through the farthest point of a turn, most of your weight should be on the inside edge of your outside ski, the sharpened metal biting into the snow and drawing a neat arc. As you transition into the next turn, quickly shift that weight to the inside edge of the opposite ski. Good edge engagement is critical to skiing fast, navigating dicey conditions, and maintaining control.
To get their campers to think through every part of a turn, Strange and Caston use a drill called controlled edge sets, which look a little like connected hockey stops. To start, stand on the hill perpendicular to the slope, with your uphill edges dug in. While keeping your skis as parallel as possible, pole-plant, roll your ankles into a turn around your pole, and set up again in the opposite direction, engaging your edges to fully stop your momentum. Stopping short forces you to use your edges instead of your听momentum to turn, and it trains balance and speed control. 鈥淚t gets you grounded,鈥 Caston says. 鈥淵ou really have to feel what your knees and ankles are doing.鈥
Lean into It
A proper ski stance is aggressive: knees and hips bent, with your weight forward over the tips of your skis. Maybe you鈥檝e heard someone use the phrase 鈥渟kiing in the back seat鈥 to describe bad form鈥攖hat is, skiing with straightened legs and an upright stance, leaning back on your heels, and trying to make turns by pivoting from the back half of your skis. You want to be in the driver鈥檚 seat, with your听shins pressed firmly against the front of your boots, your weight in the balls of your feet, and your hands forward. This will help you initiate听smooth, stable turns with your entire edge. It also keeps your body and skis facing into the fall line鈥攖he most direct听downhill path鈥攚hich makes for controlled, efficient skiing.
Once you鈥檝e got your stance down, give the 鈥淭V screen鈥 drill听a go on a mellow groomer: Flip your poles up, with the tips in the air听so they鈥檙e framing an image downhill. Your hands should be about level with your waist. Make short radius turns, maintaining听that same view between your poles. Keeping your hands and eyes forward should help shift your body positioning forward as you move downhill.
Work Your Sides in the Steeps
Even if you鈥檝e mastered fall-line skiing听elsewhere, when you get into steep terrain, your instinct might still be to move听sideways, swinging your whole body around with each turn and finishing with your skis perpendicular to the slope. To maintain that aggressive听fall-line听stance through听steep turns, you need to pivot at the waist, .
Our bodies don鈥檛 often move this way off of the snow, so Caston and Strange have their campers practice a drill they call 鈥減inching the doughnut.鈥 To do it, you create a sideways-facing C听between your听inside hip听and shoulder听by engaging your obliques, bringing your lower ribs toward your hip bones听and rotating from the waist each time you initiate a downhill turn. Exaggerate the movement. The steeper the slope, the more aggressive that C-angle should be.
Get By with a Little Help from Your Friends
Skiing is an individual sport, but Caston explains that it鈥檚 often easier to work on technique in a group. You can talk with one or two friends about what you鈥檙e trying to practice听and rely on a second set of eyes to let you know when you鈥檙e finally getting it down. 鈥淪urround yourself with good people who are working on things, too,鈥 Strange says. 鈥淏e the coach, and let your friend coach you.鈥
Caston recommends starting your mornings with a few drills听and then听transitioning听to what he calls focused freeskiing. Pick just one goal鈥攍ike holding a rhythm鈥攖o keep in mind all day. It鈥檚 easy to get overwhelmed by too many moving parts, so be patient and give your body the time it needs to absorb a skill before turning to the next one.
There are some cold, hard truths about ski technique, but at the end of the day, it鈥檚 a creative sport, and what makes it interesting is how you interpret the basics. Caston and Strange鈥檚 most reliable piece of advice? Have a good time. As Strange says, the better you are at skiing, the more fun it is鈥攁nd the more fun you鈥檙e having, the better you鈥檒l get.