first time
Login
Going to go ahead and assume this person lives in the US, not much in the way of indoor slopes there.
Get lessons; dress warm and don't wear a hockey top/moto cross gear. Good way to do it on the cheap is to borrow a load of your buddies kit.
To Create or Answer a Topic
Started by Tdown in Beginning Skiing 09-Feb-2010 - 7 Replies
Tdown posted Feb-2010
Hey everyone! So it's my first time here, and I've never skiied before. A few friends of mine are going to Tahoe and I really want to try out the slopes. Can anyone give me beginners suggestions?
Brimster
reply to 'first time' posted Feb-2010
Get some lessons......... :lol:
Tony_H
reply to 'first time' posted Feb-2010
Go to an indoor slope and have a crash course before you go out on the mountain. It will help you enormously.
www
New and improved me
Pablo Escobar
reply to 'first time' posted Feb-2010
Tony_H wrote:Go to an indoor slope and have a crash course before you go out on the mountain. It will help you enormously.
Going to go ahead and assume this person lives in the US, not much in the way of indoor slopes there.
Get lessons; dress warm and don't wear a hockey top/moto cross gear. Good way to do it on the cheap is to borrow a load of your buddies kit.
Ian Wickham
reply to 'first time' posted Feb-2010
Lessons :evil:
Bald-eagleman
reply to 'first time' posted Mar-2010
Yep....lessons :)
Carving leaves me all on edge
Innsbrucker
reply to 'first time' posted Mar-2010
I have been criticised here for not having lessons, with some justice. But I have rarely skied without supervision from a friend who has been skiing for 40 years. Learning from videos and books alone is unrealistic.
And like supervising a learner driver, you need someone to be responsible for safety, given that at first you are not able to predict or judge snow conditions, steepness, traffic etc. You need someone to push you a bit, but at other times to say, 'Don't ski here, the snow is too difficult / it is too steep / you are too tired.'
And like supervising a learner driver, you need someone to be responsible for safety, given that at first you are not able to predict or judge snow conditions, steepness, traffic etc. You need someone to push you a bit, but at other times to say, 'Don't ski here, the snow is too difficult / it is too steep / you are too tired.'
Junevalez
reply to 'first time' posted Aug-2010
Try taking up ski lessons. There are many ski resorts out there that offers ski packages which includes lessons for beginners.
Topic last updated on 04-August-2010 at 02:27