ise wrote:
Ian Wickham wrote:I'm thinking about having some off piste lessons this year, and i wonder if you have any advice on a ski to use off piste.
what do you have already? and where are you going?
off piste needs definition as well, a lot of people just mean powder when they say off-piste and buy some fat ski on that basis. In reality a lot of off-piste skiing is hacking around in crud in steep places (or it is for me) so fat skis don't always work too well. Also, in truth good powder in European quantities, say 10-50cm, isn't so difficult to ski so you hardly need a special ski for it although obviously everyone does get a special ski.
It's probably the case you're already making the best investment in getting lessons and won't need an ultra specialised ski anyway.
I think it makes a huge difference how heavy you are. I still have my first pair of Atomic C9's which are a great versatiule ski. They are OK in powder too but as a heavy skier (think Hermann Maier :-)), I need to lean way back and be going about 60 MPH to get any flotation :D
I hired some B3's a while back before Rossignol messed around with the bandit range. They are 'proper' fat powder skis and realy noticed the difference, they were a bit less versatile in tricky terrain though.
you probably want to look at something similar to the classic old Rossignol B2. This type of ski is sometimes called 'all mountain'. It will give you good floatation in the powder but be versatile in tricky terrain and conditions. I've got my eyes on this season's Atomic Nomad Crimson Ti.