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Skiing or Snowboarding?
by
schro
on 07 Nov, 2008 17:35
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Alright dudes, Timmay wanted some new chatter, so here ya go.
I used to be an avid skiier, but lost interest as I got older and realized I have other expensive habits (i.e. wife, kids, and golf) that take up most of my $$$ and time. The Lovely Mrs. Schro used to ski quite a bit too, and I know it bugs her that I'm not interested in it anymore. She has taken the kids up skiing for the day with my brother (who is still into skiing big time).
My son ( <----- that one) has said he's interested in snowboarding. When I was into skiing, snowboarding wasn't even an option. Now, it's at least as big as skiing.
A few questions...
1) At my age (42, but still in great shape), what has the least injury potential, assuming you maintain a reasonable level of control and safe speed? I'm thinking boarding, only because your legs are basically a single unit.
2) Which is more fun? I did enjoy skiing very much, but have never tried snowboarding.
3) Am I nuts for even considering this? I'd love to have another activity for the family, but the budget is not overflowing.
Thanks.
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#1
by
BlackJamesRackham
on 07 Nov, 2008 18:03
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Snowboarding!!!!!!!!!!
1) I agree with the snowboarding being less dangerous, as long as you're just free riding and not hitting the park.
2) I've done both, and snowboarding is by far more fun, in my opinion. People will have differing opinions though, so you'll have to judge for yourself.
3) You're definitely NOT nuts. It's always cool to try new things. Go for it!
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#2
by
BALDANDRE
on 07 Nov, 2008 18:57
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It's all core bro....
I tried it...and did ok...but when you fell it's killer to keep getting up..you have to throw yourself up from the angled hill of snow...horrible (for me)...
try it...you may dig it..
I think that's one thing I'm too old for...or my belly is too weak and BIG!
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#3
by
GASlick
on 07 Nov, 2008 19:41
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Understanding the need for chatter; however, I have absolutely no input on this subject. I don't like snow, snow sports or anything lower than 50 degrees.(other than ice cream)

I just thought I would post a reply to boost the reply numbers.

Seriously though, I really don't cold weather. So that severely limits my snow sports.
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#4
by
Brkeatr
on 08 Nov, 2008 05:39
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LOL....I'm with you GA.....don't like cold weather but live right in the heart of upstate NY.
I use to ski but not anymore and have never tired snow boarding....
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#5
by
PBurke
on 08 Nov, 2008 05:49
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good idea schro. snowboarding can be a blast. it can also be brutal. with your fitness level, you should be good. when i was snowboarding i was giving private lessons as well. the most common injuries were wrists, elbows and shoulders. not so much legs cause they can't move around like on skis. i would suggest taking a class together with your son. may be a good way for you two to laugh at/with each other. and the memories will be priceless as you well know. good luck bro. let us know how it goes.
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#6
by
Robmeister
on 08 Nov, 2008 06:43
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i would suggest taking a class together with your son. may be a good way for you two to laugh at/with each other. and the memories will be priceless as you well know.
Agreed. Never tried the boarding thing.....love skiing......will prolly do the lessons with the kids....that would be fun regardless.
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#7
by
champ007
on 08 Nov, 2008 10:11
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Schro,
Last X-mas my son and I decided to go snowboarding. I was a big skateboader in my teens and can water-ski. I can say it was not what I was expecting, but I did have a hour instruction session before I attempted it on my own. My son is a big skateboader and he benefited more from the lessons than I did. The only injury I sustained was in my knee, so I would suggest wearing a knee brace as a precaution. I will say it was a great father-son experience that we both will remember for a long time... so yea, its worth it. By the second day, we did a 2 day ski, I had it down pat and believe I only fell once the second day. Can't say how many times the first day but it was alot!! Oh, and instead of falling on my butt I tended to land on my back more or my knees. I say do it now while your still young!!
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#8
by
skiking
on 08 Nov, 2008 10:36
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First off, I am not the one to ask about injury potential, I would get hurt no matter what I did, but I am sure that you aren't as crazy as I am when it comes to cliffs, trees, and full throttle down the mountain
I have done both skiing and snowboarding, and I prefer skiing. If you try snowboarding but don't like it, you could always try telemark skiing, talk about working the quads, and it feels like a more fluid motion but if you legs aren't strong it will be hard to stop.
and you aren't nuts, last winter there was a 70 year old guy that snowboarded every day of the season at my hill
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#9
by
Mikekoz13
on 08 Nov, 2008 13:03
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I've never boarded and I don't ski anymore.....
But when I did ski, my preferred method was to ride the lift up the mountain, jump off the lift and point the skis down the mountain, go as fast as I could to the bottom of the mountain. They called me the "Kamikazee Skier".
That's probably why I never really enjoyed it..............
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#10
by
MikeM
on 08 Nov, 2008 18:08
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schro: My son ( <----- that one) has said he's interested in snowboarding. When I was into skiing, snowboarding wasn't even an option. Now, it's at least as big as skiing.
If you or you son are doing it for the pure coolness factor, be aware that snowboarding is currently out among the snowsport vanguard (if you care about these things). They moved on to twin-tip skis, then telemark, and even twin-tip telemark some years ago (in the park! you haven't lived until you've seen someone clacking away on twin-tip teles in the halfpipe).
A few questions...
1) At my age (42, but still in great shape), what has the least injury potential, assuming you maintain a reasonable level of control and safe speed? I'm thinking boarding, only because your legs are basically a single unit.
Wear a helmet.
In terms of injury volume and severity, it's my understanding they're both about the same. The key difference is injury type. As mentioned, snowboarders -- especially beginners -- are more likely than skiers to injure their wrists, arms, and shoulders. Beginners are prone to "catching the downhill edge," which can result in a "mousetrap" fall. (You go from being upright to slamming into the ground very quickly.) The best way to avoid wrist and arm injuries is to NOT try to stop the fall with your hands (the recommendation is generally to cross your arms across your chest and absorb the hit with the side of your upper arm). The best way to avoid mousetrap falls is to take a lesson.
True, when you fall on a snowboard your legs turn as a unit, so you're less prone than skiers are to certain kinds of knee and ligament injuries.
It may be a personal thing, but once past the beginner stage, I've found falling on a snowboard to be less scary than falling on skis.
still in great shape
A few words of warning:
Snowboarding is about balance and finesse.
True, you need a basic level of fitness to do it, and once you start improving, having good overall body strength can only help. However, there is a pattern in which usually "generally athletic guys" take up the sport and think they can muscle the board in any situation. As a rank beginner you might be able to muscle the board some and flail it around and think you're doing things right. You're not, and it'll catch up to you if muscling the board is the only technique you have. If you're at war with the board (or the mountain), it'll win. Learn to do things right from the get-go.
2) Which is more fun? I did enjoy skiing very much, but have never tried snowboarding.
Personal preference. I prefer snowboarding. To me snowboarding is exhilarating and pure physical joy.
3) Am I nuts for even considering this? I'd love to have another activity for the family, but the budget is not overflowing.
Not at all. I took up snowboarding a few weeks shy of my 34th birthday and have been doing it for 5 years now. I had been on alpine skis about a dozen times spread out over about a dozen years. I had done cross-country skiing for about 3-4 years, and just decided to try snowboarding on a whim. I knew by my 3rd or 4th day snowboarding that it was the sport for me.
There's some common folklore about learning to ski or snowboard:
Often, new skiers have it easy for the first couple days, then spend a lifetime getting good. Often, snowboarders have it very rough the first 2-3 days, then they're fine. Many snowboarders, unfortunately, plateau as terminal intermediates at this point.
I love the carving aspect of snowboarding (although I haven't made the leap to specialized alpine snowboards and hard boots) and do some fairly decent carved turns for a softbooter. Last season I spent very little time on the snow (work obligations prevented me from going much), but I spent some time learning to ride switch. Moguls are extremely challenging for snowboarders, mainly because moguls are formed mainly by the actions of skiers, who generally take slightly different lines down the mountain. I've worked at mogul riding, but haven't really got it together yet. I'll take the smallest of small jumps in the park, but I don't really like leaving the ground. This is what I want to work on this season -- getting comfortable getting in the air. I don't do rails and such. I've taken a lesson in the halfpipe and done about 10 runs total down the pipe. Let me tell you -- that's some scary stuff. Very intimidating. I twisted my back in the halfpipe once, so I'm a little leery about getting back in.
Anyhow, I love snowboarding and am happy to answer any questions you might have.
(I'm in the Detroit suburbs and ride locally on a 300-foot vertical slagpile. I generally take about 2 trips east or west each year to the big mountains.)
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#11
by
MikeM
on 08 Nov, 2008 18:15
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Forgot to mention -- just about every resort where I've taken lessons, there's always some woman snowboard instructor in her 60s. (White hair and all -- like the woman in the Columbia clothing adds.) I swear it's the same woman who moves place to place. Never taken a lesson with her because they usually give her the nervous newbies.
If you look carefully, you will see people your age and older riding.
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#12
by
MikeM
on 08 Nov, 2008 18:34
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Once I was about to drop into a halfpipe and was working up the guts to do it. I motioned to the only other person waiting to go before me -- I look closely and it was a woman in her fifties on a snowboard. I said something along the lines of "you go ahead. this thing scares the crap out of me." She said she always found inspiration in the words of some skateboarder who said, when asked in an interview whether he still got scared before a run in the pipe, "If I didn't get scared a little each time, I wouldn't still be doing it."
This was the same day a liftie cheered me because I took a run down the race course. (It was set up with skier gates, not snowboarder gates.) What I didn't tell him was that the only reason I took the race course on that run was that I had just chickened out of taking the halfpipe and given how the trails split it was my only option.
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#13
by
schro
on 08 Nov, 2008 21:49
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MikeM,
YOU ROCK.
Thanks for all the great information.
Trust me, I'm not doing this for the cool factor.
I'll be on the look out for the 60 year old lady !
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#14
by
MikeM
on 25 Nov, 2008 12:41
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Hit the slopes yet?
I had my first day out on Sunday (piddly little bump in Michigan). Loads of fun.