How to brake and control the direction in snowboarding
Before stopping downhill, there must be a process of braking and slowing down, which may be sudden braking or gradual. The weight of the buttocks is evenly distributed on the two skis, and the knees and ankles rotate inward, so that the inner sides of the two skis stand up with the snow surface, forming a wedge embedded in the snow surface.
Specific stop mode: natural stop. The terminal area is flat and open, and it can stop naturally when there is flat ground or reverse slope. When it is slow (gentle slope), stop with large plow downhill technology. At this time, it is necessary to increase the separation angle of the two skis, strengthen the vertical edge, straighten your legs, board the skis with your inner feet, and board the skis with your double heels if necessary.
Introduction of Deceleration Braking Skills in Double Slab Skiing
Knees slightly bent, naturally looking straight into the distance, rather than staring at the tip of the snowboard. The center of gravity is forward, not backward, and the calf should press the snow boots forward. Hold the pole with both hands, lift it forward and bend your elbow slightly. When slowing down, the force point of the foot is in the inner heel of the foot. Always keep a figure of eight, put it in when accelerating, and let it out when slowing down. Always be careful not to let the speed go too fast.
When the brake moves in parallel, the double plates are parallel and perpendicular to the rolling line. Lift one and move one step to one side of your body, and then move the other snowboard one step in the same direction. This can be repeated alternately to complete the movement to the mountain or to the mountain. Note that this method only applies to moving along the scroll line. In the process of moving, the snowboard should be kept perpendicular to the rolling line, and the snow surface should be blocked with the edge to prevent sliding.
There must be a process of braking and slowing down before stopping downhill. The weight of the buttocks is evenly distributed on the two skis, and the knees and ankles rotate inward, so that the inner sides of the two skis stand up with the snow surface, forming a wedge embedded in the snow surface. The terminal area is flat and open, and it can stop naturally when there is flat ground or reverse slope.