Three main things to consider in the pole touch: Where, How and When.
Where to touch
Stand in a traverse position.
Imagine a clock: 12 o'clock is at the tip of your skis; 3 o'clock and 9 o'clock are directly to your sides (90 degrees from the front.)
In long radius turns, you swing your pole and touch it, in about a 1 or 11 o'clock direction (not much downhill from where your skis are pointing.)
In medium radius turns, you swing your pole and touch it, in about a 2 or 10 o'clock direction (about halfway down the hill from the skis' direction of travel.)
In short radius turns, you swing your pole and touch it, in about a 3 or 9 o'clock direction (almost straight down the hill and diagonally across the skis' direction of travel.)
How to touch
As gently as possible, but there's a bit more to it:
Do not "plant" the pole--just a gentle touch.
Your arms are held mostly steady--let the wrists alone swing the poles.
At the point where the pole touches the snow, roll that hand forward and over the pole--keep the hand moving forward and avoid it getting bounced back at you.
The two poles swing continuously, but out of sync--as one swings forward, the other swings back.
When to touch
In long radius turns, the pole touches right after your skis have crossed the flow line and are roughly pointing across the hill. The touch triggers the new turn.
In medium radius turns, the pole touches right when your skis point across the hill. The touch coincides with the start of the new turn.
In short radius turns, the pole touches right after your skis have crossed the flow line and are pointing across the hill. The touch happens just before the new turn starts. 作者: 逐梦飞鹰 时间: 2008-1-20 22:10 标题: 收了,谢谢alex. 作者: 常识 时间: 2008-1-21 21:03 标题: 好文! [sign]一只特立独行的猪[/sign]