Skiing On Hard Pack
What, Why, How
What
Skiing on hard pack or ice provides less friction, less edge penetration for the ski and refers to firmly compacted snow.
Why
Skiing on ice is unavoidable at times and a good challenge for skiers to test their skills.
How
Depending on the sharpness of the skier’s edges and their confidence there are two ways to ski on ice: 1) an aggressive carving performance, similar to that of a world cup skier skiing on ice, or 2) a defensive skidded performance, steering the skis and taking it slowly down the ice.
Technical Know-how
What’s New
Skiing on firmly compacted slick ice, causing problems with penetrating the ski into the snow.
Performance Tips
Body: Focus on keeping the COG moving above the BOS and controlling leg steering to control speed down the ice.
Turn phases: Adapt the turn shape either using open or closed turns to suit the terrain and confidence level of the skier.
Skills
Situational Understanding
- Develop an awareness of how friction changes between the skis and hard pack snow
- Read ski area signage, avoid icy slopes that are too challenging for skiers
- Using a wider ski will make it very challenging to develop any grip in icy conditions
- Sharp edges will help the ski grip and penetrate the snow
Active Stance & Balance
- Develop a lower stance with controlled vertical movement, this will help the skier remain stable should the skis begin to slide sideways during the turn
Outside Ski Balance
- Develop a wider base of support. This creates more of a 50/50 weight distribution between the skis, providing the skier with a sense of stability
Edging
- Develop a wider base of support, this means the CoG won’t need to move inside of the BoS to create grip, allowing lateral movements of the legs to develop edging throughout the turn
Steering
- Due to the reduced friction between the skis and the snow, develop a smooth and consistent rate of steering throughout the turn
Ski Snow Interaction
- The steering angles will increase gradually throughout the top half of the turn, then maintain until the start of the next turn
- The edge angle of both skis will increase throughout the turn and release simultaneously
- The platform angle will reach near 90 degrees at the end of the control phase; however, due to the tough-to-penetrate snow conditions, it will most likely not be achieved
Teaching Tactics
Terrain
Terrain and speed are important considerations when teaching on hard pack. Select terrain that skiers are comfortable with.
Class Handling
Be especially mindful when starting and stopping students. Grip is at a premium when stopping and changing direction is challenged, so be mindful of each other and other slope users. It will be safer to start off on easier slopes when the conditions are firm; even students with a good skill level may have psychological reactions to the hard snow.
- Communicate what you want students to achieve and give it a go
- Focus on terrain selection
- Try widening the skier’s stance, establishing a wider BOS with a more even weight distribution from foot to foot
- Develop understanding of turn shape and how a skidded turn can be used to give control
- Encourage a controlled rate of rotation
- Work and develop positive outside ski balance
- Limited range of controlled vertical movement