The order of the following exercises or activities may change relative to the available terrain and snow conditions, and your students’ physical ability, age and fitness. All of these activities may not be needed in every lesson so make sensible decisions to maximise the student’s learning time.
Toeside Control
What, Why, How
This will work on the ability to adjust/control speed, direction, and stop when required on the toe edge. It also develops edge awareness on the toe edge.
VIDEO: Toeside Control with Guy McCully
Sideslipping
Floating Leaf
Example
Movements & Board Performance
Lateral & Vertical with Edging
Similar to the heel sideslipping, these movements are used to keep the body in balance over the toe edge. Lateral movement will come from the ankles and knees and result in shifting the hips and COM over the board and back to the toe edge. This will increase and decrease edge angle and allow the board to slide and grip. Vertical movement is subtle and blended with lateral to bring the hips up and over the board and back to the toe edge. The ankle joint should remain relaxed and more flexed than extended. If the ankle joint becomes too extended on the toeside, less of the soles and balls of the feet are available to balance, resulting in quick losses of balance, increase in muscle tension and fatigue. This results in loss of balance, falls and fear of independence.
Changing direction using the floating leaf requires movements that are focused through the side of the body the rider wishes to travel towards. Movement of one knee and hip laterally over one end is used to create twist in the board and decrease edge angle and grip at one end. An even vertical rise through both ankles and knees is ideal. This will initiate movement of the snowboard in that direction. To stop moving sideways, move back to the centred position used to slow down in a sideslip.
Longitudinal & Rotational
A centred and rotationally aligned stance with even pressure on both feet is necessary to help keep the snowboard across the fall line. Small movements longitudinally may help the rider adjust back to the centre of the board as the fall line changes or to aid movement in a particular direction. Very small rotational movements of the lower body may occur when twisting the board and changing direction. A rotation of the head through the neck is needed to aid vision and avoid blind spots.
Terrain & Group Management
Similar group management techniques to heelside control can be used with toeside control. You could pair students up and have one be the eyes for the other that is sliding backwards, letting them know if there are any obstacles. Ensure that students are checking their blind spots regularly.
Example
Corrective Teaching
Student experiences fatigue while sideslipping or floating leaf:
Student catches downhill edge:
Student is broken / over-flexed at the waist:
Student’s snowboard pivots very quickly around the nose and tail sequentially creating a swinging motion causing quick loss of balance and loss of control: