off piste courses

Ski tips for skiing powder

 

Here are a few top tips from Mark Gear for skiing deep powder snow!

 

 

A two footed platform

Aim to push both skis into the snow when intitiating your turns, this will provide you with a two-footed platform of pressure through your turns.  It's important to change your edges simultaneously and not sequentially. 

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Make smooth shaped turns

Go for smooth fluid movements, this will encourage smooth shaped turns.  Any abrupt movements or turns will have an abrupt effect on your balance. Smooth turns and a good rhythm are essential for a fluid powder skiing run.

 

Push the heels downwards

Not to be confused with leaning back!  In deep snow we should push the heels downwards a little to keep the ski tips up.  This will stop the feeling of the ski tips wanting to dive deep into the snow which is oftern proceeded with the classic forward face plant.

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Remember to pole plant

Smooth coordinated pole plants are very important.  This will help you to build fluidity and rhythm into your run.  The pole plant also helps for commiting to the turn and helps move your body forwards and in the direction of the turn.

 

Hope you enjoy the ski tips and all that great powder!

Mark Gear Head Coach All Mountain Performance

 

 

 

Learning to ski off piste

With modern equipment these days it can be much quicker to learn to ski off piste than in the past on more conventional skis.

The invention of skis that are wide under the foot is speeding up the learning curve for wanna be off piste skiers.  The new skis give much more stability in deeper snow conditions and allow for better control as the skis simply float more, thus making things alot easier to learn to ski off piste.

Also in more recent years, ski manufacturer's are making skis with a "rocker shape".  This again makes learning to ski off piste much easier than before as the skis really have been made for the job. The tips and tails of the ski are made to be higher than the center of the ski giving them the "rocker shape". This makes pivoting the skis in deeper snow much easier than a ski with a conventional camber, as the tips and tails of the skis do not catch in the snow so much.

 

The following article is written by a Guardian travel journalist who decided to do a course with All Mountain Performance so he could at last learn to ski off piste.

 

The Guardian publish article on AMP

Learn to ski off piste

One of the Guardians top travel writers Gwyn Topham came to Chamonix to ski with All Mountain Performance on our 5 day Intermediate off piste ski course. Despite going home with weary  legs, Gwyn made massive progress with his skiing over the course run by Mark Gear.

Here is the article that tells his story of how he conquered the off piste slopes of Chamonix.

Learning to ski off-piste in Chamonix

Chamonix is one of the world's best off-piste resorts, a great place for intermediates to take a course in skiing powder

Off piste at Chamonix

Two skiers go off piste at Chamonix. Photograph: Alamy

'What we're looking for," says Mark Gear, head coach of All Mountain Performance, "is skiing without boundaries". Mark embodies ambition: he started his skiing career handing out boots at Beckton Alps, east London's old dry slope, before becoming a giant slalom racer in Chamonix. His business card pictures him skiing a turn so fast I thought it was someone falling over.

Over five days, his intensive course promises to hone the technique of intermediate skiers, to give us the confidence to handle all runs, and to teach the basics of skiing off piste with a view to mountain safety.

Chamonix is one of the world's most challenging and best off-piste resorts, and a great place for intermediates to learn to ski powder. We start on blue runs above Le Tour, the least vertiginous of Chamonix's four ski areas, focussing on elements of turning: pressure, edge, rotation. Basic, but a proper understanding of these fundamentals is, Mark says, crucial to progress off piste. And he quickly identifies how one thing I had thought essential – thoroughly bending your knees – is overdone to the point of unnecessary pain and loss of control.

The deficiencies in my technique are made woefully clear at the end of each day, when we watch videos Mark has shot of us skiing. The others look good: Beth apparently needs to angulate her body more, while Ishbel has a technique so graceful that Mark struggles to find fault. And then comes a figure in a bulky jacket, hunched over with legs splaying out, like a badly erected wigwam battered by a storm.

My illusions of speed and finesse are dead; I don't know what I can do to improve, bar ditch the bobble hat. But Mark has kind words: the worst skiers can make the biggest improvements. I need to begin by straightening up, standing taller and keeping my errant legs together.

And it starts to work. With only three students (the maximum is six) we get a lot of individual attention. By the second day we are skiing some off piste and doing a tricky black run home from Le Brévent; on the third morning we manage a high and steep ungroomed black run on Les Grands Montets, turning over moguls and deeper snow.

It's a good course to do if you're alone, mixing daytime sociability with relaxed evenings: back in the resort, I want to do little other than eat and crash at the chalet, run by Collineige, whose chefs are plucked from some of Australia and London's top restaurants – even a banana cake at afternoon tea comes with a personalised flourish of, I was told, "an Earl Grey-infused crème anglaise". By Wednesday, when I reluctantly leave chef James's cooking for one of Collineige's central self-catered apartments, après ski has become nothing more than a quest for food, a hot bath, and an 11-hour sleep.

In Chamonix, a notoriously steep resort that draws experts in, it is sometimes hard to feel sure of my progress. Yet I'm feeling comfortable on terrain I would never have ventured on before, and the video evidence is encouraging: still no Ski Sunday, but the gap between my imagined appearance and reality is narrowing. Mark replays one of my turns in slow motion, and cries "Stylish!" Nothing could have made me prouder. By the penultimate day, alas missed by the cameras, I produce a deft, slaloming run through deep snow and trees. All I need, it seems, is an immovable object ahead to make me learn to turn quickly.

On the final afternoon we ski gullies, untracked snow, moguls, steep and bumpy off-piste narrow black runs, and long, soaring, carving turns down broader pistes. "Relax, play around!" Mark shouts. Despite legs so tight and weary that they no longer do my head's bidding, I feel I'm finally getting there. Then, on the very last run of the week, our brilliant instructor is taken out by a snowboarder who careers wildly into the back of him, on an empty slope. It's a chance for Mark to deliver a final, rueful lesson: "Sometimes, off piste is the safest place to be."

To view the article on the Guardian website, please follow the link below

http://www.guardian.co.uk/travel/2009/nov/07/skiing-off-piste-course-cha...

Ski Level Finder

Our simple level finder can help you choose the right ski course for your skiing level.   Please also take general fitness & age into consideration.  Please feel free to contact us for further help to find your level.

 

Important note : Before joining our courses, please ensure you are at least at the minimum level for the course.

 

Level 1 - Beginner

You have never skied before or you are snowplough turning on green runs only.

 

Level 2 - Low intermediate

You are skiing on blue runs and turning parallel controlling a steady speed and direction by making skiddy parrallel turns. 

You are not quite ready for our intermediate all mountain ski courses.  We would reccomend some private coaching to get you to the next level.

 

Level 3 - Intermediate

You are skiing confidentley on red runs with good parallel turns. You know how to tilt your skis onto their edges and enjoy going a little faster. You can control your speed and direction pretty well on most pistes. You now feel ready to start skiing some steeper black pistes and some of the easier off piste descents.

Intermediate All Mountain

 

 

 

Level 4 - High intermediate

You can comfortably ski red runs and have skied some black runs with no problems if the conditions are ok. You are now looking forward to try some easy off piste routes, steeper slopes and some bumps that are not too big!

Intermediate All Mountain 

 

 

Level 5 - Advanced

You can ski all pistes with no real problems including steep black runs. You can ski open reds at speed using your edges. You can make different size turns and can generally control your speed and line in medium sized bumps. You have skied some off piste and can get down if it's not too steep or too deep. You are now looking forward to feeling comfortable off piste and learning techniques for more challenging snow types and terrain.

Advanced All Mountain 

 

 

Level 6 - Advanced All Mountain

You are skiing off piste quite a lot and can ski most conditions and terrain. You may still find it hard in certain difficult snow types, or when it's steeper or with big bumps. You feel the need to consolidate and improve your all round off piste skiing skills.

Advanced All Mountain

 

 

 

Level 7 - Expert Rider

You are getting pretty good now!  You can ski off piste, deep powder, icy pistes, steep slopes and big bumps. You have fun all over the mountain.  Sometimes you get cheers from chairlifts. You may also be a trainee ski instructor or just darn hot!

Expert All Mountain

 

 

 

Level 8 - Expert Pro

The mountain is your playground. Skiing is your passion. You ski with control, versatility and expression in all conditions and terrain. You may be a skiing competitor or mountain professional seeking professional training. You still want to improve and enjoy the challenges.

Expert All Mountain

 

 

 

 

Level 9 - World Elite

 

Freeride and off piste performance ski Courses in Chamonix

FREERIDE SKI COURSES

PLEASE VISIT OUR EXPERT LEVEL SKI COURSES HERE

IMPROVE YOUR FREERIDE SKIING IN A BACKCOUNTRY SETTING WITH THE PROS.

These off piste ski courses have been developed for expert level skiers who wish to improve their freeride skills off piste. Candidates should be capable of skiing all conditions and terrain before attending these courses.

Experience some of Chamonix's best off piste and freeride skiing. Receive top level coaching, Video feebback and transport to and from the slopes.

We aim to ski mostly lift accessible off piste, experiencing some of the best off piste /backcountry skiing that Chamonix has to offer.

 

During the course we will focus on the following aspects of your skiing:

  • Control of speed and line
  • Technique and tactics for off piste snow and terrain
  • Jumps, drops and tricks
  • Tips for steeps and couloirs
  • Avalanche/mountain, off piste/backcountry awareness

COURSE INCLUDES:

  • Full days with an AMP coach
  • In resort transport for skiing
  • Video feedback
  • Max 6 persons per group

 

Performance Ski Courses

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SAFTEY EQUIPEMENT IS NEEDED FOR ALL MOUNTAIN SKI COURSES: Avalanche safety equipment (transceiver, shovel and probe) and a helmet are mandatory. We have some rental packs if you do not have your own.

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About AMP

We focus on each clients individual needs

We will provide you with a personalised development programme allowing your skiing to improve in a natural and versatile way.

What we do

 

 

Find out all about Mark Gear and AMP.

Meet Mark Gear

 

Teaching skiing is much more than just our profession. It's a passion that motivates and drives us. You will amaze yourself!

Our philosophy

 

All mountain performance choose Blizzard. We are proud to ski on Blizzard skis. Also sponsored by Marker Bindings & Tecnica Boots.

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