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STEP 1: When starting out, learn on a moderate slope. Your feet should be attached to your Snowboard Bindings. Face uphill with your board directly across the fall line. Bend your knees until they touch the ground. Make sure to keep your balance. |
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STEP 2: While on your knees, dig your toe edge deeper into the snow. This will give you a firm hold or a stable position before you continue. Plant your hands into the snow to support your upper body. |
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STEP 3: Then to get up on your toe edge, move your hands toward your body and put them on your sides. Use your hands to balance yourself while you lift your knees gradually from the ground. Next, steadily extend your legs and try to stand. Keep your balance and make sure that your board remains on its toe edge. |
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STEP 4: Finally, try to stand up. This is quite a difficult position to make but it can be mastered through practice. Just find your balance and hold your upright position while the board is on its toe edge. |
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STEP 5: At this point, learn how to control your Snowboard and the speed of your descent using your toe edge. Decrease your edge angle. You will notice that your speed in going downhill increases. You will descend faster as you push your Snowboard further down. |
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STEP 6: Increase the edge angle of your Snowboard. Take note that there is a decrease in your speed. You will keep on slowing down as you continue to increase the angle of the Snowboard toe edge. |
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STEP 7: This is the last step of the exercise. While keeping the board on its toeside, gradually move down and put your hands on the ground to support your body. At this point, you already know how to use your toe edge in descents. |
| Snowboards Hot Picks | Snowboard Boots Hot Picks | Snowboard Bindings Hot Picks |
Below you can find all the lessons of our Learn Snowboarding Online Course:
| 1: | Snowboard Basics |
| 2: | Carrying your Snowboard |
| 3: | Skating |
| 4: | Switching Edges |
| 5: | Gliding |
| 6: | Moving Up the Slope |
| 7: | Sideslipping (Heelside) |
| 8: | Sideslipping (Toeside) |
| 9: | Traversing (Heelside) |
| 10: | Traversing (Toeside) |
| 11: | Falling Leaf |
| 12: | Garlands |
| 13: | Linking Turns |
Done? Try our Snowboarding Tricks section.
Sunday 16th September 2007 at 5:37:07 AM
A better edging is based on using of lower legs as levers. That means lower legs permanently push to the front or back sides of boots and thus move the power from the body through the boots next trough the bindings to the board and so standing the board on the edge.
That involves the lower legs muscles action to the opposite direction than on the pictures above.
Wednesday 30th December 2009 at 6:02:55 AM
this looks really hard
Tuesday 5th January 2010 at 12:07:15 AM
This will most likely make you fall on you butt if your new to snowboarding seeing as how if you lean too far back you will fall down the hill where it is steepest.
Sunday 10th January 2010 at 10:26:46 PM
I did this very thing and guess what happened... ended up in the hospital for 3 years because i had hit my head.....yeah ouch?
Friday 22nd January 2010 at 5:19:15 PM
read other sites on this subject regarding "catching an edge" as pointed out by others, some stuff is missing here.
Sunday 24th January 2010 at 1:22:54 PM
I have just started snowboarding, second day.
Been working on Toe and Heelslides and damn hard... Heel is a piece of piss, most snowmonkeys can do it, but toeslides hurt
For me the technique that works is using positive force equally on toes to keep the board balanced and not slip forwards or backwards.
Steady and slow learning, Rome wasnt built in a day but legs can be broken in a second....
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