snowbender 寫:Glad that you finally venture into off-piste, I would say those skiing were pretty good, just that your “tree” run doesn’t seem to involve trees, but I cannot really tell from the videos. Heavenly? Who’s your cameraman this time?
You are better and stronger skier than I thought. You can carve, do dynamic short turns, and decent mogul skiing, what’s next? I think that you are ready for level 3 if you can expand your vision a bit. Professionalism is not just about skills.
https://youtu.be/wROVgqy7Ff0
https://youtu.be/RHOKdqW1Ns8
The same guy skiing with me on Gunbarrel. We met at 2:30Pm the last day I was on Heavenly.
Skiing offpiste is not a problem for me as I know I won't get lost.
L3 is not my cup of tea after I got my L2 almost 20 years. Skiing 20 years more should be quite a bit stronger than L3 level. If I go for L3, I need to spend money and ski the way they want to see otherwise I cannot pass. I think my skiing overall skiing is stronger than L3 standard. Technical wise I need to adjust a little to fit their criteria.
Even some L4 said I am ready for L3 and some L4 said I ski stronger than some L3. Exam is an Exam, we never know the outcome especially the teaching part.
I skied with quite a bit of L3 before and some of them cannot catch up with me.
One should be proud of getting L3 within 3 years after getting L2, not after 20 years.
I just want to ski fast and smooth everywhere with a good instructor style.
I am a recreational skier and like PK with people, of course have fun too.
I don't like teaching skiing, I don't have patience. Teaching 2-3 days in a season with good money is good but I don't have that kind of client.
Studying skiing is my hobby too but just my L4 friends are too teen to earn money since skiing is their profession. I can only ski with my L4 sister/ so call ( Japanese ) for a day and few runs in a season.