Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know why anyone starting from zero in both would choose snowboarding, and I'm a snowboarder.
In the 90s, snowboarding was seen as cooler, but that's not true anymore.
Snowboarding has annoying aspects (doing bindings every run, having to skate on flats), and skiing does not.
Snowboarding seems to draw...for lack of better words, slackers and douchebags and stoners. Is that accurate?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I learned to snowboard in 1991, when it was still pretty new and not yet mainstream, after ten years of avid skiing.
I started because I was drawn the counterculture aspect of it, but continued (and still do as a 40yo mom) because it's fun. I've done both. Snowboarding on fresh powder, there's nothing like it. And I know I'm not "cool" for it anymore.
I'm 22:43. Is it really that different than skiing power on really good powder skis?
Yes! At least, I think so. It feels like a more fluid, graceful movement to me. Hard to describe the difference. But something about the act of leaning forward and vs side-to-side just works better for me, it's like flying over the snow rather than skimming over the top of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know why anyone starting from zero in both would choose snowboarding, and I'm a snowboarder.
In the 90s, snowboarding was seen as cooler, but that's not true anymore.
Snowboarding has annoying aspects (doing bindings every run, having to skate on flats), and skiing does not.
Snowboarding seems to draw...for lack of better words, slackers and douchebags and stoners. Is that accurate?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I learned to snowboard in 1991, when it was still pretty new and not yet mainstream, after ten years of avid skiing.
I started because I was drawn the counterculture aspect of it, but continued (and still do as a 40yo mom) because it's fun. I've done both. Snowboarding on fresh powder, there's nothing like it. And I know I'm not "cool" for it anymore.
I'm 22:43. Is it really that different than skiing power on really good powder skis?
Anonymous wrote:I don't know why anyone starting from zero in both would choose snowboarding, and I'm a snowboarder.
In the 90s, snowboarding was seen as cooler, but that's not true anymore.
Snowboarding has annoying aspects (doing bindings every run, having to skate on flats), and skiing does not.
Anonymous wrote:I learned to snowboard in 1991, when it was still pretty new and not yet mainstream, after ten years of avid skiing.
I started because I was drawn the counterculture aspect of it, but continued (and still do as a 40yo mom) because it's fun. I've done both. Snowboarding on fresh powder, there's nothing like it. And I know I'm not "cool" for it anymore.