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CRC of Skiing?? Hel...
 

[Closed] CRC of Skiing?? Help, advice

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It's never too early to talk about snow!

I see you're in Cheltenham - pop in to Horace Bartons (road behind Cav House, formal wear but the ski bit is downstairs) for a chat and try some gear on. I've not been in for years but Giles Barton used to race on the British team and the family are strong skiers and should offer good advice. Handy and local for a first look...
http://www.horacebarton.co.uk/winter-sports/

Save where you can but good boots, gloves and goggles are essential for comfort and performance.

As above, if you're going to be in resort - and there from November - I'd consider buying in resort. My best experiences have been boots fitted by a good fitter in resort. Any decent shop will offer a fit guarantee and help fine tune the fit to ensure comfort in with the price - and the fitter is directly on hand throughout the season to work on any problems. If you buy in the UK, you would have to pay for this service in resort.

If you've only done 3 days skiing, perhaps hire boots for a couple of weeks while you progress into a solid intermediate boot rather than buy a beginner boot and need to upgrade, or get something too stiff now that will cramp your development.

Most tour operators include kit hire in the deal so you can try all sorts of brands out (all have different fits) and get in with the local shops (take lots of clients in!), weed out good from bad and when you are ready they'll sort you out at seasonaire rates.


 
Posted : 16/08/2012 10:04 am
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mmmm snow!!!

I think all the advice so far has been excellent. I certainly echo the advice of others, to use a good recommended bootfitters. I used Lockwoods, but would probably look elsewhere next time. They did a good job, don't get me wrong ... but I think it could have been better.

Again, TKMaxx have some excellent bargains around the start of the season, selling off last years stock. I got some fantastic bargains.

Remember the ski world is the same as the bike world ... all designs change annually, and there are snobs who only want the newest latest kit.

I had four pairs of twin-tip ski's ranging in price and function. None of them were latest model, and I had just as much fun on the mountain as some dude in his brand new ski's and top of the range spyder gear!

I spent Xmas one year in Courchevel 1850 ... which ordinarily is not cheap, but when you see the Russian millionaires wandering around in their Dior ski suits that never get anywhere near a piste, then you realise that it's just to be seen, and not to enjoy the fun that the mountain can offer.

Enjoy your time away!


 
Posted : 16/08/2012 10:52 am
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The TKmax near me quite regularly has westbeach jackets for about £50. They also stock the Nike "acg" ski gear, which (contrary to what you might assume) is actually very good.

As others have said - boots and gloves are the things to spend some cash on. Although with boots I would advocate doing a blind test. ie: don't look at the prices, choose the 1st 2nd and 3rd most comfortable, THEN factor in cost. I did that, and ended up with the second cheapest boots in the store 😀


 
Posted : 16/08/2012 11:00 am
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Interesting fact - while most purpose built French ski towns are names after their elevation (Les Arcs 1800, Les Arc 2000 etc), Courcheval 1850 is named after the Russian women.

They look 18 from behind, 50 from the front.

Badoom tisshhh!


 
Posted : 16/08/2012 12:08 pm
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I've seen too many "all the clobber, what a nobber" types
Lol.

If you're going out for a season, then you can afford to stay indoors on really bad weather days (or what we recreational skiers call really good days = heavy blizzard/high winds etc), so amybe all this high end gear isn't needed.

If you can afford it, get into ski school and get some good tuition for a few days, It's the same as any sport really, iron out any bad habits before they set in.

Have fun. that's what it's all about at your age 🙂


 
Posted : 16/08/2012 3:47 pm
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All the advice so far has been superb - thank you all.
I know everyone has a prejudice against all the gear no idea types.

As I've said I've been skiing for one week and obviously still a beginner but as I am out there for 5 months I would rather spend £200 or so on some decent boots, then buy gloves/goggles to suit as well. I'm working full time at the minute so can afford these comforts and would much rather spend my money on something which will get a lot of use.

I'll talk to solutionsforfeet and go on their advice re:boots, if the best solution is to use hire boots for a couple of weeks then use bought boots which are stiffer then I'll go with that, I'm just looking to add some comfort and something that's going to help rather than hinder ability.

Thanks all very much, this is a steep learning curve at the minute! Popped into horracebartons today - they don't stock ski boots until October.


 
Posted : 16/08/2012 9:00 pm
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