BigE wrote:Where in those 20 minutes do we have time to teach bogus movement patterns?
This is often a conversation that we have around here with regards to the terrain we have available and the length of our season. If we ski only weekends we end up with maybe 40 days per season. Even with the occasional weekday, it is rare to get much more than 40 - 50 days. One season of real training out west is equivalent to three back east. We really don't have any time to waste.
Also - as you get more into PMTS training you will find the divide between today's traditional training and what is available with PMTS will only become greater - not narrower as some will suggest. The paths really only diverge instead of converge... The result is a distinct discrepancy between truly good skiers and everybody else. When you see a skier on the mountain that appears to be playing a different game from everyone else because they are just so far ahead of even the best of the rest - that's a sign they have had really good training somewhere along the line - which is what PMTS gives you. Even compared to the "best of the rest" you'll be in a different league.