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Riding Powder
by Kurt Hoy

Weight on, weight off At a glance, experienced snowboarders make powder-riding appear effortless, but the graceful sinking and rising motion that makes it look so easy requires a certain technique. In deep powder, where edges are ineffective, fluid riding depends on the amount of pressure, or weight, applied to your board. This pressure constantly changes as you move through deep snow. Smooth riders adjust to the changing pressure– naturally feeling and adapting to the terrain under their boards.

A rider’s best means of adjusting pressure in the powder is by flexing downward at the ankles and knees while entering a turn, and extending the lower body out of it. At the top of the extension, the board will be light (unweighted) and easy to steer into the next turn. These movements will cause the board to porpoise naturally through the snow and create rhythm.

It’s rhythm and timing that set riders apart in the powder–some of it comes with experience, but some through technique. Because a snowboard essentially becomes a plow when turning in powder–building up a pile of snow and resistance (pressure) beneath it–the board must be released from the turn earlier than if you were on hardpack or it will stop dead. End turns early–releasing the board from the snow and allowing it to rise to the top

and plane–by focusing on your upward extension more than the

downward flex. This will let the board skim the surface of the snow and drift across the hill, building speed before being buried again in the next turn.

Riding powder is not inherently effortless, but it can become easier

by flexing down into a turn, and rising strongly out of it.

–K.H.