The main things I was working on were
maintaining smoothness throughout all parts of the turn, and increasing the
angles I make with my body as I ski. Both of these still need refining, but I
made a great deal of progress from where I started at the beginning (very jerky
and stiff). I was also putting particular attention towards my outrigger
position, I tend to hold them quite far out to the side to maintain balance,
but I need to work on getting them more forward to keep myself pointing down
the hill to maintain speed and not veer off too wide outside of the gates.
Despite the area we were skiing in being
renowned for its rain, we did spectacularly well weather-wise, and only had a
day and a half with bad weather. I did manage an impressive crash on one of
these days, when the poor visibility led to me not seeing a bump, flying a bit,
and then landing on the tip of my ski, only for the binding to release (which
requires quite a lot of force with my 20 din bindings) sending me into a
somersault onto my head! However the next run, one of my teammates outdid me
and managed to slice his head open on a ski - it was an exciting day!
There were many factors contributing to the
success of this block of training for me, one being that there was no added
stress of there being any races, so I could focus purely on what I was
learning. It was also helpful that there were not very many other athletes on
this camp, which meant we all got very personalised coaching (almost one to one
at times) and the group had a great deal of fun together. I made many
improvements on this camp, my skiing quite drastically changed, and it was the
best I have ever managed my fatigue during training, now I have to work
hard to maintain this for the rest of the season.