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No Need To Curtsey!

We caught up with Joe Beer to uncover some of his telemarking interests ….

Have you reached a point in your skiing life where you need something new?

A new challenge? A new way of getting about the mountain?

If you and your partner are at very different levels with your skiing, spending time together on the slopes can be difficult. One of you is inevitably bored out of his/her mind and you seem to spend most of the day arguing! One solution is for the more advanced skier to switch to another discipline, re-discovering the challenge of learning to ski through another avenue whilst the other is suddenly delighted to see you struggling and falling over as much as he/she is! Lots of people go down the snowboarding avenue for this reason but why not switch to Telemark?

Telemarking is the oldest form of skiing. You are attached only by a toe binding, so it challenges your balance in a totally different way from alpine skiing. Because you get no support from the front of the boot or binding it’s a great way of finding your centre. The lunging style of the sport makes it physically demanding, so great for fitness. Remember though, some people call it free heeling or downhill cross-country because you don’t always have to Telemark – you can alpine on the kit too! No need to curtsey!

If you already alpine ski finding your way around the mountain is relatively easy provided you don’t mind falling over a bit. But if you want to develop into a real Telemark skier please get some lessons, so many times I’ve seen people struggling about on their own trying to get it and oh dear! They are leading with the wrong leg!

Think of the feelings you get when you’re skiing down your favourite slopes and the way it felt being challenged to get where you are on your normal kit, you get the same buzz out of learning to master bumps, steeps, powder and carving on this new kit. The skis are doing a very similar thing to alpine but the skier is totally different.

I started to Telemark as a new challenge – also because the kit is lighter it’s good for ski touring. Now, however if given the choice I don’t think I can choose between them, they’re just so different and yet the same. The same buzz, the same skills, same skis – just different aches! (Which reminds me to say Tele boots are so much more comfy.)

There are two popular sayings amongst the ski fraternity which sum up the opposing attitudes between the two camps. ‘Free the heel & free the mind’ boast the telemarkers! To which the alpinists retort ‘Fix the heel & fix the problem!’

Why not give it a go and make up your own mind which camp you are in!

Catch up with Joe Beer in Morzine where he runs his own ski school.

Website: alpinelearningcurves.co.uk

For further information visit: -
morzineskischools.com

Michel Bordet, Mountain Guide in Chamonix

Michel BORDET is a fully qualified UIAGM mountain guide based in the Chamonix valley. Chamonix is located in Haute Savoie, France. Michel Bordet has been a mountain guide for 20 years.

In 1980 Michel commenced his professional training to become a professional mountain guide. Michel always had a great passion for the mountains, this naturally became a way of life.

Michel has worked as a mountain guide all over the Alps, both ski touring and climbing. In the summer months Michel ascends major alpine peaks over 4000 meters high. He has also guided in the Himalayan ranges, Patagonia, Moroccan Atlas mountains and Kilimanjaro. Michel has carried out numerous trekking expeditions.

Keeping an eye on conditions, monitoring the daily snowfall as well as registering past snow layer history gives Michel a better understanding of slope safety.

Michel says …

“I have skied down every slope and every “couloir” in the Chamonix area. I have visited all of the important alpine mountain ranges from Corsica and Mercantour in the Southern Alps to the Tyrolean mountains in Austria. My speciality is the ChamonixZermatt Haute Route as well as the Mont Blanc ski ascent.”

Michel believes strongly that a good Mountain guide must seize the moment when the conditions are naturally good and go!

Michel’s season is long, it starts in December and runs all the way until the start of June, during these months Michel works off piste, ski touring and mountaineering. Michel sees his role as a guide and a teacher where by he shares his mountain experience with his clients, adapting his mountain plans to the abilities of his clients and the conditions equally.

Above all, safety and security are top of Michel’s list.

See Michel below in action in this video

For further information visit: -

chamonixskischools.comtheskischools.com

Website: Michel Bordet – UIAGM