Friday, December 16, 2011

Check, please!

One of the things I found the most confusing when I first started learn to skate was the term 'check'.  It became an issue for me when I started 3 turns. "Check your turn." the coach would say. Or "Turn your shoulders opposite to your hips." Oh, yes, that works when you've been skating since you were six.When I started in my fifties and balanced on on foot swiveling my hips and my shoulders in opposite directions, it was just terrifying.

Since I rode horses for a long time before I skated, I had only heard the term 'check' in a horse related discussion. In a simplified description, in riding it means get your seat down in the saddle, and close your fingers on the reins. This 'checks' the horse without bringing to a stop, it causes the horse to shorten its stride as it approaches a jump so it takes off at the right point. The whole 'checking the turn' was a foreign language to me.

To this day I think that 'checking the turn' is harder for adults to learn than it looks. At least it was for this particular adult.   I don't know how various coaches introduce turn checking. I've had the swivel hips and shoulders lesson, the  many demonstrations, none of them worked for me intuitively.

What I needed was practice. And there's just so much time you can spend on ice practicing 3 turns if they give you trouble. But I've found a way.

Let me introduce my 3 turn checking training device, for sale nationwide. Ladies and gentlemen, the paper plate.

I used the ones that are paper with the waxy finish

There's only 3 things I needed for this exercise: the plate, a wood floor, and a pair of over ankle lace up boots with a solid heel.

Step 1: Put feet in boots, lace them up like they're your skates. I used a pair of old jodhpur boots with a slight heel. I wanted something that gave me a feel of skates, with a similar heel.
Step 2: Put plate on floor.
Step 3: Put boot on plate.
Step 4: Do a 3 turn.

It's that simple. I would just leave the plate on the kitchen floor and do 3 turns every time I went through the kitchen. At first I could get the turn but would wobble and not be able to hold it coming out of the turn. Being at home I could try various arm positions and timing. I could look at 3 turn videos and follow the instructions. I could remember my coach's instructions and practice them. Eventually, I got everything to come together and my 3 turns on ice improved. But because I had off-ice practice at home, I really got comfortable with the moves in an environment where a fall was not going to happen. When I was at skate camp last  summer, coaches would ask me to demonstrate my three turns and say "Those are good." So, how much of this was due to off-ice practice, I don't know. I do feel it made me more comfortable with the timing of the check, and my upper body position.

I've read of other people using a spinner for practicing 3 turns. It's probably harder to do them on a spinner, and if you have one it's worth a try. If I had access to one, I might give it a turn myself. Right now, I don't use the plate anymore as I'm happy with my 3 turns. The paper plate exercise, I feel, got me over the hump and cost me pennies.

N.B. If you have larger feet, you may need the paper platter. I have Tinkerbelle feet. I could do a 3 turn on a paper plate, easy peasy.

6 comments:

  1. "Check your turn" was the biggest mystery I heard people throwing around but never truly explained, sigh.

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  2. Yes, checking the turn is kind of mysterious. Checking and lilt are two things I wish some coach would make a video on. I was going to do a physic-y explanation, but really it wouldn't do much good. Checking goes so fast, I just had to practice, practice, practice.

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  3. love the blog! thanks for sharing! i'm an adult beginner too (started in fall 2010, at 34), and my coach says maybe i can take my first test in february. the paper plate idea is fantastic for three-turns -- wish i'd thought of it!

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  4. Welcome I'm glad you like it!. Good luck on your test.

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  5. Oh. My. Dear. God. I'm an adult beginner, who started skating because my mare is now retired, her filly is only a yearling, and I was going out of my head with nothing to ride. I'm a transplant from the H/J world, I've been skating for almost 3 months now, and I just started 3 turns in my last lesson, so for me this post was sheer gold!! LOLOL!

    I have paper plates, I have ariats, and I have a wooden floor. Bring on the fun. :-D :-D

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    Replies
    1. Oooh, Ariats are nice. I still have my Mountain Horse winter paddock boots even though I haven't ridden in more than a decade.

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