Heelside Eurocarve
By Hubbleice, renec112 Last edited 2 days, 6 hours ago by renec112
Source: Snowboard Addiction
A Eurocarve is a deep, laid-out carve where you commit so far into the turn that your body ends up nearly horizontal to the snow - hand, hip, or shoulder dragging the groomer as the board holds a clean rail. It's not a separate technique, just a normal carve taken to the limit. The position only holds if your edge angle, angulation, and turn shape are actually correct.
Don't try this until your carves on blues and steeper terrain are solid. You also need the right snow: firm, well-groomed corduroy, wide pitch, no traffic. Ice and chop will end the run before it starts.
Heelside is the side to learn it on. Initiate early and high on the slope. As the board crosses the fall line and the edge engages, drive your knees and hips into the hill and let your upper body angulate down toward the inside of the turn - chest open, lead hand reaching to drag the snow. The key is angulation, not lean: lower body bends into the turn while the torso stays stacked and counter-balanced. A pure motorcycle-lean pops the edge the moment anything vibrates. Toeside is the same idea - knees drop deep, hips push into the hill, trailing hand reaches behind - and feels harder because you can't see your line.
Speed is your friend. Eurocarves need centripetal force to hold you up; too slow and you just topple onto your back. Build speed across the top of the turn, then commit. Expect to slide out or sit down the first few tries. Increase edge angle gradually rather than throwing yourself flat on attempt one.
Reference ride:
Video by Snowboard Addiction
Key tips
- Get basic carves and steep-terrain carves clean first
- Firm, wide, well-groomed runs only
- Angulate, don't motorcycle-lean. Lower body bends in, torso stays stacked
- Needs real speed - no force, no Eurocarve
- Initiate early and high. Late commitment never ends well
- Heelside first; toeside is the same idea but blind
- If the edge keeps washing, drive the knees harder into the hill
You've reached the end of this course!
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