Snowboard Garlands
You'll get a cleaner feel for how a turn starts, which makes full linked turns and carving progress much easier to build on purpose.
Starting and shaping the top half of repeated turns on one edge so you can isolate pressure, steering, and confidence without committing to full direction changes.
Watch & Learn
Key Moments
Let the board begin the turn, then guide it back before it crosses the fall line fully.
Build confidence in the top half of the turn before asking for full turn completion.
Notice exactly which movements get the board to engage cleanly at the start of the arc.
What It Should Feel Like
- ✓Like rehearsing the first half of a turn until it becomes automatic
- ✓The board starts to obey subtle inputs much earlier in the arc
- ✓You can isolate edge engagement without also solving the whole turn at once
Common Mistakes & Fixes
Turning the exercise into full turns too soon
Come back before the board finishes the whole arc so the drill stays specific.
Rushing each repetition
Pause briefly between garlands so each start feels deliberate.
Using the upper body to yank the board downhill
Initiate with edge pressure and board movement first.
Practice Drills
Five-garland sets: make five clean garlands on one edge before switching to the other edge.
Same-start challenge: try to make the first third of every garland feel identical in timing and pressure.
Garland-to-turn combo: after several repetitions, turn the last one into a complete turn and compare the feeling.
Prerequisites
Level Up Next
Your Progression
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Snowboard Speed Control
Level 3
Current
Snowboard Garlands
Level 4
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Snowboard Basic Carving
Level 5