Alpine Skiing
Alpine Skiing is the most popular of all the skiing disciplines and it’s directed predominantly at racing. It includes Downhill, Super G, Giant Slalom, Slalom and Skier-X. Skiing on the piste would for the most part be classed as ‘Alpine Skiing’ too.
Telemark Skiing
Free heel skiing is a common descriptive of telemarking, a discipline that’s very popular in Scandinavia and growing in popularity throughout the world. I’m sure one of our friends on the GB Telemark team will be happy to leave an analysis of how the turns are made in the comments below.
Nordic Skiing
Nordic skiing includes the combined, biathlon and XC (or cross-country as it’s otherwise known). This is lycra, speed, precision and endurance all rolled into one.
Freestyle
Freestyle skiing includes the following disciplines: moguls (Alpine Guru’s friend Andy Longley in quite good in the bumps), aerials, half pipe, skier cross, slopestyle and big air – and you can never forget ski ballet too.
Freeride & Off-Piste Skiing
Seth Morrison shows us how this is done, freeride and extreme skiing – dropping out of helicopters, shooting through narrow couloirs and dropping big cliffs. It’s very cool, dangerous and not for the faint-hearted.
Speed Skiing
Point the skis straight and hold on for dear life – it says exactly what it is – go fast to win.
Ski Jumping
We’ve all seen this on Eurosport – its fun to watch for a few jumps and then gets a little repetitive. Hit the jump and travel as far as you can – that’s the name of the game here.
Mono Skiing
Two skis become one ski – looks pretty funny and is relatively ‘old school’ now but a good laugh is to be had on these – especially in the moguls.
Snowblading
Snowblading hit the world back around the millennium and was quite the craze – now it’s not quite so highly regarded – although racers sometimes train on them for balance and edge training. Henrik Harlaut one of our favourite pro freestyle skiers sometimes goes snowblading – he makes it look cool:


