Hello and welcome back to another post, today I am going to be talking about what a moves test is like at least for people at my hometown rink. For most tests, you show up early in the morning, hopefully dressed nicely, to show that you care about this test, and for respect to the judges. You should show up at least 30 minutes early because sometimes they can run faster then expected, and you can have time to stretch, warm up whatever you need to do for your test, sometime people bring in food and lay it out as a befe. When taking your test, like any competition or show you have only FIVE minutes to warm up on ice so use it wisely! Depending what level and how many judges in total show up, you usually have 2-3 if not more. When testing is happening it is quiet place, so don't be yelling across the rink. During testing you are allowed to go back to your coach a few times when they are writing in your comments and scores, your coach will tell you you did good, you did bad, or what to remember for the next move. When doing the test you also have to start from a complete stop for every move you do, this way the judges can see that you are either pushing or not. If you mess up you have one reskate only, unless it's freeskate testing then in this case I believe you have two. Once you have finished testing you wait a couple minutes and wait to see your score, there is a minimum amount of points you have to reach in order to pass, the more points you have to earn as you reach higher levels, if you have to have at least 16 points and you only have 15.5, well sorry it means they have circled retry, on the form it will have boxes of the points they give you, comments and finally they circle pass or retry, and theres you moves test!
Ice Skating
Thursday, July 7, 2016
Friday, June 10, 2016
Freestyle 4 Requirements
Hello everyone, and happy skating, today I am going to show you the freestyle 4 requirements, you are now at one of the biggest sprout outs at ice skating at a level because you are now going from half rotation jumps to single rotation jumps. The required spin can only get harder to but, I think you are ready to take one the challenge. The required moves
- Loop jump
- Flip jump
- Half loop
- Sit spin
- Dance sequence
Important Ice Skating Vocab Words
Hello ice skaters and welcome back to another post, today I am going to show you a bunch of important and common vocab ice skaters use, that you should definitely know as a beginner or if you decide to start ice skating. So lets get started
- Edges- edges are not just a move but, edges are used all the time in skating. In skating there are two kinds of edges, your inside and outside. Picture this put your feet shoulder with apart then with your feet lean in, this is called your inside, now put your feet shoulder with apart again and lean to your outside, this is your outside edge. Edges are commonly used in moves in the field and dance sequences where you will be going from an inside to an outside back and forth in one kind of move, or there are moves practicing one of the edges.
- Rotation-rotation is used for jumping in ice skating, NOT revolutions, which is used for something else! Rotations is the amount of time in the air such as a waltz jump is half of a rotation which means the skater takes off and jumps half of a full rotation, if you watch ice skating on TV, you will notice that most of them are doing triples if not quads also depending on gender, when they are doing triple they are doing three rotations.
- Revolutions-revolutions are used in spinning, when you see someone spin each time they complete one full circle in a spin that counts as one revolution. Yet spins are hard to count by revolution unless you got a slow spinner at your rink, some spins like the scratch spin as soon as you wind up and start spinning 3-5 revolutions are pretty automatic. Some skaters even try to count how many revolutions they make it in a spin!
- Moves in the Field- moves in the field is a king of test referring to the USFS company, this test looks at your ability to do certain kind of moves involving edges (explained above). They look at your edge quality mostly, in moves in the field you are able to move up if you pass but note when taking the test you have judges and they are tougher on you as you go up in levels. There is also a freeskate which they look at your jumps and spins through out a program, you must pass the moves test before the freeskate.
- Jumps/spins- jumps and spins may seem like an obvious vocab, but people who skate ask a figure skater can you do tricks once they see that the figure skater can do jumps and spins. Of course as the figure skater is thinking what tricks?, I am not a dog. So think of jumps as if you were just trying to to touch your roof from the ground well you got to jump to reach it unless you are tall or your roof is short. Same with spins if you see people turning around really fast in a centered position they are probably spinning of some sort.
- Traveling- traveling is defined as a spin that does not finish where it started, you can usually spot on ice because it leaves a trace that looks like a tornado, the opposite of traveling would be centered (defined below). When a skater travels you can see that they are moving away from their circle. Imagine standing right next to someone spinning if you notice they are moving away from you they are traveling. Even if you were a distance from someone spinning and they are getting close to you they are traveling.
- Centered/centering- centering is used as a term in spinning. A centered spin you can easily spot looking at the marks on ice. If you look closely, a centered spin should leave the marking looking like circles over lapping circles creating one big circle. You can also say that a centered spin is a spin that starts in one place and finishes where it started. You can see through person, if you watch someone spin, look carefully know where they start do they finish where they started or are they traveling?
Freestyle 3 Requirements
Hello welcome back to the ice skating blog and today I am going to go over the freestyle 3 requirements, now you are getting into more complex things such as harder elements, and harder dance sequences, unfortunately I do not know these dance sequences or forgot them so I can't really help you there. You will need
- Salchow
- Change foot spin
- Dance Sequence
- Back Spiral
- Toe loop
- Back pivot
Thursday, June 9, 2016
Preliminary Freeskate Test Requirements
Hey guys and welcome back to another post, in todays post I will be talking about preliminary freeskate test requirements, this test is overall quite simple and is all the basic jumps and spins you learn through out the following ISI levels, freestyle 1-4. Here are the list of moves you will need
- Waltz Jump
- Salchow
- Loop
- Flip
- Waltz Jump-toe loop combo
- One foot (can do Scratch, three revs.)
- Sit spine (three revs.)
- Through out the program you should have some of the moves
Freestyle 2 Requirments
Hello and welcome back to another post! Today I am going talk about freestyle 2 requirements, in this level there is more to learn you will need to know
- Ballet jump
- Half toe wally
- One foot spin
- Dance sequence
- Half lutz
Freestyle 1 Requirements
Hey guys me here again, today I am going to talk about the freestyle 1 requirements. This is a pretty big step up, first of all this is your first real jump, and spin you will be learning! Wow you are getting so advanced now, anyway here are the requirements you will need for this level.
- Waltz Jump
- Two foot spin
- Back edges
- Pivot
- Spiral
- Half Flip
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