Friday, July 14, 2006

RM with Naomi and Peter


This was the last day of Skate Camp, so I imposed on them for a group shot. Nice, nice!

Monday, July 10, 2006

Vakhtang Murvanidze


RM with Vakhtang Murvanidze. Murve is the former national champion of Georgia, in men's singles. He made an impression on the international scene as a real showman with a fabulous and original skating style.

Skate Camp

RM with Peter Tchernyshev.

Skate Camp


RM with Naomi Lang. She's the former US Ice Dance national champion, with her partner, Peter Tchernyshev.

Sunday, July 02, 2006

Skate Camp - Sunday

Sunday 8am. I am SO TIRED. Off to skate!

Sunday 9:45am. Just got out of Naomi and Peter’s class. We began by doing edge work. Forward and backward lunges, focusing on edges and flow. Then on to crossrolls. The forward ones went okay, but backwards? Thank goodness for Naomi, because she helped me figure them out. Well, sort of, anyways.

Sunday 10:45am. We’ve begun to think about choreography, and how to approach our skating with a sense of musicality. Of course, in order to do that, Peter had us disco dancing on the ice. I am not skilled. But then again, none of us really were. We started to get it better when Naomi and Peter had us doing simple crossovers and chasses, but with us interpreting tempo and timing from the music that was playing. That was great.

Sunday a bit later. I just got out of stretching class. Christine is an amazing teacher. She really knows how to make these stretches real, explaining exactly how each one is relevant to my skating. Although I’m pretty bendy for someone of my size and age, there were a couple of stretches she gave us, for hip flexors, that I was usless at. I obviously have a lot to do in that area!

Sunday 11:45am. Back on ice for compulsory dance class, which we had to abandon when we realised that we were sharing the ice with the pairs. The pairs are awesome to watch, really powerful skaters, but sharing the ice with them meant that we couldn’t complete our patterns. It ended up being fine, because we instead played with choreography. Peter and Naomi were trying to get us to interpret emotion through movement. For example, he gave us the emotion “anger”, and we, as a group, had to try to get that across in our skating. We were doing fine until, in the middle of our dance, two of us crashed into each other and both went flying! Once we got over the shock, everyone burst out laughing. So much for “anger”.

Sunday 12:45pm. The staff sat as a panel, and we were able to ask them questions. I’m not shy, so I piped right up. I asked what they found to be the differences between teaching adults and teaching young skaters. Edward said that adults are very intense. They work hard. He did say that one of the things he sees with some adults is a fear of falling, which an adult must overcome if they are to progress as a skater. Zuzanna said that adults WANT to be there, where sometimes with young kids, they don’t, and that can be hard to deal with as a coach.

Sunday 2:00pm. Naomi split the class into two - the more advanced dancers went with Peter to work on their CDs, and we stayed with Naomi to work on the lower level dances. This was wonderful, because we really got to focus on some of those tricky moves in the Rhythm Blues, Swing and Fiesta. Naomi has a way of explaining things where I totally get it, and am able to fix things that I’ve been struggling with.

Last we had our practice session. This was an open skate, held on two rinks, where we got to ask any coach anything we liked. I did end up meeting Vakhtang, and I'm glad. I commented on his performance at the Ice Theater of NY a few years ago, when he'd done this amazingly hot and funky tango. He looked chuffed that I remembered, and even did a bit of a riff off the number for me. I skipped back and forth between the two rinks - I think I was afraid that I’d miss something. I practiced some of the moves that I’d learned, got the email addresses of some of my fellow skaters, and grabbed some quick snapshots of myself with Vakhtang (!), and Peter and Naomi (!!)

The weekend is over, and all I can say is wow, and wow, and wow. I’d been nervous about attending, but I’m so glad that I went. In fact, I’m already trying to figure out ways to get there again next year!

Saturday, July 01, 2006

Skate Camp - Saturday

11:15am. I just got out of Naomi and Peter’s “Compulsory Dance Moves” class, where they did a review of some of the elements that are required in the CDs. Of course, for me, some of those moves were quite new! I think the hardest were the series of linking three turns that we did. My left forward outside three is fairly strong, but my right forward outside three? Next to non-existent. Still, I managed to make it through.

The best part of this class was doing the chasses. I love chasses, although I find them a challenge to do well. Peter was extremely helpful and patient, taking me by the hand (huge grins on my part) and helping me learn a new style of doing them. I normally do them quite upright, but Peter taught me how to do them with more knee bend. That really helped. And I learned a new one – what I’d call a back cross chasse, where you put your foot down behind your skating foot. That was difficult at first, but I caught on quickly.

My favorite part of the class, though, was when Naomi had to teach Peter how to do an open Mohawk. Apparently, for Peter, it had been a while. Then we all got to do a variety of types of Mohawk. Fun? Well, sort of. Fun and challenging.

12:20pm. We just did an hour’s worth of two elements I’d never done – Chocktaws and Twizzles. The Chocktaws were great, once Naomi showed me what the heck one was. I was shaky, but she showed me the basics, so I could practice this new move.

But the twizzles…those were AWESOME. I love them. I’ve seen people do them, but never tried myself. I’m not very good at them, I’m sure, but they are so fun. I felt so free. They ROCK.

Yesterday was really the first day of camp for me. I’d been at work earlier in the day, but I was useless. All I could think about was the Skate Camp. I’d do five minutes of work, then spend the next ten thinking of Peter Tchernyshev. I was hopeless. I was so excited, I was literally bouncing in my chair. When I got to the rink, I introduced myself to every adult around me with a “So, are you here for the Adult Camp?” I met people from NY and NJ, from Boston, from Ohio, even from as far afield as Los Angeles and Canada.

It’s been great skating with so many adults. At my normal rink, I’m the only adult, so this has been a pleasure. And people at this camp are at all levels, from relative beginners, to high level skaters new to dance, to advanced dancers, to people like me, who are just okay.