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Hi this SnowboardAddiction.com riding with Nev Lapwood and Dan Gerstner.
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Buttering on a snowboard & flat land tricks refer to playing around on your board while
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flexing and holding positions over the nose and tail. It gives you stuff to do when riding
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flat or boring terrain, or if there is no terrain park available.
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In this tutorial, we cover an introductory buttering trick, tail butter 180 out. Buttering
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tricks don't really have names, I've called this a tail butter 180 because that's the
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movement of this trick. Buttering is far easier on gentle slopes,
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rather than steep terrain. There's no rules to what you can or can't do, it's all about
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fun and style.
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Prerequisite techniques For this buttering trick, you have to have
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a few skills on lockdown first. You must be able to do ollies ....and nollies.
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You need to be able to hold the tail butter position while riding.
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You need to be able to jump 180s, and specifically 180s using counter rotation.
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The techiniques behind ollies, nollies and how to hold a tail press are all covered in
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our basic buttering vids. Tactics for learning 180s are covered in detail
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in our 180s tutorials so check that our first before trying to learn this trick.
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Tail Butter 180 The tail butter 180, is an introductory buttering
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trick and very achievable for riders new to buttering. This trick can be done with either
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a frontside 180, or a backside 180 out. Start with the frontside 180 as most riders find
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this easier.
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Step 1 Begin by jumping a few frontside 180s using
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counter rotation. Counter rotation is where your upper and lower body rotate against each
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other in the air. You can get the feeling of this by jumping
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180s with your board off. Either hold an object like a bar or pretend your holding something.
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Jump and do a 180. This is counter-rotation because during the trick, your upper body
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and lower body rotate against each other. After you understand the movement, use a more
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relaxed looking position.
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Step 2 Try this while riding on a flat slope. The
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key is to be in this position as you jump with your upper body facing forward and you
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lower body straight. Being in this position will allow you to counter-rotate the 180.
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Incorporate an ollie into this movement. Ollie counter-rotated 180.
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Practice these until you can snap the 180 quickly, you're then ready to add this to
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the butter.
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Step 3 Practice the basic tail butter position a
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few times. It's easier to nollie into any buttering trick on your tail.
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Small nollie, to hold a controlled stylish tail press, then pop an ollie out.
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You can do this with an ollie, but it's much harder to keep the nose of your board from
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slapping back to the ground. Try ollie into a tail butter and you'll see what I mean.
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In a clean pressed position, your nose should be lifting approximately 10cm or 4 inches.
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A small controlled press looks good. Trying to press the board too much is a common problem
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and is way harder to balance.
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Step 4 It's time to slap these stepping stones together
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to make actual buttering trick. Nollie tail butter, ollie frontside 180 out.
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The key get to making this work is your final body position right as you're popping the
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180.
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As you nollie into the tail butter, begin to open up your upper body. When you reach
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your maximum open position where your upper body is at an angle of 90 degrees or more
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away from your board, this is when you ollie and snap the front 1.
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You need to be slightly on your heel edge, your board may even turn slightly frontside
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while buttering before you 180. This is normal. You can slide it around as much as you desire.
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The whole trick should be one smooth movement with no delayed point or dead period.
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If you're having any forced movement or still period, then try doing the whole trick faster.
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Rotating your upper body as you nollie in, holding the pressed position for only a second
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then snapping the 180 out. One of the most important points is to just
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keep it smooth and stylish with no forced movements.
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Backside 180 out The exact same trick can be done ollieing
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a backside 180 out, to mix it up and build your skills.
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The only major difference is that a backside 180 uses what's called a blind landing as
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you land the trick. Blind landings are covered in detail in our 180s video.
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Step 1 Jump some backside 180s with your board off
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using counter-rotation to see how this feels. Your upper and lower body, rotate against
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each other to make the 180 happen. You can get the feel by holding onto something
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or an imaginary object. After you've got the basic technique, relax and let your body flow
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through this movement smoothly.
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Step 2 While riding, ollie and do a counter-rotated
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backside 180. Land blind and ride away before looking into your new direction of travel.
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A blind landing helps to make the trick look smooth and easy. It prevents you from reverting
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and allows you to ride away switch in a straight line.
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Step 3 For the full trick, nollie into a tail press,
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close your upper body into a wound up position, ollie and counter-rotate a backside 180 out.
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Land blind and ride away. The key to making this 180 easy is to use
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lots of counter rotation. Right as you ollie, your upper body needs to be 90 degrees or
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more offset from your board. The more wound up you are, the easier it'll be to perform
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the 180. You also need to be slightly on your toe edge
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and your board may have already started rotating a little. That's fine and happens naturally
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as a result of the direction your upper body is leading into.
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Style Style is important with all butters. They
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should look smooth, effortless and fun. When you're first learning these 2 tricks,
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keep the nollies in and ollies out small and controlled so that they're easy.
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As you get better and want to challenge yourself. Put more emphasis into every part of the trick.
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Pop your nollie harder to get more height. Emphasize the pressed position by sinking
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your hips down towards your tail. This will also bring the nose of your board higher from
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the ground. Spring from your tail ollieing a big 180 out.
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It'll take substantially more effort but will separate you from other riders making you
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stand out from the crowd. Smoothness and control is more important than
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the height and pop you get.
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Terrain Once you've learnt this trick you can take
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it to other terrain features. Rolls over knuckles and cat tracks are 2 fun
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spots to do these. Butter across the flat areas then pop your
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180 off the roll. It'll naturally give you a little extra height and hang time, which
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makes it feel good and look better too. These butters translate into the tail press
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front 1 and tail press back 1, which are intermediate rail and box tricks. The body positions are
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the exact same.
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Summary The tail butter 180 is a simple introductory
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buttering trick. If you practice your quick counter-rotated
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180s and balancing in the tail press position, then you should be able to easily tie them
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together for this trick. The key is your final body position right
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as you ollie the 180. Make sure your upper body is 90 degrees or more away from your
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board, which makes it easy to counter-rotate a full 180.
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Learn this both frontside and backside as it's an essential stepping stone to many other
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buttering tricks. You're riding with Nev Lapwood & Dan Gerstner
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SnowboardAddiction.com