The first five years of skating, my progress was very slow. I was talking Freestyle group lesson and the first 2 years I didn't practice at all, later I started practicing one hour per week. I realized, if I wanted more, I needed more practice time and a better, way better, technique. Just to be proven right about lacking technique, I hurt my left ankle. I stopped doing jumps and spins and as I didn't know MITF (Moves In The Field) exercises at that point, I was just skating around. An older skater offered to teach me Ice Dancing pattern dances. Unfortunately she was teaching me mostly the steps in the pattern, not the skating basics technique (edges and turns), that is the foundation of ice dancing.
At this point I started some private lessons with a 17 years young lady that I knew from my Freestyle group classes asking her to teach me flow on ice. She started me on MITF exercises. It was also the first time I went on practice ice, very crowded and intimidating, but eye opening about how young skaters train. Shortly, they take multiple group lessons (Freestyle, MITF and Ice Dancing) and at least one private lesson weekly, and they practice every day. They are also in the syncro team for their level, and they meet twice a week for that.
My young coach was a very accomplished ice dancer and she started teaching me a little of the basics. I also got into a Ice Dancing group lesson summer session, that was full during the rest of the year as it's a mandatory class for the syncro teams. The Ice Dancing class instructor was a national medalist, amazing skater and very thoughtful teacher. Actually my young coach was her student. I did a couple of ice dancing private lessons with the Ice Dance instructor too. Then some private lessons with a young man that was her student, in order to skate the dances with a partner. It was an exciting time, I was discovering so much! It was also a humbling time, as I started to realize I basically didn't know anything about skating :( Then, in the fall both my young coach and young dance partner moved away.
A little over a year ago, in January 2017, I started lessons with my current coach. He is an experienced coach specialized in ice dancing and he also partners his students for ice dance tests. I approached him asking to help me test the first 3 pattern dances. But I liked his very methodical approach and the fact that he also teaches MITF and Free Style, so I choose to have him as my only coach and to commit to a lesson per week. He first asked me about my goals. I said I wanted to skate better, of course... I wanted to look like the strong skaters I saw at the rink not in terms of jumps but I wanted their flow and confidence on ice. My coach said that that is called "power" and it's very difficult for an adult skater to get. We developed a lesson and training plan following the standard track testing for ice dance and MITF. The focus is in acquiring the knowledge for that level not to pass the tests. I've started to take 2 private lessons and skate 5 days a week. We tried to include FS but I wasn't able to find the time to train it methodically.
So here is were I stand:
Ice Dancing:
Preliminary pattern dances ( Dutch Waltz, Canasta Tango, Rhythm Blues) standard, I passed in January 2017
Pre Bronze pattern dances (Cha Cha, Swing, Fiesta Tango), standard, I passed in March 2017
Bronze
pattern dance Hickory Hoedown - passed in January 2018. I'm close in testing the
remaining 2 dances at this level, when the injury will allow.
Bronze pattern dance Willow Waltz, standard, I passed in December 2018 (update)
Ice
dance is harder than it looks and than I expected. The thinks I'm
working
on continuously are edges and steps based on edges (chasses,
progressives, swing rolls forward and backward), posture, speed and
power, dance 3- turns and inside and outside mohawks.
MITF:
Pre-Preliminary, standard, I
passed in March 2017
Preliminary, standard - in November 2017.
I think I'm close in testing the third level, Pre-Juvenile,
all the coach is asking is more power.
What this covers is
stroking, edges, forward and backward crossovers in different
presentations, forward and backward circle 8 edges, all kinds of 3
turns, each test level asking for a better execution (forward outside
and inside 3 turns, power forward outside 3 turns, backward outside and
inside 3 turns), forward spirals on outside and inside edge, inside
mohawks, power pulls.
Freestyle:
From my group lessons I'm confident in the forward pivot, shoot the duck, lunge... that's it.
With
my private coach we covered a little bunny hops, waltz
jump, Salchow, half flip, forward one foot spin, forward scratch
spin and we started the backspin.
Adult Pre-Bronze Freestyle test, I passedin March 2019 (update)
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