Yes, it would be great if you could come to next ECS, ride the original and make some turns with me or with our extremecarving instructors.
Since you say you are a "beginner", you should have asked some advices about the board from other Swoarders here. The board is even more important than the setup!
For an equivalent or even better price you would have got a quasi custom Swoard in a choice among 3 sizes and 5 flexes (!!), and not only 2 sizes for zero flex choice! It's crucial that the board matches your height and, above all, your weight if you want no limitation in your progression. The flex is really important, as well as the torsional stiffness whose distribution is tuned accurately thanks to our
ATC Matrix technology. In this way the Swoard can carve at any angulations, and also perfectly at 90° (the edge nearly vertical to the surface of the piste) what is the real technological challenge. It is possible to lay down on frontside with a door or any snowboard

but the Swoard is a dream for the easiness and the smoothness it gives, as well as on the backside.
I'm sorry to tell you that your board is not an extremecarving board and that it has not been developed by extremecarvers. It's just a good carving board and all its weaknesses are known. For examples:
- All the pictures you can see on the vendor's Web site are not laid turns. We mainly see the hand touching the snow, rarely the elbow and never the armpit. However the (Greek?) snow looks wet and thus forgiving: it should not be difficult to lay down in such conditions. At the last ECS, I saw half of the participants who were much better. Look at the pictures and videos
here.
- The vendors of your board are thus not extremecarvers but just carvers. They have never contributed to the development of the ride technique and were unknown till recently. Worse: they write sometimes big mistakes about a discipline they don't master. They are good snowboarders of course, there is no problem, but they are not specialists and not as good as many guys I saw during the last ECS.
- "Developing" a board on Greek snow during short seasons with a factory which is located thousands of miles away (in USA) is a big inconvenient. The tester is not a shaper and not an extremecarver. The builder is not an extremecarver neither, though he is doing a good job.
- They show NO video. I can't believe that our "Opus 1" has been shot 9 years ago already (winter 1999-2000), while we still don't see anything from them.
Sorry to be so frank, but that's facts. You should have asked first.
But don't worry, for sure you will have fun and you will progress at carving on good snow. For normal carving there are no bad alpine boards nowadays. As well as the freecarve boards for soft boots. The sport is mature. Then, to go further and stop being limited, come back here.

I have got e-mails from people who have switched back to Swoard. So feel free to write me an e-mail when you want.
Patrice Fivat