Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Progression

So in my continuous search for new people to skate with, I posted about a skate session we would be having on the Burlington Vermont thread, in the Silverfish's New England forum. To my surprise, some one not only got back to me, but they actually showed up on time! Gunnar met Jack, and myself at Mallets Run on May 2nd, around 1 o'clock in the afternoon. Gunnar's preparedness was outstanding, and enthusiasm to learn refreshing. After gearing up, and going through safety protocol, we talked about skill level and limitations. Gunnar, before our sessions, I would consider a beginner, because he had all the basics, but lacked the intermediate skills like sliding. He showed great awareness of his surroundings, and never the bit heedless. All of these things contributed to his quick progression. In two days, Gunnar went from chirpy, stinkbug slides, to buttery drifts around corners. It was remarkable. Something that took me years to figure out, he gets in a matter of days. I think it's awesome.

It just proves that anyone can do this. It just takes some basic understanding, protective gear, and common sense. People don't deep sea dive with out their life support systems, commonly known as a Self Containted Underwater Breathing Apperatus, so why would you skate with out the proper protective gear? Gunnar was able to skate more, because the gear he was wearing protected him from harm when he fell, and falling is going to happen. Reduce your chances of injury, and greatly increase your skate longevity. With the proper gear, limits can be pushed, and confidence expanded, but don't let it get to your head. You are still mortal. Know your limits, and always maintain control of them. "Don't let your ego write checks your ass can't cash".

By the end of the first day, Gunnar had made a dozen of decent heel, and toe slides on his Landyachtz Evo, Bear852, with s9 goddess of speed wheels. He understood more about aerodynamics after doing some downhill runs with Jack, Tom, and myself. Since Jack is all of 110 pounds, I was bump-drafting him into the sweeper, so he could take it a bit faster. As the sun began to drop, Tom and I set up some slalom cones for a GS course. The cones were spaced a full road width apart, starting at 30 feet, and progessively reaching 50. Jack even got in on the slalom action, riding my LY drop speed, O-tangs, and loosey-goosey Venom barrel bushings. That was a great day. Day one of the Gunnar sessions.

Gunnar sessions: Day 2.
Kyle and I met Gunnar at Overloook Park, May 4th. We did a few warm up runs, Gunnar was more confident in his slides, and was hitting them at higher speeds. We then proceeded to the bike path, towards the White Barn. This was Gunnar's first time riding the bike path with some speed, and when he got the first major turn, he busts out the cleanest drift. The White Barn, with it's blind turns and sweeper, posed no problems for Gunnar. We posted up at the hairpin, and Gunnar was nailing one hand drifts around it. Kyle was floating around the hairpin, letting the back end of his surf bug swing out, as he leaned hard on his heelside. No hands needed.

Skate today because tommorow might rain.

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