Vertical Rollerskating

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Message 2702 (23. May. 2007 10:45) (Tree)

zorg
Broken elbow healing
Take care, pad yourself and maybe train on wood ramps, they absorb much more crash energy than concrete. Also on high structures, you often crash on the curve, ending in a long slide on the pads. In small ones, no space nor time to prepare the crash, mainly crash on the horizontal parts.

Have fun
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Robert Chase: Broken elbow healing (22. May. 2007 06:19)
 Hi all,

It has been so long for my elbow to heal. I had to wait several months, but I finally moved. I did a lot of lifting and my elbow held up great. I have been getting shooting pains though out my arm, but I think my elbow is finally ready for some skating. I just moved in with a roommate to reduce my costs and I live about a mile from a pretty nice public park. I stopped by three weeks ago and the bowl looked really good. I have not skated in four months and only had skated for a few months, when I broke my elbow. I skated inline till about eight years ago and then a while back I got on my quads. I was doing great till I broke my elbow doing a nothing trick. It's amazing how we can do flips and twists and crazy shit and then break something doing a footplant. This has been the worst injury of my life and cost me a lot of money and almost cost me my job. Now, I have a pair of custom skates waiting for me. I hate to say it, but where I live, it is embarrassing to rollerskate on the street. I am going to go to a park with a path and get used to my skates. Then, after I am comfortable, I will hit the skatepark. My new skates have wide trucks and an awesome plate that is about 1 inch from the wheels. I can't wait to grind and do some plate slides. I almost think I am better off doing flips because there is no way I will land on my elbow. Anyway, I will keep you posted. Oh, by the way...I was commenting to my new female roommate that there is a little dog next door that barks to much. She informed me that the people next door were not from here and were professional rollerbladers. I have no idea if they are hockey players or vert skaters, but I will find out. I hope they skate vert and I won't mind their dog. : ) Also, I had a friend take an old VHS tape of mine and make it a streaming video. As soon as I get it, then I will post it, if it is compatible. The tricks are really good, but lacking airs and grinds. It seems I could only do flips and other tricks like layback airs. I can't wait to get some feedback. If I could do airs and grinds, then, at the time, I would have been pretty good. I miss skating, but I will only give one more broken bone before I quit. I have bills to pay and I am old. I hope my next door neighbors skate vert and I will be in heaven. All the young people at work make fun of me because I rollerskate. I don't care because they don't understand, but it would be nice to have some skate partners. I will keep you posted. I want to skate tomorrow, but now I have to get used to vertical skates. I have never skated on wide trucks and a huge grind plate. Rollergirl hooked me up and I have not talked to her since, but I better say hello because she is awesome.

cya,

Robert
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zorg: Broken elbow healing (23. May. 2007 10:45)
 Take care, pad yourself and maybe train on wood ramps, they absorb much more crash energy than concrete. Also on high structures, you often crash on the curve, ending in a long slide on the pads. In small ones, no space nor time to prepare the crash, mainly crash on the horizontal parts.

Have fun
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Nelo: Broken elbow healing (6. Jun. 2007 15:35)
 Just get used to your vert rollerskates on flat first. Try to go fast (both forward and fakie) and make spins (180º and 360º's, also forward and fakie). When you master those, then hit a skatepark. As Zorg said (hello, Loic), it'd be better if you could rollerskate on wood wide ramps; they absorb pretty much the impacts. Learn first how to fall properly (sliding with your kneepads and elbow pads in forward and fakie fallings, mainly, but also you'd like to use wristwards or hand sliders). A helmet helps a lot. It's also important that your arms are capable of lift your own weight (so in a forward falling your hands can avoid hitting your face in the ground because of the body's inertia).

After that, you only have to be prudent and wise, and practice a lot. And rip the damn skatepark as there is no tomorrow!! (just kidding).

I think that your work mates are trying to convince themselves that is worth to live a gray sedentary life as theirs.

Have fun!

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