Friday, July 31, 2009

How to inline skate?

hey guys i got this nice pair of skatesi i jsut dont know how to.. how do i?? is their a site seeing hoe to do it or a video please tell me.

How to inline skate?
The Rollerblade web site (http://www.rollerblade.com/home/index.ph... has some basic animated online lessons.





Liz Miller has written a good book "Get Rolling" with details on all the basic skills. A lot more information than you can get in a video. http://www.getrolling.com/lizbooks.html





There are some parts of the form that are not obvious you can practice for years (like I did) and then improve suddenly when some of them are pointed out to you by a real instructor.





If you have a local inline skating club in your area, they can help give you pointers.
Reply:Do your self a favor. If you don't know how to skate spend the money on the knee pads, gloves and wrist guards. Maybe even a helmet.


They can be cumbersome but during the breaking-in period, that would you not the skates, they could save you a lot of grief and possibly a trip to the hospital.





Then strap your skates on and practice, practice, practice.





Good Luck and have fun.
Reply:inline skating is all about practice. im sure there are video's that will teach but that does not beat the trial and error.
Reply:There are many ways to learn to inline skate. So choose a method that will work in your lifestyle and go for it.





The best way to learn is to sign up for basics skills classes at a local skating rink, with a recreational skating program, with a speed team or with a certified independent skating school or instructor. These programs will give you the foundation for any type of skating you may want to try including: recreational, fitness, aggressive, freestyle slalom, speed, hockey, figure (yes inline figure skating) and more. Nothing will replace the "real person lesson" thing.





Your next choice would be books, videos and internet information. Many of the inline skating and speed sites offer great information, contacts for lessons and training and opportunities to network with other skaters. If you learn this way, skate with friends so you will know if what you are doing is right. We never look the way we think we do.





Practice, practice, practice. Whether you get formal training or self-instruct, you'll only get as good as how hard and how often you try. All training should go hand-in-hand with protective gear, by the way.



Hotel reviews

No comments:

Post a Comment