Hey Leon, thanks heaps for making this video! Can you recommend any parks around the inner west or city that are good for learning these tricks? I found a park in the mountains called Melrose Jr skate park which looks cool but its a long way to go! Thanks dude, love your channel, I dont have to drive around looking! :)
Thanks for watching man! The skatepark in Currans hill or Waterloo skatepark have perfect small little quarter pipes to learn on if they are anywhere near your area?
Yeah that's weird man, it usually takes people a long time to learn crooked grinds on a ledge but you've done it the other way around lol Still sick though!
Should you lift your back leg/knee/foot to be able to lift the back wheels of the ramp and into the air when balancing on the coping or when putting the front wheels on the deck?
The weight stays on your back leg but you lift your front leg on the way up into the stall and then again to lift your wheels back over and into the ramp
4 місяці тому
@@LeonPaxton Thanks, but I was wondering about the actual rocking part, where both wheels are in the air and the board is balancing on the coping. How do you get into that position?,,Just like you do several times in the first seconds of this video.
Oh sorry! Yes once you lift up into the 'rock' position your momentum will lead you forward to the point where your back wheels come off of the ramp and you shift more of the weight on your front foot but it's only for a split second before putting the weight back down on your back foot so you can lift your front wheels back over and into the ramp. Hopefully that makes sense lol
4 місяці тому
@@LeonPaxton Ok, so it's almost like you're "braking" when you straighten out your front leg to put the front wheels down. But your body and your board wants to continue to move forward, so you have to absorb that motion somehow. I think you do that by lifting/bending the back leg, which will make the back wheels come up into the air. If that's how it works, it actually makes sense. I re-watched the beginning of your video frame by frame and it definitely looks like your lifting/bending your back leg after/while you straighten out your front leg. Thanks again for helping me understand :)
You're basically rolling back down the quarter pipe fakie as if you would just rolling up and coming back down (without the rock the fakie) The only difference is you're putting more pressure & weight on your back foot as you're coming out of the rock to fakie to get your front wheels back over the coping and into the ramp. You don'y need to emphasise this movement too much though and your weight will still be centred across your board just with that little bit more pressure on the back foot. Hopefully that makes sense lol
What trick have you been trying to learn in a quarter pipe lately?
My friend showed me how to BS salad stall, I want to start working on back side disasters next.
BS disasters coming up 👌🏼
Hey Leon, thanks heaps for making this video! Can you recommend any parks around the inner west or city that are good for learning these tricks? I found a park in the mountains called Melrose Jr skate park which looks cool but its a long way to go! Thanks dude, love your channel, I dont have to drive around looking! :)
Thanks for watching man!
The skatepark in Currans hill or Waterloo skatepark have perfect small little quarter pipes to learn on if they are anywhere near your area?
@@LeonPaxton awesome thanks dude. I’m in Ashfield so Waterloo isn’t to far away. Currans I’ll check it out l8tr sk8tr :)
For some reason I just can't do transition tricks.
Kinda funny, can do crooked grinds on a ledge but a rock to fakie? Nah lol
Yeah that's weird man, it usually takes people a long time to learn crooked grinds on a ledge but you've done it the other way around lol
Still sick though!
Ayeee gonna love this new transition tricks series 🔥
Thanks man!
Any tricks in particular you want to learn?
dope vid !!
Thank you 🙏🏽
What park is that?
St. Helen's Park skatepark in Western Sydney dude
Should you lift your back leg/knee/foot to be able to lift the back wheels of the ramp and into the air when balancing on the coping or when putting the front wheels on the deck?
The weight stays on your back leg but you lift your front leg on the way up into the stall and then again to lift your wheels back over and into the ramp
@@LeonPaxton Thanks, but I was wondering about the actual rocking part, where both wheels are in the air and the board is balancing on the coping. How do you get into that position?,,Just like you do several times in the first seconds of this video.
Oh sorry! Yes once you lift up into the 'rock' position your momentum will lead you forward to the point where your back wheels come off of the ramp and you shift more of the weight on your front foot but it's only for a split second before putting the weight back down on your back foot so you can lift your front wheels back over and into the ramp. Hopefully that makes sense lol
@@LeonPaxton Ok, so it's almost like you're "braking" when you straighten out your front leg to put the front wheels down. But your body and your board wants to continue to move forward, so you have to absorb that motion somehow. I think you do that by lifting/bending the back leg, which will make the back wheels come up into the air. If that's how it works, it actually makes sense. I re-watched the beginning of your video frame by frame and it definitely looks like your lifting/bending your back leg after/while you straighten out your front leg. Thanks again for helping me understand :)
Embarrassingly enough I really suck at all transition tricks 😅Gonna have to use this ramp series to up my game :P
Haha all good man, I got you 😉
Any trick suggestions you'd want to learn?
Any tips on balance and where to put the body weight on the way back? (pretty much dropping in fakie)
You're basically rolling back down the quarter pipe fakie as if you would just rolling up and coming back down (without the rock the fakie) The only difference is you're putting more pressure & weight on your back foot as you're coming out of the rock to fakie to get your front wheels back over the coping and into the ramp. You don'y need to emphasise this movement too much though and your weight will still be centred across your board just with that little bit more pressure on the back foot. Hopefully that makes sense lol
Great video, great tips.
Thanks heaps dude! 🙏🏼
I can get this at the small quarter pipe at Cherrybrook but no where else 😔
That's alright man, just keep practicing and getting your confidence up then you'll be able to hit bigger quarters in no time 🙌🏼
@@LeonPaxton thanks bruv, I wouldn't mind seeing a review of Cherrybrook as well please.
@@mattdbf Sweet, I'll add that to the list as well 👍🏽