I love how you break things down and go though the issues. Its a skill thay not many people that are "naturals"/"gifted" can do, normally people that can do it just "do it" and can't verbalise the process.
Thank you! The good news is I'm not one of those natural/gifted people, so I had to struggle through most of these learning processes and did things in very inefficient ways. Hopefully my tutorials can save others from unnecessary suffering 🙃🙃
This breakdown and drills are gold! Hope you’ll continue the series starting with basic skills (sit drop, swivel hips), how to connect them, and moving further to flipping and twisting skills!
I guess one common mistake that I see many doing and I do too is kind of traveling on the trampoline, I land on the slightly left side if I do a left twist, I guess it's all about timing. Thank for the tutorial! :)
Thank you! When you do many in a row, you can sort of predict where you're going to travel and try to almost gainer in the opposite direction to maintain your placement 🙃👊🏻
Thank you! I will at some point, but they’re probably pretty far off- my best advice for now is that Randy feels a lot like back triple full and vice versa- you can also treat it as a Rudi with a slightly slower flip and sustained twist. As for Jonah, do it as a ballout and really focus on staying square and extended for an uncomfortable amount of time, plus having a clear visual spot of the area behind your takeoff point, before you snap the flip 🙃👊🏻
@@ScottMcDonaldAcrobat what do you mean by do it as a ballout? It looks to me like a cradle off the wall to backflip once facing away from the wall but not sure if that's a good way to think about it
@@ScottMcDonaldAcrobat @ScottMcDonaldAcrobat I meant to say rudy actually, have baranis but don't quite understand how to add the extra full twist. Thank you for your videos, I have been doing trampwall for a few months and never would have gotten to where I am without them. Best tutorials out by far. I hope to come train with you in Vegas soon!
@@walkawalka4ni9 Ahhh sorry, I didn't realize you meant a walking Jonah on trampwall; I thought you were referring to just a regular Jonah from feet to feet on trampoline/floor- if that was the case, I would recommend learning it off your back at first, hence the ballout. It is indeed a cradle that continues into a backflip! You can think of it that way, as a full swan that stops twisting halfway through but keeps flipping, or even as a walking sideflip or barani with different timing. I'll make a proper tutorial for it at some point :)
@@walkawalka4ni9 Gotcha! I would recommend learning a front full as an intermediary. If you can back double full, a Rudi feels extremely similar, so those tricks are both great to learn in tandem. I'd say a big misconception with Rudi is the timing- you don't want to treat it as a regular barani then try to pull another twist after you finish the flip, as that will lead to overrotation (on the flip axis), but you also don't want to twist too early and stall yourself out. Ideally, as you add twists to any flip you want to flip proportionately slower, aiming to fit as much twisting as possible into the weightless phase/over the top. I'm not sure if that's helpful or not, but I'll also make a tutorial for Rudi at some point 🙃👊🏻
I love how you break things down and go though the issues. Its a skill thay not many people that are "naturals"/"gifted" can do, normally people that can do it just "do it" and can't verbalise the process.
Thank you! The good news is I'm not one of those natural/gifted people, so I had to struggle through most of these learning processes and did things in very inefficient ways. Hopefully my tutorials can save others from unnecessary suffering 🙃🙃
This breakdown and drills are gold! Hope you’ll continue the series starting with basic skills (sit drop, swivel hips), how to connect them, and moving further to flipping and twisting skills!
Thank you so much! I’m editing a seat drop tutorial right now and have a swivel hips one here:
ua-cam.com/video/_0xs2ktpZ0U/v-deo.html
I guess one common mistake that I see many doing and I do too is kind of traveling on the trampoline, I land on the slightly left side if I do a left twist, I guess it's all about timing. Thank for the tutorial! :)
Thank you! When you do many in a row, you can sort of predict where you're going to travel and try to almost gainer in the opposite direction to maintain your placement 🙃👊🏻
I love you so much bro
👊🏻🙃👊🏻
More efficient cat twists here I come
Ayyyyy 👊🏻🤓👊🏻
Awesome. Can you also do tutorials on how to do a randy and Jonah?
Thank you! I will at some point, but they’re probably pretty far off- my best advice for now is that Randy feels a lot like back triple full and vice versa- you can also treat it as a Rudi with a slightly slower flip and sustained twist. As for Jonah, do it as a ballout and really focus on staying square and extended for an uncomfortable amount of time, plus having a clear visual spot of the area behind your takeoff point, before you snap the flip 🙃👊🏻
@@ScottMcDonaldAcrobat what do you mean by do it as a ballout? It looks to me like a cradle off the wall to backflip once facing away from the wall but not sure if that's a good way to think about it
@@ScottMcDonaldAcrobat @ScottMcDonaldAcrobat I meant to say rudy actually, have baranis but don't quite understand how to add the extra full twist. Thank you for your videos, I have been doing trampwall for a few months and never would have gotten to where I am without them. Best tutorials out by far. I hope to come train with you in Vegas soon!
@@walkawalka4ni9 Ahhh sorry, I didn't realize you meant a walking Jonah on trampwall; I thought you were referring to just a regular Jonah from feet to feet on trampoline/floor- if that was the case, I would recommend learning it off your back at first, hence the ballout.
It is indeed a cradle that continues into a backflip! You can think of it that way, as a full swan that stops twisting halfway through but keeps flipping, or even as a walking sideflip or barani with different timing. I'll make a proper tutorial for it at some point :)
@@walkawalka4ni9 Gotcha! I would recommend learning a front full as an intermediary. If you can back double full, a Rudi feels extremely similar, so those tricks are both great to learn in tandem.
I'd say a big misconception with Rudi is the timing- you don't want to treat it as a regular barani then try to pull another twist after you finish the flip, as that will lead to overrotation (on the flip axis), but you also don't want to twist too early and stall yourself out.
Ideally, as you add twists to any flip you want to flip proportionately slower, aiming to fit as much twisting as possible into the weightless phase/over the top.
I'm not sure if that's helpful or not, but I'll also make a tutorial for Rudi at some point 🙃👊🏻