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Post by Hair on Mar 26, 2007 16:58:04 GMT -5
How far do you have to go before you can claim that you can do a trick? Is there some kind of rule of thumb?
Example: I can hang five for two parking spaces consistantly. A good one will go three parking spaces, but that is few and far between for now, but I'm learning.
If some one were to ask me if I could do a hang five, I'd tell them "No". I'll say that I can do a hang five when I can glide about twenty parking spaces or until the bike just completely runs out of speed.
There are many other tricks that fall into this same category.
So, does a consistant two parking spaces qualify me as a "hang fiver"? What is the rule for claiming you can do a trick that really has no end?
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silver
New Freestyler
Posts: 35
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Post by silver on Apr 4, 2007 2:38:36 GMT -5
Being able to enter it, balance it, and come out of it qualifies it for me... I'd say 2 parking spaces would be enough. I just started on learning them around the end of last year... It's just starting to warm up again so I've been out riding, the best I can do is a 2 - 3 feet on a "good one." lol
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Post by icastel on Apr 6, 2007 1:24:10 GMT -5
You can do short ones, so it's good. Keep at it and you'll be going 3, then 4, 5, etc. spaces before you know it.
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Post by SoCalRider on Apr 17, 2007 17:21:32 GMT -5
Like Igor stated, just keep at them and you'll see yourself doing it longer and longer. You can say you can do a trick when you can get in, perform, and get out of a trick...but you can call yourself dialed or mastered when you can do it without thinking about it. Keep up the hard work!
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