View Full Version : is there a trick...
is there a trick/skill that is as difficult to learn as it was to learn how to ride?
i realise this is a question that may have phrases like 'the eye of the beholder' and 'paradigm shift' bandied about with great abandon
i'm just curious to see how people feel about this issue
James_please02
2002-12-09, 05:30 PM
i thought wheel walking was a trick like that.
you gradually work up from not even getting your feet on then 1 metre, 2 metres.....and so on. Its taken me longer to learn it, i still can't do it propally, than it took me to learn to ride.
that might just be me
harper
2002-12-09, 05:59 PM
Wheel walk. It has probably taken me longer to learn to wheel walk than it originally took me to learn to ride.
jagur
2002-12-09, 06:37 PM
i think gliding and coasting are up there.
yoopers
2002-12-09, 08:32 PM
For the longest time, I've been trying to look handsome while riding but the trick just isn't coming along very well.
Bruce
I was thinking along the lines of wheel walking too... I still can't go more than a few metres, despite having been trying for weeks. On the other hand, in terms of hours I don't know... I don't practise wheelwalking much...
Phil, just me
john_childs
2002-12-09, 10:26 PM
Originally posted by phil
I was thinking along the lines of wheel walking too... I still can't go more than a few metres, despite having been trying for weeks. On the other hand, in terms of hours I don't know... I don't practise wheelwalking much...
Phil, just me
I practiced wheel walking for about 3 minutes on Sunday. It seems to be taking me ages to learn to wheel walk. I've been at it for over 7 months with very little to show for it. It seems that practicing for a few minutes every couple of weeks doesn't cut it.
I think the thing that needs to be mentioned is:
When you were first learning, you were so dedicated because until you learned, you couldn't ride.
Now, if you try to, say, wheelwalk, after 5 minutes of trying, if you don't get it, you can still ride away and do something else.
This is what I nortice about myself as I learn new things.
Maybe this isn't the case with everyone
U-Turn
2002-12-10, 04:24 AM
Hmmmm. I thought ALL the tricks took weeks and months to learn; they do for me. *scratches head*
:(
:confused:
andrew_carter
2002-12-10, 07:13 AM
I think the thing that needs to be mentioned is:
When you were first learning, you were so dedicated because until you learned, you couldn't ride.
Now, if you try to, say, wheelwalk, after 5 minutes of trying, if you don't get it, you can still ride away and do omething else.
This is what I nortice about myself as I learn new things.
Maybe this isn't the case with everyone
That's very true. I've been really lazy with my wheel walking, but I think it's slowly getting there. I'm looking forward to trying to glide and then eventually coast and I think I'll have quite a bit of trouble with coasting in particular (naturally).
Andrew
MUni14052
2002-12-14, 05:13 PM
Wheel Walking!! I'm still learning!!
johnfoss
2002-12-17, 07:06 PM
Wheel walking wasn't that bad. I don't remember if it took me longer than learning to ride, but I didn't learn to ride in anything that could be called a "normal" way so it didn't matter.
But wheel walking **backward**? That's a definite winner. Not any fancy way (some of which are easier), just the regular way with your feet on the front part of the tire, pulling toward you with very little traction. I spen what seemed like a whole summer working on that one.
register
2002-12-21, 12:34 AM
I would have to say gliding. I say that because you have to learn to wheel walk, then with one foot, and finally Gliding. Infact Gliding took longer I think, but the strange thing is I can glide and wheel walk with one foot, but not regular with two feet. I really have know idea why, but from the start wheel walking with one foot seemed easier.
Checkernuts
2002-12-21, 03:20 AM
Whats the difference between costing and gliding again?
U-Turn
2002-12-21, 04:58 AM
Costing is where you think about gliding that steep hill ahead of time and determine how much skin you will have to pay.
Max_Dingemans
2002-12-21, 05:16 AM
but really, gliding is with a foot dragging on the tire, and coasting is with nothing touching the tire or moving parts.
gluteous maximus
2002-12-21, 04:44 PM
Not taking my frustration out on the poor unicycle has to be the most difficult trick in my repertoire. (Excuse my French!)
I guess the rest of you are just more gentle and forgiving than I am...
... RIGHT?
James_please02
2002-12-22, 06:26 PM
i say that if the uni's thrown you off then it deserves getting battered by its rider, it's only fair. Fair punishment:)
U-Turn
2002-12-22, 07:34 PM
Excuse my French! Glutes - I thought y'all spoke Latin! What gives?
:confused:
gluteous maximus
2002-12-23, 01:23 PM
Uway-Urntay,
At'sthay ywhay Iway aidsay, "Ardonpay ymay Enchfray!".
Actually, "repertoire" comes to English via French via the Latin repertorium, so, I should have said, "... the most difficult trick in my repertorium.", and "too bad if you don't understand Latin!"
Ownay, aren'tway ouyay orrysay ouyay askedway?
U-Turn
2002-12-23, 11:39 PM
I'll sit on you... and your little dog, too!Iway illway itsay onway itway irstfay !way
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