If you want to get started with skateboarding, don't be intimidated by the variety of tricks. The fact is that many of them are performed on the basis of less complex, but no less important tricks. The basis of skateboarding is in fact just one trick - Ollie (Ollie). Having mastered and honed this trick, you will quickly learn the rest.
Instructions
Step 1
Tall ollie looks great, so every beginner skater wants to learn this trick. And there is nothing complicated here, you just need to follow some tips.
Step 2
Accelerate, just not much. Place the foot of your leading foot close to the front bolts or in the middle of the board deck. Place your jogging foot on the tail (the back of the board). Bend your knees, focus, and get ready to jump.
Step 3
An important component of an allie is the click movement. A sharp jerk, a kick (or push) with a jogging foot on the tail of the skateboard and the next sharp push off the ground along with the board immediately after pressing - this is a click. Push off only with the jogging foot. Then the nose of the board will rush up first. The height of the trick depends precisely on the strength and sharpness of the click.
Step 4
The extraction immediately follows the click. This movement is done after lifting the tail of the deck off the ground and lifting the nose of the board to extend your board. Stretching is the second key element of the ollie and is the up-and-down movement of the foot of the dominant foot, turned inward, over the skin of the snowboard. It is thanks to this movement that the board comes off the surface.
Step 5
Once you've mastered the click and draw, all you have to do is master the touchdown. It's not hard. Try to put your feet in the area of the bolts when landing, then the probability of board breakage (this also happens) is reduced to almost zero. Control the center of gravity of your body during flight so that it does not fall on the center of the skateboard. But you shouldn't lean back or forward too much - your board may fly out from under your feet upon landing or (even worse) break.