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How to Skate on Wooden Planks
How to safely skate on the type of wooden planks
bridges and boardwalks are made of, that have
spaces your inline skates can get wedged inside.
The Disney Inline Marathon has a section
of wood planks that are slippery when wet and
tricky for beginners when dry.
Why Wooden Planks Can Be Dangerous
Inline skates are much better than quad roller skates
at handling cracks in the road that run across a skater's
path. I have rolled across railroad ties many times in
my inline skates, with no problem at all. It's the cracks
running in the same direction you are skating that you
need to worry about. Two of the most frequently
encountered cracks of this type are (1) the crack that
runs down the center of many city sidewalks, and
(2) wooden planks on a bridge or a boardwalk. If your
skate wheels get lodged in those cracks, you can be
immediately thrown to the ground without any warning.
Wooden planks can be especially tricky to skate on because
the spaces between the planks are often wider than a skate wheel.
On a surface like the one above, try to avoid skating on the 4 center boards,
and especially keep your skates away away from the spaces between those boards.
Skating on the horizontal planks on either side of those 4 boards should
require no special techniques other than (perhaps) pushing slightly harder
than you would on very smooth asphalt, but if you skate on the four planks
in the middle you need to be very careful to avoid getting your
inline skate wheels stuck between the planks.
Three Safe Ways to Skate on Wooden Planks
When you skate on wooden planks, you need to use a skating stride
that will not allow your skate wheels to become lodged in the cracks
between the planks. Here three different ways to accomplish this:
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Skate with your toes pointed out to the sides, so your skates will
move diagonally across the planks. The idea is to make sure your
skates are never parallel to the planks of the skating surface. I
call this striding method the "duck skate" and it's the same technique
I use to avoid sliding backwards when I'm skating up a steep hill.
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Another method I have used on a wooden bridge is centering each of
my skates on one of the planks, and propel myself forward by grabbing
the side rail of the bridge and pulling myself along, without moving
my feet at all (not the most efficient method, but it works).
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My person favorite method is to keep my skates together, but skate
across the planks first to the left, and then to the right,
"slaloming" diagonally, back and forth across the planks, so my
skate wheels can never get lodged between the boards. This method
works very well as long as your wheels are never parallel to the
planks, even when you reverse your slalom skating direction.
(I usually reverse direction by doing a little pivot-hop, leaving
my toes on the ground and pivoting quickly with my heels up).
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None of these methods is difficult. The hardest part is remembering
to use one of them whenever you are skating on a surface that has
large cracks running in the same direction you are skating.
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How to Get Started on Inline Skates
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