The 70′s are the fateful era that brought about one of the most popular sports that is sweeping the whole world, knocking it off its feet and sending it through the air (literally).
It was first introduced by surfers who would want to bring their love for hanging ten and shooting the tube back to dry land. Skateboarding was born out of the passion of some dedicated surfers for the sport. The first prototypes of the skateboard closely resemble that of its granddaddy.
A shorter version of a surfboard with wheels on an axle. Street surfing or skateboarding started its humble roots from riding up and down the street. With the contributions of guys like Alan Gelfand, Stacy Peralta, Tony Alva, Jay Adams, The Z-boys, Bones brigade, Steve Caballero, Rodney Mullen, Mike V, Tony Hawk and other skaters who in their own way made skate boarding one of the biggest subcultures in the world.
Skateboarding owes its popularity to the needs of some to be different. The culture of skateboarding is mostly about non-conformance, rebellion, no nonsense and the need for something more than the ordinary.
It was quite a hit for teens and other kids who found themselves misunderstood and ostracized because they won’t just say yes to everything.
In the early days of skateboarding there were only two requirements to be called a skater, one you needed to be fast and two you have to be brave. One of the earliest facets of riding a skateboard was bombing a hill. From a top an inclined street a skater would push forward with full force weaving through the incoming traffic.
Just like the game of “chicken” where the loser is the first one to deviate from the direct path. Bombing a hill means being brave enough to take a car head on and then dodging it a the last second. Stacy Peralta, Tony Alva, Jay Adams and the rest of the Zephyr skateboarding team or the Z-boys, were the forerunners of street skating.
Fancy moves and tricks on a surfboard infused with the mobility and large availability of hills in the West Coast made it possible for them to go on their hill bombing days. An exhilarating experience but a dangerous one.
Another special if not most colorful era of skateboarding is the free style era. Rodney Mullen, considered to be the god of freestyle skateboarding, gave freestyle it’s colorful and enchanting character.
When Alan Gelfand landed the first ever ollie in the world, Mullen was watching from high above his Olympus and is watching Gelfand trying to think of better ways of making the board fly. The kickflip, heelflip, hardflip, finger flip, pop shove-it, underflip, pressureflip, 360 flip, varial and other modern skateboarding tricks can be credited to the discovery of Mullen’s “Magic flip” the first real ollie kickflip.
In modern times, skaters are more inclined to perfecting a sequence of different tricks or a combo. Combos are two to three tricks performed in one fluid motion. One of the most common combos is the kickflip to 50-50 on a rail to kickflip out.
Combos are usually done to add difficulty to a sequence. Because of the increasing need for difficulty and variation, skaters have introduced the use of a contraption called the ramp. A ramp or a skate ramp is used to have more height and to ollie across a farther gap. An aide to achieve greater difficulty.
Ramps vary in design, the launch pad, pyramid contraption, funbox, grind box, gator pit, quarter-pipe, half-pipe and the big ramp. Each has a different function and each can make a run or a sequence more interesting and more exciting.
Matt Oconnor
http://www.articlesbase.com/sports-and-fitness-articles/how-skateboarding-became-so-popular-136856.html
#1 by Jackie Blue on July 6th, 2009
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Does anyone know when the skateboard first became popular?
I remember some of the neighborhood kids had them in the middle 60′s. Were there skateboards prior to the 1960s?
#2 by oldasshippie on July 6th, 2009
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That’s a good question!I can remember riding them in the 60s,they were called "Sidewalk Surfers"then.We road them down concrete drains beside the interstates!
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#3 by Genie on July 6th, 2009
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I’m not sure. Us kids got cheap ones in the mid 60′s and I fell flat on my back on the sidewalk. Knocked the wind outta me and no one was around; thought I was dying.
My older brother bought a nicer one and it had something akin to shock absorbers. Pretty cool.
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#4 by cincy_reaper on July 6th, 2009
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JB,your Q’s take me back.
We were skating by ’63 or ’64 in Ohio.
We all built our own boards. Mine was an old swing seat and a rollerskate screwed to it,front and back—the old metal skates you could put on your street shoes with a skate key. One could pull the skate in two parts and mount two wheels on each end of the board.
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#5 by Tara J 4 ZENNA on July 6th, 2009
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i would say late 70′s i was a skater i had a cool skate broad top of the line wheels and trucks.but i lived on a ranch and the only pavement was the drive way.but i would take my board to school and go boarding in town.my younger sister’s name is kato and i called her kater the skater or kato potato
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#6 by ? Shortstuff ? on July 6th, 2009
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My sons got into skateboards in the late 70′s. They weren’t allowed on a skateboard until they had all the necessary safety gear on, including a helmet.
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#7 by CurlyQ on July 6th, 2009
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1960 was the first time I saw or used one. They were called surfskates then and had metal wheels like those on roller skates. Hit one little crack in the sidewalk and head over heels you went!
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#8 by Ginger H on July 6th, 2009
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I still have my first skateboard. My Dad got it for me in 1964.
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#9 by abuelamah on July 6th, 2009
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I had one in the 60s ….Good question I have no idea
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#10 by adolphusguzman on July 6th, 2009
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Very early 60s, I still have the scars on my elbows!
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#11 by caves51 on July 6th, 2009
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I’m 57 and a gal. I’d never seen them before…. but I made "one" out of my old pair of metal ‘spring’-type skates. [they'd broke]
I nailed the rollers to the bottom of a 2"x4" piece of board and down I went on the driveway… and did pretty well on the curve to the sidewalk!
That had to be about 1961 or ’61. ‘Way before Kennedy was Prez! Did someone make $$ off of me? LOL.
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