fredyferlMake good plans and always have a couple of spots lined up, in case the first one, the second one or even the third one doesn't work. The best is the check out the spots you wanna hit beforehand, so that you don't have any surprises. Building the spot properly so that you have the right amount of speed is key too.
I made tutorials about street skiing for an internship I did with NS 2 years ago, they're up on their youtube under "How to Ski Street". They're more basic but they might be helpful.
In the end i'd say the key with street is to not get discouraged. It can be pretty hard sometimes and you might have a couple of spots in a row that won't work, but if you keep doing it and ask yourself why that spot didn't work, it will lead somewhere
**This post was edited on Aug 10th 2022 at 6:50:00am
**This post was edited on Aug 10th 2022 at 6:50:24am
DlonettiEvery spot is always going to be more difficult than you think. Speed might be difficult to get, the build takes longer than you think, getting a trick you do regularly in the park takes way more tries. I found that every aspect of street skiing was more difficult than I thought it was lol, but the reward is so worth it. Scout spots ahead of time and come in with a plan. Snacks are helpful, and post-spot pizza is a necessity with my crew.
Thanks goin to both of you!! We been scoping since last semester last year, it’s interesting bc some of the homies have their own list of spots / not all of us have seen each spot so I’m excited for the depth of choices we’ve got rollin at the moment. Bottom line is someone has laid eyes on each potential spot in person, for sure crucial.
to the second point, a few of us have hit more legit spots n all of us have been out in the streets before, and I think we’ve all come to terms w the difficulty factor going in. Preciate the feedback!!