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| What is free running? |
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Free Running | Free Running
All you need to start free running is a pair of shoes, a place to run and some creativity.
Free Running - What Is It?Free running, also known as parkour, is a combination of jogging and gymnastics. Free runners view a city as one big playground. Every day city objects like stairs, rails and walls are used in a series of vaults, leaps and climbs. A free runner might leap on to a park bench, backflip over a newspaper box, then walk across a stair rail, before climbing over a wall. The idea behind free running is to link moves over and around obstacles into one fluid run - kind of like the way skateboarders move through a street course. The sport requires great strength, flexibility, creativity and discipline. | |
| Getting started |
Free Running - Getting Started
Becoming a free runner or traceur, as they're sometimes called, is pretty easy. All you need is a pair of shoes and a place to run.
City parks and playgrounds are great locations for free running, or anywhere else where you can make use of a city's obstacles.
There are several basic moves in free running that you should learn including how to land,
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Free Running | how to roll, and how to properly balance yourself on obstacles.
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| Saftey |
Free Running - Safety
Free running is a fun, cheap and healthy sport - but it's important you practice free running safely. Know your limits and don't try any jumps or moves until you've checked the landing and have learned how to land properly.
Start off my trying basic moves over small obstacles before moving on to more challenging jumps and leaps.
Always free run with a friend. It's more fun, friends can offer suggestions on how to best move around an obstacle and they can help you off the ground if you have a nasty wipeout. |
| Saftey |
Free Running - Safety
Free running is a fun, cheap and healthy sport - but it's important you practice free running safely. Know your limits and don't try any jumps or moves until you've checked the landing and have learned how to land properly.
Start off my trying basic moves over small obstacles before moving on to more challenging jumps and leaps.
Always free run with a friend. It's more fun, friends can offer suggestions on how to best move around an obstacle and they can help you off the ground if you have a nasty wipeout. |
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