A skateboarding trick is a maneuver performed while skateboarding. The majority of contemporary skateboarding tricks are based on the Ollie (once called the Ollie Pop), which was invented by Alan "Ollie" Gelfand of Florida in the late 1970s. Skateboarding tricks can involve varials, jumps, flips, grabs, slides, grinds and stalls, and may even be combined with twists of various multiples of 180 degrees. Tricks which require some kind of ramp, sometimes a halfpipe, are known as transition tricks; the rest can be performed on flat ground or off of curbs and on rails and are known as street tricks.
Competitive skateboarding is primarily judged on the difficulty and success of such tricks.
The body varial is jumping into the air and rotating 180 degrees to land on the board facing the other direction. It is often combined with other tricks.
The ollie is a technique of jumping on a skateboard in a way that pops the board off the street by kicking the tail section (or the nose section in the case of a nollie). This action lifts the opposite end of the board, at which point the front foot (in the case of an ollie) will slide forward causing the rear end to level out. Once this is achieved the rider lands all four wheels on the ground and rolls away with their knees bent.
A heelflip is a variant of the ollie in which the board spins towards the riders front while maintaining its direction of movement.The heelflip is sometimes deemed harder than the kickflip since that you are kicking the board with a much harder-to-control part of your foot.The trick involves the rider to ollie,slide the front foot up at an angle and kick the board with your heel.
Get into ollie position, and pop a good ollie, then grab the middle of your board on either side. Once you get good at this try doing 180 or 360 ollies. Although this move can be done on flat land it is probably much easier on a ramp.
Pop the deck up and catch it in a nose grab. While it's in the nose grab, hold it out beside you and spread your legs apart so that it looks like you're walking across the air. Put the board back underneath you and ride away like nothing ever happened.
In this maneuver, the skateboarder first ollies onto a rail (e.g. a hand-rail along a small set of stairs). She then puts all her weight on her back foot, turns slightly, and slides with her board crooked down the rail.
1) You can tap down after you have popped the board this will cause the board to half flip on to your front foot and you then land you back foot on the tail which shoud be upside down.
2) You can flip the board by flicking your foot like you would in a kick flip and catch the board quickly.
When you have perfected the casper while you are still you can then try it moving. This is more difficult but can be achieved with practice. After a while when you can do it moving you will find that you will catch it and be able to get a slide out of it. Exiting casper can be achieved in many ways but keep it basic and just flip it back with your front foot. The caspar can be time consuming to learn and the slide is the hardest part but after much practice you will get it. It is an impressive trick to pull off and can be used to show off.
a. can you roll backwards?
b. can you spin 'round a little?
c. skateboard.
Place your back foot on the tail, but in the well of the tails curve. Place the front foot on the side of the board towards your butt.
Step off the board with your front foot. The tail will pop.
Your back foot will now have to guide the board through the air as you turn frontside on your front foot.
The back trucks will hit the pavement. When this happens, hop your front foot back on. The advanced can jump on before the back trucks land, not losing any speed. If you do this trick, everyone on the block will be doing it 45 minutes later.