Hello Everyone! In between school and reading, I have been dying to learn how to do a standing backbend. So here is step by step tutorial to getting your backbend along with effective tips! I also share tips on how to come up from a backbend. I watched a few videos, practiced and practiced, and thought I would share with you the results! I am really excited to know how to do a backbend when your not flexible, and it has helped with my flexibility as well. In case you are wondering how to do a standing backbend, here are my tips and techniques I used to master the backbend!
Thank you so much for watching and for all you who leave comments!.
If you want to learn how to do a front walkover after you master your backbend and getting up from your backbend, my video on that is HERE
Xoxo
beginning gymnastics
How to Do a Kip Drill | Gymnastics
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In gymnastics, there are skills that are stepping stones in order to get higher up in the levels. On bars, one of those skills happens to be something known as a kip. The kip is just another way to get on the low bar or the high bar.
It does take quite a long time to learn. Six, seven, and eight year old’s are learning this now, and it is a very difficult skill to achieve. It takes strength, and focus. It takes a long work ethic, drills, conditioning, but all in all this is a big stepping stone to get you where you want to be when you want to compete in higher level gymnastics.
Mainly, you want to chop the kip down into different sections, so the student can learn each piece of the kip, then put them together slowly, and then finally all together at once.
Some major drills would just be simple leg lifts, a leg lift that would end up rising up into a candlestick, getting the muscles to be able to get strong enough to pull your body into the bar. So, you would do something called band pull downs, where you pull a band into your body. You would do just different pieces of drills that would initiate what the rhythm of the kip is, the rocking motion, the timing, the speed, all of that. Anything that would resemble the rhythm of a kip or a movement of the kip, is necessary for a student to learn the kip.
The student will start approximately three feet away from the bar. She’s going to get a big jump off the spring board to initiate a big stretch of a glide, which is going to give her a big momentum to do the skill. From there, she’s going to lift her toes aggressively to the bar, and shoot her toes upward to the ceiling, flick her wrists over the bar, and she will end up on top of the bar.
This is a very important skill. As you can see, she is… there’s the glide, leg lift, and press. Okay. Very good. That’s exactly how it’s done.
Gymnastics : How to Do a Cartwheel
When doing a cartwheel, try to keep your hips right over the top in the middle of the cartwheel. End your cartwheel in a lunge with help from a gymnastics coach in this free video on gymnastics.
Expert: Andrea Pratt
Contact: usagymnasticsworld.com
Bio: Andrea Pratt has been training for more than 10 years at Utah Pinnacle and Hunts Gymnastics. S
Filmmaker: Michael Burton
Series Description: Gymnastics involves many stretches, positions and moves including walkovers, cartwheels and handstands. Learn gymnastics basics with help from a gymnastics coach in this free video series on gymnastics.