Thanks for the shout out Ricky! And yes, I was absolutely deep diving on Braille videos to help me get started, even bought SMS. I've been blown away by the people commenting on my videos over the last few years, there are a ton of people (re)learning to skate in their 30's and 40's, with some incredible stories! It's easy to give up, much harder to keep pushing yourself, but so much more fun and rewarding. And it really helps to find a good group of folks to skate with.
I took up skating for my 61st birthday. I'm about to turn 64 and I have drop in's, rock to fakie, tail stalls and I'm getting rock and rolls. A lot of people think it's foolish and with every injury they hope I quit but I love it and keep going.
I started at age 42 from zero. Had never even stepped on a board previous in my life. I skated a lot in that first year and slowed down some just because other interests have picked up but its been a great journey learning these past 3 years
Nice! Same story here, started at 41, 43 now and it's been so much fun. Managed to learn a lot and avoided injuries (age makes you more careful I guess), great exercise and great community!
@knuteri3 I pretty much exclusively skate ramps. I dont know about you but I found out real quick you better pad up. The 40+ year old body doesn't like hitting concrete 🤣
@@aicbrian Same here. Knee pads, elbow pads, wrist pads, hip pads and helmet. And yea, I also mostly skate ramps, easier on the knees and I actually feel safer when I can slide out from a fall, so I've been practicing those knee slides. So much fun! 😁
I am 43 and just starting out. The learning curve is steep, so far the only compliment or comment I've gotten at a park is that I fall well. That's probably from all my practice falling down in Judo! I tried my first boardslide yesterday on my d.i.y. roll on rail. I Slipped out and slammed pretty good. After a fall like that I always try to practice something I've worked on a little more so I can walk away with a Slam not being the last thing that day.
man i didn't get good at falls/rolls in karate.... just didn't come up enough and i felt like i was doing it wrong. i'll have to drag a mat out and work on that a bit along with practice falls wearing gear. the grass trick or trying things on a carpet to keep the board from moving seems helpful to do right before moving to concrete. get the move down then add the moving target. but i guess rails and slides wouldn't benefit from that, if those are your current focus. rock on man!
I'll be 41 in December... I've skated most of my life... Really heavy into street skating when I was a kid... Skated off and on while I was in the military... Skating in Iraq was a trip. It's been a couple years since I've been on the board at this point.... But it is always sitting there ready to go, whenever the occasion arises. I have to say watching all of your videos has gotten me fired up to jump back on... Thanks!
I'm 39. I skated from 10-14 and stopped because I was too poor to afford a new skateboard when mine broke after moving in with my mom. I started again about 6 months ago. 3 months to 40. The hardest thing at this age isn't the physical aspect, if anything that's easier now. The hard part is finding people to skate with. I mean my 4 year old daughter is also learning to skate, but people my age haha.
Hey Ricky, thanks for keep pushing skateboarding and not getting tangled up in this drama around Braille. Strong moves from you to share your thoughts and feelings, whilst not getting personal. Love to see that you maintain a clear head and keep up the good skateboarding content, we are all here for. Thanks again for what you share and teach, it has helped me on so many different level. We like skate!!! 🤞
I lost my skate life to illness. Nearly most of adult life. But got lucky and manged to escape it and at 37, gonna start skating again. I wouldn't say I'm a beginner, but just could never progress past my childhood. Lets get it back and beyond!
Watching your videos kinda got me back into skating with my son. I used to skate when I was around 13 years old and now I'm 35. it's been a blast rediscovering skateboarding and sharing it with my son. We've been at it for about 2 months now.
Dope to see these journeys! Started about 1.5 months ago tracking my progression of taking up skateboarding at 33, been a blast and love to see how far these people have gotten 🙌
I just got into skateboarding this summer at the age of 45. I've mostly been carving and pumping ramps and transitions at the local skate park. I've done one drop in, I'm starting to learn to Ollie, I can do a few reverts, manuals, ect, and I can kick turn high up a transition. Most of all, I'm just loving it and having loads of fun.
I’ve started skating 3 months or so ago, an would love to send you some clips. I’m nearly 34 🙈😂 much love and respect to you Ricky and for getting called out at the berrics 😂 griffin for the win. Some of best tricks so far are fakie tre flip, regular BS big spin, an full cab. But pretty decent at doing things like shuv it to nose manual or fakie big spin manual. I love skate.
I started this year at 42, got in about 2 solid months before it got too cold to skate every day but it's been a blast. I wish I could have gotten over that initial uneasiness on the board when I was 18 haha
No idea why I didn't see this before, but it was a great surprise to see you watching my 1 yr vid Ricky. Learning to skate has been one of the most rewarding things I've done as I've gotten older. It's been an awesome journey, thanks for sharing it! I like skate!
44 year old from Melbourne returning to skateboarding. Never had any tricks other than an ollie but always had fun. Smashed myself twice in a bowl dropping in…can’t wait to get out and have another go. Thanks for all your encouragement and tips Rick
I just started back up at 43 after a 20 yr hiatus. I have skated three times in the last week. By the end of the first session I got to landing some ugly kick flips at a pretty slow roll. The next day everything hurt. I waited a day and went cruising to get used to just riding. Burnt out my hips. Couldn’t even pick my leg up the next day. Today I went cruising again and tried one kickflip. I caught it half flip and the second I popped it I felt a searing pain in my hip. It’s fine now but my hips are definitely burned out. It’s discouraging but seeing people starting from scratch at this age tells me I just need to reacquaint my body with this type of abuse.
Yup, about to be 43. Got back in this time last year. Ollie is getting solid. Shoves, FS 180, No Comply 180, Ollie to fakie on a bank, all getting there. Kickflips are close, heelflips are closer. I've toe drag landed a handful of heelflips. I've got 50-50s, 5-0's, Axle stalls on transition. I've got back board on ledges. I can lock in feeble and blunt, still working on getting back out. Got rock to fakie, working on rock and roll. It's been a blast. I've met new friends and have never felt so good. Best decision I ever made was getting back into skating. And, yes, I watched Aaron Kyro tutorials, haha.
I am most definitely over 40 and have been trying to skate for the last 2 years (well I’ve just turned 42 lol). I can cruise, I feel confident kinda on a a board but I just feel so out of place, I get way to nervous in a park full of younger more experienced guys. I wish I could be more consistent in practicing but with limited places here and a travel to the shops being mostly up hill, I find it really hard to just go for it. I used to practice in my work car park but now our office is being closed to no more car park.
I could barely ollie off the ground when I was a kid, I'm 40 this year been skating 3 years now and I enjoy life so much more than I did without it, I feel like I was a skater trapped in the body of someone else my whole life, Canada wasn't welcoming to skate, things were... rough, I was a bmx guy who used to stand with my ankles folded when I was hanging out so they're flexible when I finally got into skateboarding , didn't think about it for so long it almost didn't happen, when my son became interested watching people skating it lit a fire in me I had no idea how big the kindling had been stoked, I'm still stoked and the fire burns in me everyday, even with a wrist injury to protect I still get to roll around but the spins and switch and front manuals will have to wait, that kick flip though
40 here as well. Kids got old enough, and wanted to learn to skate this summer. It's a bit boring to just watch, so I bought a setup for myself as well. Just 20 years since the last time, right?! Was like starting over from scratch, so took it quite slow the first couple of months. Finally starting to get the good feeling back, when I was snaked by a scooter-kid on my way down from a 4ft quarter, right when I was about to pump some speed 😅 5 fractures in the ankle, 2 surgeries, steel plates and screws, probably 2 surgeries more to come, and 4 months with crutches so far... Physiotherapy going good, so the plan is to start over when summer comes around, unless the wife starts acting up that is 🤣
42 and learning. Been on a board before, but never really skated. My gf has balance issues after some minor strokes. She was encouraged to try skateboarding by her therapist. Apparently being somewhat scared when learning to balance helps with forming new signal paths in the brain. So we are hitting our local skate park a couple times a week. Scary, fun and healing, lets go!
Love this! I'm only 35, but didn't skate seriously from 15 til now. Feels like progress is slow comparatively, since I'm at like the 8 month mark and can just ollie and FS 180. I can almost shove/pop shove, and if I could just keep my front leg in the air(or flick with my ankle and not my knee...) I will have the kickflip. Seeing other people making progress like that makes it more feasible. They were probably better skaters than me to start, so it's still encouraging
Im started from being able to roll around and do a small stationary ollie on a good day at 45. Now I am 51 and drop in and pools and do some tricks and roll around all the time. 😊
I am 39. Picked up skateboarding during covid after almost 20 years. And I am nowhere near the level of the first guy. Kickflip is the most I can do. 50-50 are hard. Mastering the basics of mini ramps is my goal.
41 here started skating last year. Primarily as off season board training for my main passion: splitboarding. Mid life crisis made me pull the trigger and walk into the local skate shop. One of the better decisions I've done in a while
My story.. Skateboarding 13-19.. restart at 33.. now I'm 35.. not as good as in my younger years but I think I can get there!! Maybe even better.. still hyped;,)
Over 40 here. Skated from the mid 90s to mid 2010s. I'm switch and always pushed mongo. I put together a new board with the Baby Heron, Nano Cubics, and Indys. I'm learning to push the right way and pick things up again. I must say I don't know how I handled the slams in my youth. Having RU-vid for tips makes things so much easier. I didn't have parks growing up. I'm looking forward to adding some freestyle and vert to the repertoire.
I'm a skater in my 40s! I think the confusion with nollie shoves comes from people associating tricks with foot set up, but the trick is actually named for how your board rotates in relation to your stance. If you do the foot setup for a front shove in nollie then your board moves the same as if you did a backside shove in your usual stance so it's backside.
60+. Started skateboarding almost three years ago. The Onewheel was my gateway to skateboarding. Never did anything balance-wise before. My progression is slow, because I take it carefully, and I had a severe injury that kept me out for over a year. But I'm satisfied with my progression. I have two short videos on my channel that are board related. View at your own risk.
Somehow, I think this guy had a lot more experience than he led to believe. I would say he actually knew these tricks when he was younger and is just bringing them back, or he is just fricken good that way. I am 53 and absolutely didn't know any tricks and I am not even close to this guys progression, I do have Ollie not moving wierd enough I can fakie ollie and I have the manual after about 9 months, I think the moving Ollie is just in my head I just need to commit! Anyway nice to see the older skaters getting back out there, I don't think there should be an age limit to anything as long as you are healthy enough!
used to skate when i was younger, hitting 40 not to long now. and i want to get back into skateing, but i have no ACL in my left knee, but ill give it a shot.
i learned my 180s by power sliding them first. and i learned power slides by accident by going too fast between obstacles in my dad's garage. over 20 years ago
I'm 48 and purchased Christian hosoi hammerhead. Favorite of all time. I was a " closet skater wanna be" when I was a teen. I was a long haired metal head and it wasn't cool to like skating in our group. But honestly I always admired it actually quite envious because my family was so poor that if I wanted a quality board we couldn't afford it,not even a replica cutout. So I'm starting late like way late i get it. But um im gonna do it. Good luck to all who are doing the same.
Lets get it baby! 46 and going back to foundational trick sets to improve my transition and flip tricks. Seeing all this makes me want to put together my own fuddy duddy video! You don't stop skating because you got old, you got old because you stopped skating!
Turned 40 this year but been back on the board for about 3 years now. Lower boday weight training helped me progress much faster on my board. Keep shredding homies!!
im like these guys. i started skating again after 26 years off. coming back was just a little easier than learning the first time. thats not exactly a bad thing.
That's AMAZING progression in a year for someone who started out in their 40's... i mean he has to have something in his background that gives him very good coordination and sense of where his body is... that's really good.
If you skate regular stance, backside is when your board spins clockwise and frontside is when your board spins counterclockwise, for every stance except switch (reg, nollie, fakie). for switch you call it like its goofy stance. If you skate goofy stance, backside is when your board spins counterclockwise and frontside is when your board spins clockwise, for every stance except switch. for switch you call it like it's regular stance.
48 here, skated from age 13 to 16 and got back to it during the lockdowns as my 13yr old son started taking interest in skating. He is now way better than me as he can Ollie euros and has a variety of flip tricks, I myself stilI have my ollie from back in the day and can stationary kickflip but honestly don't do much street anymore as I did as a kid, Now it's mostly transition, as that's what brought me into skateboarding from the 1st day a kid in my class brought in a Thrasher and I saw Hosoi on foldout in the mag I knew I wanted to do that as a kid but there were no parks in the area back then.
skated for 6 years from 13 to 19 teen. now i am 37 almost 38 and started again 2 month ago. starting to get the hang of it. nailing kick and varial flips. 360 flips getting more consistent but that is the best i can do for now. heel flip is completely lost.... such an awkward movement! if i do it they have no pop und flip super slow. skating is so awesome. i should have never stopped! it is a lot more taxing on the body now tho! and i stayed fit my whole life but that explosivness is not something i trained.
In my 30s. I could remember how awkward riding a park felt for those who never did it but to just enjoy and trust the process of learning is by far the hardest part.
These always make me want to film a similar video because I'm back into skating at 36 years old. However, I've never recorded a video or edited a video so I hesitate. Love the reactions from Ricky.
Don't let that stop you. Just get a little tripod and film away. Watching it back is a great tool for improving - though can be very humbling as well. ;)
he has a great kickflip tutorial. in depth and even indirectly mentions AKs learning style for kickflips. he says it creates rocket kickflips lol. anyways i like this dude's tutorials.
Shout out to Chris from Elder Skates - he came rolling through my area a couple years ago, super nice dude with a positive attitude. 👏🏻 He was ripping pretty good too!
Didn't land my first kick flip until 34. My first varial at age 35. Went through the repitoire of tricks I was supposed to know during my my mid 30's (kick flips, heels, shuvs, boardslides, 50-50s, 180s, etc.). Now getting longevity out of my skateboarding at the end of my 30s riding transition on my surfskate. I think for us older riders there needs to be a different approach than what's been standardized as the learning milestones of the sport. We're too old to break bones and tear ligaments since those injuries now have serious consequences. You can still get rad in your 40s for sure, but quoting Takahiro Morita, certain tricks no longer fit the age and there needs to be a more mature style of skateboarding.
45 and getting in, 2 months out after screwing my left arm in the first week (wheel bite going wrong, im not just in my forties, I'm fat too), but I just ordered some risers and plan to be back in some days!
Dig these videos,, at 49 I’ve been back on three years now, not going to lie it’s harder than it used to be. Definitely having fun though. Just started a lil RU-vid bout six months ago.. only the wins of course..ha..ha.. Thanks for shining light on us old folk.. 👊🏼 I like sk8 too…🛹✔️
i started at 46. im 48 now and can rip a mini ramp under 4 foot.... anything bigger than that and im struggling.... im getting followers too... and enjoying life soo much now... started due to emtal and physical health issues...
skated for 4 years from 13-17 now at 29 im picking it back up very enjoyable no where near what i used to be its weird my mind knows how to do the trick but my body cant haha
0:09 check her out!! :D yeah i'm starting late.... not THAT late but late enough you worry about if the reason it's better to start early is because you bounce off pavement better.... but idk. wearing helmet and pads and especially wrists should mostly keep the danger at bay. learning how to fall will be another. from karate that was always something i struggled a bit with, that drop roll up thing. but i need typey fingers and wrists for work so with wrist guards that seem to have a good rep AND no amazon reviews showing fractures and breaks and failures... i'm good to go. as i kid i overreached for a baseball when playing with friends on our block. went down and of course, arm went out like a kickstand. i felt the top of my hand touch my forearm. (BUT I CAUGHT IT and didn't drop it!) LUCKILY it wasn't a break!! had to wear a split for a few weeks, but then just learned to throw left-handed for team practice cuz i'd be damned if i let that stop me. haha. *so i learned don't kickstand you arm, don't lock it out and try and catch yourself. be as loose and rolly as possible.*
My son is 7 and I am 46.. He is just starting out and an only child. I am getting the itch to start again so he has someone to skate with each day. I just came back from a skateboard show (ramp and street) and the itch is stronger.. Not sure what to do..
I started skating at 40+, with no previous experience, I ride 3-4 days every week, and after a year, and many hours of practice 😂 I could only cruise and do a really bad tic-tac 😉 really slow-learner... Still skating 3-4 days every week My progress is slow 😅 But I will continue at least til age 75-80