I wish it was more popular in the states, I'd love to get into it, I'm just worried someone is going to call the police, concerned about the boy climbing up the face of a McDonalds...
Perfect, anyone else in that area want to get in contact with the group there?Spartigus68k said:We have a parkour club at my high school in Boulder Colorado.
And i know CU and the local gyms have parkour classes.
The group where?ViolentlyHappy91 said:Perfect, anyone else in that area want to get in contact with the group there?Spartigus68k said:We have a parkour club at my high school in Boulder Colorado.
And i know CU and the local gyms have parkour classes.
There is no law against parkour unless stated otherwise. Try not to draw attention to yourself if you're going to do it. If police come to you and ask you to move on, don't argue, just move along, the last thing anyone needs is getting arrested.Bored Tomatoe said:I wish it was more popular in the states, I'd love to get into it, I'm just worried someone is going to call the police, concerned about the boy climbing up the face of a McDonalds...
Uh, trespassing?ViolentlyHappy91 said:There is no law against parkour unless stated otherwise. Try not to draw attention to yourself if you're going to do it. If police come to you and ask you to move on, don't argue, just move along, the last thing anyone needs is getting arrested.Bored Tomatoe said:I wish it was more popular in the states, I'd love to get into it, I'm just worried someone is going to call the police, concerned about the boy climbing up the face of a McDonalds...
Ya, but I don't really want to do it by myself.ViolentlyHappy91 said:That's why I made this thread. Hopefully you'll find others to do it with, if not, practicing alone is still good.Glerken said:It sounds really fun. And I think I would be pretty good. Unfortunately it's not popular in Arizona, so I have no way of really getting in to it.
I think Parkour might rub against trespassing and possible destruction of public and private property...ViolentlyHappy91 said:There is no law against parkour unless stated otherwise. Try not to draw attention to yourself if you're going to do it. If police come to you and ask you to move on, don't argue, just move along, the last thing anyone needs is getting arrested.Bored Tomatoe said:I wish it was more popular in the states, I'd love to get into it, I'm just worried someone is going to call the police, concerned about the boy climbing up the face of a McDonalds...
No, it's trespassing if you don't leave when they tell you to. Try to stay off other people's property while doing it, around town would be best.Kubanator said:Uh, trespassing?ViolentlyHappy91 said:There is no law against parkour unless stated otherwise. Try not to draw attention to yourself if you're going to do it. If police come to you and ask you to move on, don't argue, just move along, the last thing anyone needs is getting arrested.Bored Tomatoe said:I wish it was more popular in the states, I'd love to get into it, I'm just worried someone is going to call the police, concerned about the boy climbing up the face of a McDonalds...
People generally look at someone doing parkour and think that it's pretty cool, i've had people join in randomly when I was doing it in town because they didn't know anyone else did it.Glerken said:Ya, but I don't really want to do it by myself.ViolentlyHappy91 said:That's why I made this thread. Hopefully you'll find others to do it with, if not, practicing alone is still good.Glerken said:It sounds really fun. And I think I would be pretty good. Unfortunately it's not popular in Arizona, so I have no way of really getting in to it.
And since it's not popular, if people saw me doing parkour by myself, they'd probably think I was insane or attempting suicide.
O you were talking to other peopleViolentlyHappy91 said:The one you mentioned.Spartigus68k said:The group where?
Yeah, pretty much, I used to be really unfit, couldn't even run 100 meters, just got better with time.snowbilby said:So basically you don't really need any real skills, you just join a group, go running and slowly get better?
I live on the boarder of NSW/QLD in the Tweed area so I could probably find a group near-by
Don't break things then?Bored Tomatoe said:I think Parkour might rub against trespassing and possible destruction of public and private property...ViolentlyHappy91 said:There is no law against parkour unless stated otherwise. Try not to draw attention to yourself if you're going to do it. If police come to you and ask you to move on, don't argue, just move along, the last thing anyone needs is getting arrested.Bored Tomatoe said:I wish it was more popular in the states, I'd love to get into it, I'm just worried someone is going to call the police, concerned about the boy climbing up the face of a McDonalds...
Landing and rolling are the first things my group will teach people, they're really easy to learn and it will be a natural reaction shortly after.Gamer137 said:I would like too after playing Mirror's Edge, but I am way to unfit to do it. I can barely do proper push-ups, much less break a drop and roll using my arms, or whatever that technique is.
I probably wouldn't, but where I live, everyone assumes that teenagers : Immediate breakage of all valuables and possible robbery... I might take this up later... Scare some old people.ViolentlyHappy91 said:Don't break things then?
That's not how the law works. That's essentially saying if no one tells you not to, you're allowed to.ViolentlyHappy91 said:No, it's trespassing if you don't leave when they tell you to. Try to stay off other people's property while doing it, around town would be best.Kubanator said:Uh, trespassing?ViolentlyHappy91 said:There is no law against parkour unless stated otherwise. Try not to draw attention to yourself if you're going to do it. If police come to you and ask you to move on, don't argue, just move along, the last thing anyone needs is getting arrested.Bored Tomatoe said:I wish it was more popular in the states, I'd love to get into it, I'm just worried someone is going to call the police, concerned about the boy climbing up the face of a McDonalds...
You aren't a trespasser if you walk into the McDonald's to order food, you're invited to. You are not invited to climb on the roof.Not all persons seeking access to property are trespassers. The law recognizes the rights of persons given express permission to be on the property ("invitees") and persons who have a legal right to be on the property ("licensees") not to be treated as trespassers; for example, a meter reader on the property to read the meter.
Which is why we do not like people going onto roofs, we strongly discourage it. It's dangerous and just plain stupid.Kubanator said:That's not how the law works. That's essentially saying if no one tells you not to, you're allowed to.
You aren't a trespasser if you walk into the McDonald's to order food, you're invited to. You are not invited to climb on the roof.Not all persons seeking access to property are trespassers. The law recognizes the rights of persons given express permission to be on the property ("invitees") and persons who have a legal right to be on the property ("licensees") not to be treated as trespassers; for example, a meter reader on the property to read the meter.
Shame I live thousands of miles from your group or I would be all over participating.ViolentlyHappy91 said:Landing and rolling are the first things my group will teach people, they're really easy to learn and it will be a natural reaction shortly after.
Yes, it will do a lot of damage if not done correctly, this is why generally, we do conditioning, a lot of conditioning. If you land correctly, you'll do no damage to yourself.akmarksman said:20 years of running and jumping up and down entire flights of stairs have done some damage to my knees..and that's before I heard of parkour.
Granted if I were a teenager again,I definitely would get into parkour.
Check out some of the vids on YouTube..
probably my favorite is 2 brothers free running.