All you “no” folk must not have young grandkids! Just on Thanksgiving we were walking to a playground and my 8 yr old started skipping, so I joined her. It was never a question of whether I knew how, just - given all my ankle and hip issues - how WELL I could skip or for HOW LONG!
A few skips was plenty! It is a pretty high impact activity.
I know how to skip; I just cannot do it. Also cannot run. Nor walk much more than a kilometer. Skipping is one the three natural gaits for a human. You don’t have to learn how.
I started CrossFit a few years back. Turns out they do a lot of skipping, including some of the fancy steps boxers use to train. With much practice, I once again became mediocre at it.
Yes I can still skip. I do it occasionally while working out. However, I am on crutches with a fractured fibula head so I won’t be skipping for quite some time.
Within the past month, I skipped down the hallway at school, as a joke response to something a student said (I can’t remember exactly what it was). It seemed to amuse them.
Of course I can. You need to start with a very thin, flat stone, no smaller than a quarter and no wider than 2" or so in diameter. Any larger and you won’t get a proper spin. Hold the rock in your dominant hand parallel to the water and with your index finger wrapped around it so that when you throw it the rock will sort of “roll” down the length of your finger giving it the spin needed to skip across the water. Keep the arc of your throw parallel or perhaps a few degrees above parallel to the water and then throw using a sweeping motion, releasing the rock at the last moment by extending your indext finger. If you do it right the rock will spin on the x-axis as it travels in a straigh-ish line across the water. When gravity does it’s thing and the rock impacts water, the angle should be such that it will ricochet several times before finally succumbing to gravity and friction and sinking into the drink.
I’m pretty sure I can. However, I’m absolutely sure I shouldn’t try, and the physical therapist who’s trying valiantly to prevent me from needing a hip or knee replacement in the next few years would almost certainly agree.
Yes. No problem coordination-wise. But I was very happy that my bed was there to collapse on after the third step, and I’m not sure how I would have stopped otherwise. Anything that stresses my lower back is a struggle, and I will probably pay dearly for that tomorrow morning.
No issue here. I have a 9- and 7-year old, though, so that keeps me relatively spry. It’s never occurred to me that this was something one forgets, so I learned something today.
My mother forgot how to get up off the ground, and had to ask me to help her relearn it when she tried to take an exercise class involving getting down onto and up from mats on the ground. She was in her 70’s at the time.
I’m in my 70’s now, but pretty good at getting up off the ground, whether it’s floor or field – but then, I generally at a minimum do that at least a couple of times a day, and most days a lot more often.
Early to mid 50s and just did it without issues, both remembering how and physically being able to pull it off. I skipped often with my young relatives so I’ve done it plenty as an adult. If they gave out skipping achievement awards, I’d at least have an adult participation ribbon but I tend to think I’d be in the gold or silver medal range.
Early 60s - do it all the time. I coach little kids in athletics, and it’s a good exercise for warm-ups, and also for some long jump technique. I can still perform the ‘this is how you do it’ example, but I do admit that if I have an older athlete in attendance, I defer the demonstration (‘Here’s one I prepared earlier’).