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It isn't the safest trick to start out trying to learn but it isn't that dangerous if you have gotten used to your skateboard and are not falling to much you should be able to prefect this trick easy and quick.
If you're really tired, you probably need to just take a half hour break. Letting your body rest is the best way to regain lost energy. If you're super tired, you might even have to call it a day and go skate again tomorrow.
We'll cover the shuvit first. The shuvit is a great trick for new skaters. As I mentioned earlier, it doesn't involve any real learning curve, and can be performed without an ollie. To do a shuvit, place your back foot up on the tail of the board, and your front foot on the mid section of the deck. Lift the board up as if you were going to do a manual, and then kick your front foot to the left or right. If you did this properly, the board should pivot and spin underneath your feet. Start with 180 shuvits at first. After landing a few of those, you can start working your way up to a 360 shuvit or even a 540 shuvit. A really good skateboard is a new http://www.the-skateboard-shop.com/complete-longboard-skateboards
However, we do know the first retail skateboard appeared in 1958 and was marketed by Bill and Mark Richards of Dana Point, California. It was then mass-produced and remodeled in the 1960s. The blank, or deck, was often made in the shape of a surfboard out of solid wood or plastic. Some metal boards were created as well. The wheels were often made out of clay or steel and were less sturdy than today's version of wheels.
When I was young, my friends and I made things dangerous by jumping over each other with the ramp we made. I can't recommend this, because it's just so dangerous. However, we did have lots of fun finding objects to stack, and then trying to gap those.
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