Tips for Getting Started in Parkour...

getting_started_in_parkour.jpg

APK - Parkour and Freerunning Community

Advertisement

APK's Professional Parkour Team

Tribe Professional Parkour and Freerunning

Friends of APK

Exclusive Contests & Pics 
Become Friends with American Parkour on Facebook!10,559 Fans

Parkour/Freerunning Videos 
Subscribe to American Parkour's Youtube Channel - Parkour and Freerunning Videos 5,566 Subscribers

Instant News and Updates 
Follow American Parkour on Twitter 1,461 Followers

Newsletters

APK Newsletters
Sign up for Newsletters
The Freerunner - World's 1st Parkour Magazine  
WOD - Workout of the Day  
 

APK Alliance Blog

What is the Alliance thinking?
What is the Alliance doing?
APK Alliance Blog
Find out on our blog!

Proud to be Sponsored by

K-SWISS

Weekly Features

Ozzi's Weekly Parkour Video Review

Featured Video

Featured Link


Parkour Mumbai

Featured Wallpaper

APK Login

Members: 72299
News: 4494
Web Links: 48
We have 52 guests and 23 members online
Parkour Beanies and Hats

Official Store of American Parkour

American Parkour Tutorial DVD

Buy Tutorial DVDs,

Clothing, and Gear  

At the APK Store

Picture of the Week

POTW - 11-9-2009
 

Workout of the Day

WOD 11-20-09
"Education is what survives when what has been learned has been forgotten."
--B. F. Skinner-- (1904 - 1990)
 

Leave NO Trace


American Parkour Leave NO trace

 So far we've picked up 105 bags of trash - learn more here . Check out APK's outreach initiatives here .

RSS Syndication

Home
The Forgotten Movements Vol. 2: Gorilla Gait Print E-mail
Monday, 04 May 2009
 

By Gabriel Arnold

Kong Vault. Precision. Cat Leap. The essentials, the bread and butter, of most traceurs’ movement repertoire. There are certain movements that get the most practice, that get the most attention, and that get the most thought. This is understandable because they can be used in so many different situations without changing the basic technique all that much. But what about other situations, what about other movements? Surely there are other, lesser known ways of moving through the environment? Of course. And I’m going to highlight a few that I feel don’t get the respect they deserve.

Read more to read about what I call speed QM, or the “Gorilla Gait.”

I think it’s safe to say that most is not all practitioners of parkour and its related disciplines have trained quadrupedal movement at some point or another. You know that silly looking walk where you get down on all fours and move around on your hands and feet. Let’s be honest, it may be a great exercise and develop some fantastic coordination, but when it comes to movement and speed/efficiency, it’s nearly worthless. Or is it? It seems like a lot of people are so worried with making sure they have each foot and hand placed correctly that they’ve lost sight of the speed aspect. Honestly, how many videos or real life situations have you seen where someone uses the QM to progress their movement, instead of balancing on a rail or conditioning? Not many as far as I know.

Granted, if I’m in an open grass field, I’m not going to QM. I will run. But what if I come out a roll and the only way to progress forward is a tiny opening the size of a small window? Or there’s a small ledge I need to traverse quickly, but standing and running would throw me off balance? I could crawl on my stomach each time, but that would slow me down immensely. I could QM, but if I only know the “perfect QM” motion, I’ll still be slowed down. So then, why not tweak the motion and speed it up?


Take a look at the following video of Canadian traceur Dim Monk. Good stuff all around, but pay especially close attention to minute 2:00-2:08. Notice that smooth, galloping motion he did. That’s the Gorilla Gait. It let him seamlessly connect movements that otherwise would have looked jerky and stiff. His all around style is very low to the ground, making his transitions, no matter the speed, smooth as silk.

Now the question is…what makes this movement different from a standard QM? Well, like I described a second ago, it’s more of a gallop than a walk. Picture a horse in your mind. When it’s walking, all the legs are touching the ground one after the other. But when it runs, they move in a sort of back legs-front legs motion, where they open and close like fingers in a hand. In fact at certain points, none of their hooves are touching the ground. Our primate cousins monkeys have a similar motion when moving at fast speeds. Look at this picture.



None of its limbs are touching the grass. It is literally galloping along, one-two, one-two, in a back-legs-then-front-legs motion. (Aka, in unison) If it tried to run with all four legs moving at once it’d trip itself up and fall flat on its face.

That’s the basic idea. Speed up your QM and watch new possibilities unfold. The next time you’re out training, try this drill. Find an area where you have a favorite line, a series of obstacles or movements you’ve got down to instinct on two legs. Then get down on your hands and toes and run it on all fours. No matter what it is, whether it includes walls, rails, whatever, hit it fast on all fours and only rear up when absolutely necessary. Truly get in touch with the monkey within. You’ll quickly find that the Gorilla Gait comes naturally as a response to the increased speed. And you’ll also find yourself viewing old problem spots with new eyes, eyes that are lower to the ground, and a mind more open to opportunities.

If you want some additional practice on all fours, take a look at Kind David’s recent “Just Monkeying Around” video for inspiration. At the very least you’ll think it’s cool looking.

Users' Comments  RSS feed comment
 

Display 19 of 19 comments

1. 05-04-2009 07:00

I am totally new to PK(4months) and I still spend a lot of time doing what I call ground work. i.e. Q.M. over open ground... Ground Kongs until they're perfect! A few other guys may jump ahead, catch their feet and smash their face. I love this good horse training. THX

2. 05-04-2009 09:17

Start playing QM tag with bunch of people. You will want to gallop if you don't want to get caught or if your want to catch anyone.

3. 05-04-2009 09:25

I absolutely love this! I call it the "gorilla gallop," but who cares, right? I think King David's 2008 demo has some great gorilla'ing in it, too. 
 
Here's the vid: http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=HvGy7QRZS-I The really great parts are at 1:16 and 2:48, but there are some other parts (like 0:43) that show how having a good knowledge of this kind of movement can help you flow through obstacles. 
 
Try that second video out. I use monkey walking as a warmup, but King shows that it can be a full freaking workout!

4. 05-04-2009 09:58

This guy is fantastic. WOW...talk about serious flow. Mad props to Dim Monk.

5. 05-04-2009 10:16

VERY impressive flow!!

6. 05-04-2009 10:29

There are tons of forms of quadrupedal movement lots are usefull for getting under stuff I use a sideways gallop more often then the forward gallop for getting under objects but there both usefull. I use gallops and what I call kong gallop as drills to develop the kong in my students its amazing how much faster people learn by building skills from the ground level.

7. 05-04-2009 11:25

awsome. great movemnet. QM's really do help out in actual parkour becuase its moving like an animal. isnt that wat parkour kinda is? :)

8. 05-04-2009 12:33

Good stuff. I've used QM a few times, but this clarified alot. Awesome read!!!

9. 05-04-2009 16:25

My friends and i made up a game 3 years ago called hillbilly tag. Whoever's it is blindfolded, everyone else is QM galloping. Good conditioning too.

10. 05-04-2009 16:42

ha i do this all the time its so much fun

11. 05-04-2009 18:49

I've done this for a long time, but never thought to add it to parkour. :zzz

12. 05-05-2009 06:43

Haha I've been teaching this at informal classes here on Long Island for a couple months now, after I saw that exact same video. Good stuff Sky.

13. 05-06-2009 08:56

Great article, I already see this as a fantastic addtion to my training!

14. 05-08-2009 13:57

i dont get why everyone is saying what they do is special. this form of movement has been practiced for years by breakdancers.

15. 05-09-2009 15:34

Great Traceur. Very nice flow at 2:25 and on

16. 05-18-2009 18:56

I really like the whole gorilla approach to things. It feels so good to have a flow that is so even when moving. I wrestle with my dogs in the same way.

17. 05-20-2009 17:15

This reminds me alot of the drills we used in wrestling to help you scramble.

18. 06-12-2009 16:45

I'm 15 and i can't even to this! my knees are so bad it Hurts! it HURTS to crouch down like that even for a second or two. Does anyone know if there is anything cheap i can do for that?

19. 07-04-2009 10:21

try streching and maybe talk to a doctor or something

Display 19 of 19 comments

Only registered users can comment an article. Please login or register.

Add your comment



mXcomment 1.0.6 © 2007-2009 - visualclinic.fr
License Creative Commons - Some rights reserved
< Prev   Next >
©2009 American Parkour. All Rights Reserved.