Surfskate as flow training is T3 in the flow series — the point where the ground movement vocabulary connects to Kip’s actual movement practice on wheels. Surfskate isn’t presented here as a workout alternative to ground flow. It’s analyzed as the same motor patterns in a different context, with a different feel, and a different kind of play.
The Pump Mechanics
Surfskate propulsion comes from hip rotation — the rider pumps through transitions by rotating the hips and shifting weight in a wave-like pattern. This is the same rotational movement as the ground flow transitions: crab to bear via the leg sweep, lateral ape, and the Cossack shift. The nervous system doesn’t know which surface it’s training on. It knows: hip rotation, weight transfer, timing.
The Flow State Connection
Flow training — both ground movement and skating — has a quality that rep-based strength training rarely achieves: the movement becomes intrinsically enjoyable. You stop counting. You stop timing. You move because it feels good. This is what “flow state” is: complete absorption in the movement itself. Both the ground flow series and surfskate can produce it. Both are worth pursuing.
How to Cross-Train
Use ground flow sessions as surfskate warm-up: bear walk → crab → lateral ape → forward roll. Then skate. The hip mobility and rotation you’ve built in ground flow will be immediately available on the board. Use skating as a movement feedback tool — the board reveals weight distribution and timing issues that ground training sometimes hides.
★ Kip’s flow practice. Move. Groove. Repeat. Smooth.
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Move. Groove. Repeat. Smooth.
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