No, but the closest thing to that that I do have is I'll refrain from skating super rough spots for a while whenever I just set up a fresh deck, because when I was a kid living in an old city, I used to have to make my decks last for as long as I could, and I retained the habit of avoiding messing up a good, crispy one too quickly over time. As soon as the board starts feeling worn in though, then everything is game.
Side note but state of the deck also influences my trick selection, on a brand new board I'll stick to minimalistic tricks and barely flip it for a while, and maybe skate ledges more, once it's been eating the ground or obstacles a few times and starts feeling used I'll do more of everything, then once the pop is pretty much gone and basic tricks no longer work as well then for a while I'll just abuse the board with tricks I wouldn't do otherwise, stuff that relies on scraping the tail vs. popping, etc.
Super early on I 'studied' what would be the ideal set-up for skating in my hometown in particular, which is almost exclusively rough terrain so my skateboard was always a happy medium, thus eliminating my need for different boards (I'm the type who can only have one at a time). E.g.. compensating for the shittier grounds with bigger wheel size (54/56mm) instead of low durometers (as to not lose control over some tricks that work best with hard wheels, and generally feel like I'm on a longboard). I'd rather have one board that's good for everything than several set-ups that are great for specific terrain, to me that always sounded cumbersome.