Author Topic: Skateboarding After 50  (Read 18660 times)

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The Huffer

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Skateboarding After 50
« on: February 24, 2026, 09:03:59 AM »
I know there are a few of us here. It's a funny old feeling being too old to really indulge in the Skateboarding after 30 thread. I know we have an old man thread but that is pretty undefined. So here we go.

Here we are, well over the halfway mark. Colonoscopy hopefully done. Pondering retirement. Looking back on our lives and wondering how quick the downhill will be over the next 20 or 20 years, if we are lucky. By now we've lost family and friends.  Yet, we are still fortunate to be skateboarding. For some of us, it's few slappies or slash grinds on Saturday morning. For others, it means still going hard, working on parts and learning tricks.

Anyway, love to spark a chat with the real old cunts that are here. Your personal history with he wooden plank. Health, well-being, philosophies, approaches to life on the board and what you hope skateboarding into old age might look like.  Godspeed.

Or we can just degenerate into equipment chat and Andy Amderson worship...

Sedition

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #1 on: February 24, 2026, 11:13:04 AM »
I'll play. Repost(ed) from the "Old Dude" thread by way of an intro here.


Age: 51

Set Up(s):  -8.25/14.38 DLX, IV stamp. 144 Forged. 53/99 Classics. Swiss 6.
                  -8.75/14.5 BLKLBL. 159 Cast. 53/99 Classic. Ceramics.
                  -Polarizer (so fun!)
       
Preferred Terrain:  Mini ramps, real street (I *hate* perfectly smooth skate parks. I need a bit of crust.)

Favorite skaters:  Random no-names/friends. The Splinter Pit Crew. Stranger. Hensley. Frank G. Miller.  Woolley. Tommy G. Busenitz. Grosso. Lucero. Blender. Gus G. Pulman. Tim Olson. Elijah Akerley. TNT. The Kid. Svitak. BA.KU. Dressen. So many....   

Music:  Too many to list. Post-punk. Punk. Darkwave/Coldwave. Soul/RnB. Big Band/Swing.

Occupation:  Security Manager at a large nightclub, and lawyer.

Skill:  Diminishing with age. Was sponsored in the 90s by local shop and local board company. Went to Woodward and Acme wanted me to send them video...I never did.

Hometown:  Boston

Other stuff:  Started skating in 1985, when I was 11-years-old. Non-stop since then. I'm also the clown that runs The Past Participle on IG. The f/s rock in my sig is me at our old DIY.
"When life goes bad, make it go wronger"  -Gerwer

gringo_viejo

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #2 on: February 24, 2026, 08:43:30 PM »
Looove a good front rock. Elegant trick. That looks like a well formed transition too…

Age: 50

Setup:  street: 9.0 x 17wb. 169s. 56mm conical fulls. OG Swiss. pool: 10 x 17wb. Ace 77 classics. 1/8 risers. 60mm g-bones. Big balls.
                 
Preferred Terrain:  bowls, curbs, a nice 3’ quarter pipe dragged into the alley by the coffee shop. Maybe a bank to curb if I can find one in the wild.

Favorite skaters:  Salba. Ray Barbee. Ben koppl. Dan drehobl.

Music:  Wu, Tribe, De La, Del/Hiero, Black star…

Occupation: cook

Skill:  Languages. Soup. Switch pushing. Memorizing poetry.

Dwelling:  Out in the woods by the river. Or huddled under a quarter pipe in the rain.

Other stuff: Got murdered on a mini ramp 3 months before my 50th birthday. Still trying to get back out there.


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The Huffer

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #3 on: February 24, 2026, 08:47:58 PM »
50 sounds really old and I look pretty old when I dare to look in the mirror but I don't think I've lost much skate ability as I was always hopelessly average anyway. Growing up in Wales/ Bahrain in the 1980s/ 90s meant skating street but desperately wanting to skate vert. it was very validating when street became an actual thing. So i consider 88 to 93 to be the Golden Years. It was amazing to see things change so rapidly. Even without access to the internet or mags, we caught wind of trick development and changes in boards and wheel sizes. I think coming of age in that era has given our generation an appreciation for it all. Also the gap between us and the pros was a lot smaller. What they were doing was super impressive but still seemed achievable and relatable.

Anyway, I'm super thankful to still be on board. So many friends can't skate anymore for a variety or reasons. Pretty tough to find people to skate with these days and funny from going to be the youngest dude on the sesh to the oldest (not always)

 I am also glad to wake up pain free. Might be luck or might be lifestyle... not sure but I know it's not forever. Skateboarding means as much to me now as it did in 1985 at age 10. Pretty crazy to find the absolute funnest thing to do on the planet so young and still be so motivated by it 4 decades later.

Anyway, learned a new trick the other day. Noseslide to crooks. Little things like mean so much at this age... I often loose sleep pondering skateboard achievements and ambition....

This could be 50+ support group but maybe there are only a few of us left.... hahah...

Since we are talking front rocks. I'm still buzzing from the one Bryce Kanights snapped of me on my 50th birthday back in May. Apologies for positing this again... but it was a heavy moment...



Sedition

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #4 on: February 24, 2026, 09:19:28 PM »
50 sounds really old and I look pretty old when I dare to look in the mirror but I don't think I've lost much skate ability as I was always hopelessly average anyway. Growing up in Wales/ Bahrain in the 1980s/ 90s meant skating street but desperately wanting to skate vert. it was very validating when street became an actual thing. So i consider 88 to 93 to be the Golden Years. It was amazing to see things change so rapidly. Even without access to the internet or mags, we caught wind of trick development and changes in boards and wheel sizes. I think coming of age in that era has given our generation an appreciation for it all. Also the gap between us and the pros was a lot smaller. What they were doing was super impressive but still seemed achievable and relatable.

Anyway, I'm super thankful to still be on board. So many friends can't skate anymore for a variety or reasons. Pretty tough to find people to skate with these days and funny from going to be the youngest dude on the sesh to the oldest (not always)

 I am also glad to wake up pain free. Might be luck or might be lifestyle... not sure but I know it's not forever. Skateboarding means as much to me now as it did in 1985 at age 10. Pretty crazy to find the absolute funnest thing to do on the planet so young and still be so motivated by it 4 decades later.

Anyway, learned a new trick the other day. Noseslide to crooks. Little things like mean so much at this age... I often loose sleep pondering skateboard achievements and ambition....

This could be 50+ support group but maybe there are only a few of us left.... hahah...

Since we are talking front rocks. I'm still buzzing from the one Bryce Kanights snapped of me on my 50th birthday back in May. Apologies for positing this again... but it was a heavy moment...



^ Every. Word. Of. This. Post.

And yeah, I am having •waaaay• more fun skating now than at any point in my life (well, maybe the same as when I was just starting), and also super grateful that I can still skate at all (let a lone at the level I can)…so many others have dropped out for whatever reasons.

"When life goes bad, make it go wronger"  -Gerwer

Easy Slider

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #5 on: February 25, 2026, 02:44:36 AM »
Finally a thread I am too young for. Until next year.  ::)
why come?

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AnimalChinaski79

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #6 on: February 25, 2026, 03:17:04 AM »
I'll play. Repost(ed) from the "Old Dude" thread by way of an intro here.


Age: 51

Set Up(s):  -8.25/14.38 DLX, IV stamp. 144 Forged. 53/99 Classics. Swiss 6.
                  -8.75/14.5 BLKLBL. 159 Cast. 53/99 Classic. Ceramics.
                  -Polarizer (so fun!)
       
Preferred Terrain:  Mini ramps, real street (I *hate* perfectly smooth skate parks. I need a bit of crust.)

Favorite skaters:  Random no-names/friends. The Splinter Pit Crew. Stranger. Hensley. Frank G. Miller.  Woolley. Tommy G. Busenitz. Grosso. Lucero. Blender. Gus G. Pulman. Tim Olson. Elijah Akerley. TNT. The Kid. Svitak. BA.KU. Dressen. So many....   

Music:  Too many to list. Post-punk. Punk. Darkwave/Coldwave. Soul/RnB. Big Band/Swing.

Occupation:  Security Manager at a large nightclub, and lawyer.

Skill:  Diminishing with age. Was sponsored in the 90s by local shop and local board company. Went to Woodward and Acme wanted me to send them video...I never did.
Hometown:  Boston

Other stuff:  Started skating in 1985, when I was 11-years-old. Non-stop since then. I'm also the clown that runs The Past Participle on IG. The f/s rock in my sig is me at our old DIY.

I've been following the Past Participle on IG for awhile now! 

Sedition

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #7 on: February 25, 2026, 06:23:16 AM »

I've been following the Past Participle on IG for awhile now!


Hah. I thanks. I am shocked that turned into what it has.
"When life goes bad, make it go wronger"  -Gerwer

gringo_viejo

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #8 on: February 25, 2026, 08:50:15 AM »
Expand Quote
50 sounds really old and I look pretty old when I dare to look in the mirror but I don't think I've lost much skate ability as I was always hopelessly average anyway. Growing up in Wales/ Bahrain in the 1980s/ 90s meant skating street but desperately wanting to skate vert. it was very validating when street became an actual thing. So i consider 88 to 93 to be the Golden Years. It was amazing to see things change so rapidly. Even without access to the internet or mags, we caught wind of trick development and changes in boards and wheel sizes. I think coming of age in that era has given our generation an appreciation for it all. Also the gap between us and the pros was a lot smaller. What they were doing was super impressive but still seemed achievable and relatable.

Anyway, I'm super thankful to still be on board. So many friends can't skate anymore for a variety or reasons. Pretty tough to find people to skate with these days and funny from going to be the youngest dude on the sesh to the oldest (not always)

 I am also glad to wake up pain free. Might be luck or might be lifestyle... not sure but I know it's not forever. Skateboarding means as much to me now as it did in 1985 at age 10. Pretty crazy to find the absolute funnest thing to do on the planet so young and still be so motivated by it 4 decades later.

Anyway, learned a new trick the other day. Noseslide to crooks. Little things like mean so much at this age... I often loose sleep pondering skateboard achievements and ambition....

This could be 50+ support group but maybe there are only a few of us left.... hahah...

Since we are talking front rocks. I'm still buzzing from the one Bryce Kanights snapped of me on my 50th birthday back in May. Apologies for positing this again... but it was a heavy moment...


[close]

^ Every. Word. Of. This. Post.

And yeah, I am having •waaaay• more fun skating now than at any point in my life (well, maybe the same as when I was just starting), and also super grateful that I can still skate at all (let a lone at the level I can)…so many others have dropped out for whatever reasons.

Helllll yeah dude. Fully decked and absolutely worth reposting. Maybe one of my comeback goals will be to get a decent frontside rock n roll to put next to these two.

Certain so-called basic tricks are just beautiful to me.  Decked front rocks. Boned ollies. A nice long crooked grind or backside tailslide. Blunt to fakie (not easy, but still makes me happy every time I see one.)

I started skating in my 40’s. I would drive home past the local park and think, “that looks like a good time.” Finally one day I decided, “why not try it before you die, old man?” All I wanted to do was be able to drop in and ollie.

The local dudes were so welcoming. I was afraid they’d be like “fuck off poser,” but instead they were stoked that I was trying. To this day, I’ve had plenty of people yell dumb shit at me from cars, but I’ve rarely had another skater vibe me out.

Until this year I never got badly hurt. Just bumps and bruises. People would say, “isn’t that dangerous?” and I would tell them I got hurt more at the gym or playing volleyball.

There’s nothing like riding a stationary bike to make you realize how great skateboarding is. If I can get to where I can just carve around again I’ll be so grateful. Even before, six years in, I was still mostly doing beginner stuff, but so what? Even if I never touch the coping again, I’ll be happy to just push.


Shoes are just hard-palmed gloves for your ground hands

AnimalChinaski79

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #9 on: February 25, 2026, 09:13:49 AM »
Expand Quote
Expand Quote
50 sounds really old and I look pretty old when I dare to look in the mirror but I don't think I've lost much skate ability as I was always hopelessly average anyway. Growing up in Wales/ Bahrain in the 1980s/ 90s meant skating street but desperately wanting to skate vert. it was very validating when street became an actual thing. So i consider 88 to 93 to be the Golden Years. It was amazing to see things change so rapidly. Even without access to the internet or mags, we caught wind of trick development and changes in boards and wheel sizes. I think coming of age in that era has given our generation an appreciation for it all. Also the gap between us and the pros was a lot smaller. What they were doing was super impressive but still seemed achievable and relatable.

Anyway, I'm super thankful to still be on board. So many friends can't skate anymore for a variety or reasons. Pretty tough to find people to skate with these days and funny from going to be the youngest dude on the sesh to the oldest (not always)

 I am also glad to wake up pain free. Might be luck or might be lifestyle... not sure but I know it's not forever. Skateboarding means as much to me now as it did in 1985 at age 10. Pretty crazy to find the absolute funnest thing to do on the planet so young and still be so motivated by it 4 decades later.

Anyway, learned a new trick the other day. Noseslide to crooks. Little things like mean so much at this age... I often loose sleep pondering skateboard achievements and ambition....

This could be 50+ support group but maybe there are only a few of us left.... hahah...

Since we are talking front rocks. I'm still buzzing from the one Bryce Kanights snapped of me on my 50th birthday back in May. Apologies for positing this again... but it was a heavy moment...


[close]

^ Every. Word. Of. This. Post.

And yeah, I am having •waaaay• more fun skating now than at any point in my life (well, maybe the same as when I was just starting), and also super grateful that I can still skate at all (let a lone at the level I can)…so many others have dropped out for whatever reasons.
[close]

Helllll yeah dude. Fully decked and absolutely worth reposting. Maybe one of my comeback goals will be to get a decent frontside rock n roll to put next to these two.

Certain so-called basic tricks are just beautiful to me.  Decked front rocks. Boned ollies. A nice long crooked grind or backside tailslide. Blunt to fakie (not easy, but still makes me happy every time I see one.)

I started skating in my 40’s. I would drive home past the local park and think, “that looks like a good time.” Finally one day I decided, “why not try it before you die, old man?” All I wanted to do was be able to drop in and ollie.

The local dudes were so welcoming. I was afraid they’d be like “fuck off poser,” but instead they were stoked that I was trying. To this day, I’ve had plenty of people yell dumb shit at me from cars, but I’ve rarely had another skater vibe me out.

Until this year I never got badly hurt. Just bumps and bruises. People would say, “isn’t that dangerous?” and I would tell them I got hurt more at the gym or playing volleyball.

There’s nothing like riding a stationary bike to make you realize how great skateboarding is. If I can get to where I can just carve around again I’ll be so grateful. Even before, six years in, I was still mostly doing beginner stuff, but so what? Even if I never touch the coping again, I’ll be happy to just push.

Totally nailed that point!  I try to tell myself that too, being able to at least push is something to cherish.  It will not last forever.  I try to remind myself of that if I'm having a bad day or off day skating.  Enjoy it now while we can. 

GnarAlarm

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #10 on: February 26, 2026, 09:48:20 AM »
I'll play. Repost(ed) from the "Old Dude" thread by way of an intro here.


Age: 51

Set Up(s):  -8.25/14.38 DLX, IV stamp. 144 Forged. 53/99 Classics. Swiss 6.
                  -8.75/14.5 BLKLBL. 159 Cast. 53/99 Classic. Ceramics.
                  -Polarizer (so fun!)
       
Preferred Terrain:  Mini ramps, real street (I *hate* perfectly smooth skate parks. I need a bit of crust.)

Favorite skaters:  Random no-names/friends. The Splinter Pit Crew. Stranger. Hensley. Frank G. Miller.  Woolley. Tommy G. Busenitz. Grosso. Lucero. Blender. Gus G. Pulman. Tim Olson. Elijah Akerley. TNT. The Kid. Svitak. BA.KU. Dressen. So many....   

Music:  Too many to list. Post-punk. Punk. Darkwave/Coldwave. Soul/RnB. Big Band/Swing.

Occupation:  Security Manager at a large nightclub, and lawyer.

Skill:  Diminishing with age. Was sponsored in the 90s by local shop and local board company. Went to Woodward and Acme wanted me to send them video...I never did.

Hometown:  Boston

Other stuff:  Started skating in 1985, when I was 11-years-old. Non-stop since then. I'm also the clown that runs The Past Participle on IG. The f/s rock in my sig is me at our old DIY.

I'm too young to post in this thread...wow that feels amazing to say. I'm too young.
Never thought I'd say that again. (44 years old)

But, I just had to pop in and say I love the Past Participle IG page.
Thank you and keep up the good work!

Sedition

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #11 on: February 26, 2026, 12:48:14 PM »

But, I just had to pop in and say I love the Past Participle IG page.
Thank you and keep up the good work!


Thanks for the kind words! Much love!
"When life goes bad, make it go wronger"  -Gerwer

ChuckRamone

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #12 on: February 26, 2026, 02:52:18 PM »
I'm 46, turning 47 this year. Hopefully see you guys in this thread in a few years.
Fuck Anti-Hero


Plan9Customs

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #13 on: February 26, 2026, 06:01:20 PM »
@Sedition did you have a blog at some point? I seem to recall it was you(could be very mistaken) that wrote about living in a smaller town riding a Variflex with some bmxers at a quarter pipe.
Stood out since it almost mirrored my start and town.


Sloppy Krooks

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #14 on: February 27, 2026, 05:58:59 AM »
I turned 50 this year, started skating around ‘86 or so. Everything was magic.
I was never talented, never cool enough to fit in with the cooler skaters in my small town so never really improved that much.

Which honestly was ok. Now that I’m older there’s a lot of low-hanging fruit I'm learning and still loving it.

FS carve grinds scare the shit out of me, trying to make friends with them.

Living in a mountainous area in Japan with lots of snowboarders, there are a lot of skaters my age snd we have a great community here, with new parks popping up. I helped get one made in my local, which I’m stoked on.

Age: 50

Setup:  street: && egg 8.75, Ace Lows, 99a Spits snd Bones 6Balls
Curbs & transition: Black Label Tugboat 9.5 with Ace 77s and IKPs, Bones X 97a and bones bearings.
Also: Anti Hero Horse Pill 10 with Slappy 10s and Bones X97a and bones bearings
                 
Preferred Terrain:  bowls, curbs, mini ramp and the local parks with DIY sections

Favorite skaters:  Drehobl, Gravette, Koppl, Lucero, Cardiel, Wilkins

Music:  50’s Rockabilly, 60’s Ska and Soul, 70’s Reggae, 80’s and 90’s punk and hip-hop

Occupation: teacher/snowboard instructor

Skill:  drawing

Dwelling:  a rental house in semi-rural Japan

Other stuff: learned a Scott Steven’s trick on my 50th.
I’m trying to be every mom’s favorite skater’-&&

Duane's the type of guy to ask to see your junk then go to school and tell everyone you're gay. - Uncle Flea


gringo_viejo

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #15 on: February 27, 2026, 07:42:54 AM »
I turned 50 this year, started skating around ‘86 or so. Everything was magic.
I was never talented, never cool enough to fit in with the cooler skaters in my small town so never really improved that much.

Which honestly was ok. Now that I’m older there’s a lot of low-hanging fruit I'm learning and still loving it.

FS carve grinds scare the shit out of me, trying to make friends with them.

Living in a mountainous area in Japan with lots of snowboarders, there are a lot of skaters my age snd we have a great community here, with new parks popping up. I helped get one made in my local, which I’m stoked on.

Age: 50

Setup:  street: && egg 8.75, Ace Lows, 99a Spits snd Bones 6Balls
Curbs & transition: Black Label Tugboat 9.5 with Ace 77s and IKPs, Bones X 97a and bones bearings.
Also: Anti Hero Horse Pill 10 with Slappy 10s and Bones X97a and bones bearings
                 
Preferred Terrain:  bowls, curbs, mini ramp and the local parks with DIY sections

Favorite skaters:  Drehobl, Gravette, Koppl, Lucero, Cardiel, Wilkins

Music:  50’s Rockabilly, 60’s Ska and Soul, 70’s Reggae, 80’s and 90’s punk and hip-hop

Occupation: teacher/snowboard instructor

Skill:  drawing

Dwelling:  a rental house in semi-rural Japan

Other stuff: learned a Scott Steven’s trick on my 50th.

Dang that sounds amazing. I have so many questions…

How is street skating in Japan? How is just living in Japan? How long did it take to feel comfortable with the language? (Or maybe you always lived there and are a native speaker, I don’t know)

I guess I’m curious about how a person goes about moving to, and living/working in, another country. I’ve been thinking about it for a while.

…or if you want we can just talk about frontside carve grinds. I feel like I give it too much oomph and almost revert around to switch (getting wrecked in the process)


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The Huffer

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #16 on: February 27, 2026, 08:19:31 AM »
Snowboarding in Japan looks dreamy. I love the idea and look of bindingness snowboarding in powder.

Sedition

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #17 on: February 27, 2026, 08:52:34 AM »
@Sedition did you have a blog at some point? I seem to recall it was you(could be very mistaken) that wrote about living in a smaller town riding a Variflex with some bmxers at a quarter pipe.
Stood out since it almost mirrored my start and town.

I've had, and contributed to, various blogs over the years...def rode with some BMXers in the early years, but never had a Variflex. Sounds like might be ParkBlockDiaries (Kyle's blog)???
"When life goes bad, make it go wronger"  -Gerwer

Plan9Customs

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #18 on: February 27, 2026, 06:49:50 PM »
Expand Quote
@Sedition did you have a blog at some point? I seem to recall it was you(could be very mistaken) that wrote about living in a smaller town riding a Variflex with some bmxers at a quarter pipe.
Stood out since it almost mirrored my start and town.
[close]

I've had, and contributed to, various blogs over the years...def rode with some BMXers in the early years, but never had a Variflex. Sounds like might be ParkBlockDiaries (Kyle's blog)???

Thanks. I’ll have to check that.

Plan9Customs

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #19 on: February 27, 2026, 08:51:31 PM »
@Sedition Thanks! That was it. Cannot repeat karma action aka I owe you one.

Mbrimson88

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #20 on: February 27, 2026, 09:41:46 PM »
.

*** I had just started typing and maybe this is not quite the place for it, but I thought I would just post it anyway ***


So much history, so much life lived, but maybe so much still to do for some people...

I don't know much about looking forward - every day is just another day to keep on going, sometimes better than yesterday, sometimes not, but any which way, I do know that without a skateboard, things would have been very different.

Some people I know have said in the past if it wasn't for skateboarding, they would be dead or in jail, with particular mention of me, usually in terms of keeping them rolling in whatever capacity I had been able to help, which is not to say I am out there being a skateboard saint, far from it, but I have been fortunate enough to be able to help a lot of people with skateboards over the years, running a lot of events for local Councils, youth based groups or agencies, church groups or pretty much anyone who wanted something skateboarding, who didn't have a big enough budget to get in "the professionals", although I even worked for "the professionals" on and off for a number of years too, usually as the instructor to go with their pro demos and whatever else was going on at that event.


Still being able to ride a skateboard is not something I take for granted either, but I would put it down to never going too hard or being too daring, so although I still skated a lot when younger, had injuries - broken arm when first starting back in the mid 80s, broken ankles at different times from 1988 through 1990, or a few other smaller breaks throughout the years since then, I am thankful I never had anything that took me out completely.

Most others I skated with who went way harder, got way better and ultimately skated themselves into early retirement due to various injuries, more often than not needing knee reconstructions, having back problems, some with other breaks or issues that just prevented them still rolling as much as they wanted, but it is just one of those things with this thing we love to do.

I still skate, still get in on a session and still enjoy seeing people I know being able to learn new tricks or get a good line or whatever else, so that part will never get old for me, along with getting my hands on skateboards and skateboard parts, testing different things, modifying setups to make them work in different ways, talking about skateboard stuff, in particular, on Slap skateboard forum and in person in the shop or at skateparks, so in that way, I have never lost the love of it either.

Some people who have worked in the skate industry have become jaded, negative, almost ended up hating skateboarding because of what they had to do, which is unfortunate for them, but everyone is on their own journey, so it is also up to them to find their way back to it, if or when they can, so I am quite thankful I have never really felt like this towards skateboarding either, as is often the way for older crew.


If we can still wake up each day, still be stoked on skateboarding, still want to look at a new video, or try a new product, or pass by a spot and still think of something we might like to do or see done on it, then we can still live as full a life as we are able, even if we cannot skate for whatever reason at any given time or day.

I think the world would be a lesser place without a skateboard, a group of friends and a place to roll, or at least my world most certainly would be.



* Sorry this might be a bit longer than I wanted, but being 51 and still finding as much enjoyment from skateboarding now as I ever have, I just let it all out and maybe said too much or said not enough (for an over 50s skate group) but I will just leave it as is.

Gone since 1988.  I talk too much about skateboards.  Sorry.

Sedition

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #21 on: February 27, 2026, 10:28:12 PM »
@Sedition Thanks! That was it. Cannot repeat karma action aka I owe you one.

Kyle is a great writer.
"When life goes bad, make it go wronger"  -Gerwer

Sedition

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #22 on: February 28, 2026, 01:24:23 AM »
.

*** I had just started typing and maybe this is not quite the place for it, but I thought I would just post it anyway ***


So much history, so much life lived, but maybe so much still to do for some people...

I don't know much about looking forward - every day is just another day to keep on going, sometimes better than yesterday, sometimes not, but any which way, I do know that without a skateboard, things would have been very different.

Some people I know have said in the past if it wasn't for skateboarding, they would be dead or in jail, with particular mention of me, usually in terms of keeping them rolling in whatever capacity I had been able to help, which is not to say I am out there being a skateboard saint, far from it, but I have been fortunate enough to be able to help a lot of people with skateboards over the years, running a lot of events for local Councils, youth based groups or agencies, church groups or pretty much anyone who wanted something skateboarding, who didn't have a big enough budget to get in "the professionals", although I even worked for "the professionals" on and off for a number of years too, usually as the instructor to go with their pro demos and whatever else was going on at that event.


Still being able to ride a skateboard is not something I take for granted either, but I would put it down to never going too hard or being too daring, so although I still skated a lot when younger, had injuries - broken arm when first starting back in the mid 80s, broken ankles at different times from 1988 through 1990, or a few other smaller breaks throughout the years since then, I am thankful I never had anything that took me out completely.

Most others I skated with who went way harder, got way better and ultimately skated themselves into early retirement due to various injuries, more often than not needing knee reconstructions, having back problems, some with other breaks or issues that just prevented them still rolling as much as they wanted, but it is just one of those things with this thing we love to do.

I still skate, still get in on a session and still enjoy seeing people I know being able to learn new tricks or get a good line or whatever else, so that part will never get old for me, along with getting my hands on skateboards and skateboard parts, testing different things, modifying setups to make them work in different ways, talking about skateboard stuff, in particular, on Slap skateboard forum and in person in the shop or at skateparks, so in that way, I have never lost the love of it either.

Some people who have worked in the skate industry have become jaded, negative, almost ended up hating skateboarding because of what they had to do, which is unfortunate for them, but everyone is on their own journey, so it is also up to them to find their way back to it, if or when they can, so I am quite thankful I have never really felt like this towards skateboarding either, as is often the way for older crew.


If we can still wake up each day, still be stoked on skateboarding, still want to look at a new video, or try a new product, or pass by a spot and still think of something we might like to do or see done on it, then we can still live as full a life as we are able, even if we cannot skate for whatever reason at any given time or day.

I think the world would be a lesser place without a skateboard, a group of friends and a place to roll, or at least my world most certainly would be.



* Sorry this might be a bit longer than I wanted, but being 51 and still finding as much enjoyment from skateboarding now as I ever have, I just let it all out and maybe said too much or said not enough (for an over 50s skate group) but I will just leave it as is.

It’s 4:21am. I got home from work just a bit ago, and I’m about to go to bed, but I had to respond to this first…I would say you erred on “not enough.” This was a great read…I’ll respond more tomorrow when home from skating. For now, I salute.
"When life goes bad, make it go wronger"  -Gerwer

Sloppy Krooks

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #23 on: March 01, 2026, 05:10:06 PM »
Expand Quote
I turned 50 this year, started skating around ‘86 or so. Everything was magic.
I was never talented, never cool enough to fit in with the cooler skaters in my small town so never really improved that much.

Which honestly was ok. Now that I’m older there’s a lot of low-hanging fruit I'm learning and still loving it.

FS carve grinds scare the shit out of me, trying to make friends with them.

Living in a mountainous area in Japan with lots of snowboarders, there are a lot of skaters my age snd we have a great community here, with new parks popping up. I helped get one made in my local, which I’m stoked on.

Age: 50

Setup:  street: && egg 8.75, Ace Lows, 99a Spits snd Bones 6Balls
Curbs & transition: Black Label Tugboat 9.5 with Ace 77s and IKPs, Bones X 97a and bones bearings.
Also: Anti Hero Horse Pill 10 with Slappy 10s and Bones X97a and bones bearings
                 
Preferred Terrain:  bowls, curbs, mini ramp and the local parks with DIY sections

Favorite skaters:  Drehobl, Gravette, Koppl, Lucero, Cardiel, Wilkins

Music:  50’s Rockabilly, 60’s Ska and Soul, 70’s Reggae, 80’s and 90’s punk and hip-hop

Occupation: teacher/snowboard instructor

Skill:  drawing

Dwelling:  a rental house in semi-rural Japan

Other stuff: learned a Scott Steven’s trick on my 50th.
[close]

Dang that sounds amazing. I have so many questions…

How is street skating in Japan? How is just living in Japan? How long did it take to feel comfortable with the language? (Or maybe you always lived there and are a native speaker, I don’t know)

I guess I’m curious about how a person goes about moving to, and living/working in, another country. I’ve been thinking about it for a while.

…or if you want we can just talk about frontside carve grinds. I feel like I give it too much oomph and almost revert around to switch (getting wrecked in the process)

Street skating… Japan has a very different relationship with streets that we do. Things are generally much more respectful of shared and private areas, so generally the idea of graffiti and skating in public and private property is pretty frowned upon, especially when you get out of the big cities. Street skating is totally possible, but it can’t be done in an arrogant, often confrontational way like in North America. It’s more subtle.

So skating tends to be more stealth, at low-traffic times. Plus, it’s so fucking hot and humid during the summer it’s almost impossible to skate during the day anyways.

There are a lot of unique spots, but as a foreign resident (and with the massive uptick in racism and xenophobia) i don’t want to give anyone a reason to hate foreigners more than they already do. I stick to the parks, which here in Nagano are pretty numerous compared to other rural prefectures. Plus we have a decent DIY scene.

Living here is not easy unless you either live in a bubble of foreigners, have a Japanese partner to take care of the legal stuff, or you speak really good Japanese.

There is a logic (and a lot of the time kinda illogic) to the way the society works, and no-one teaches you, it just takes time to understand the smaller societal rules. The language is the same. I learned the fundamentals in university back in Canada, which helped me learning it by myself later on. But it’s not easy, especially reading and writing. It took me about 3 or 4 years, maybe more until i felt kinda comfortable conversing.

But the thing is, I never feel completely comfortable here, except in very specific places. No matter how much i conform, fit in, learn the language, i will always be treated differently. Although in some ways its much better than when i first arrived in the 90s, its looking like its doing to get worse very soon, as politicians here are following Trump’s lead in demonizing foreigners.

I cam here as someone who was a big nerd about Japanese traditional culture. And totally idealized the place. The first few years were great, but when i came back after i hiatus, i hated a lot of it,. The inflexibility, the close-mindedness, the total lack of awareness about political and environmental issues. Japan is at least 30 years behind the rest of the world on a lot of societal issues.

But it’s like anywhere. It’s got good stuff (which its very good at showing) and bad stuff (which its also good at hiding).

But I feel I’m part of the skate and snowboard community in my area, and there are a lot of people my age which makes it a lot more comfortable and relatable.

I’m trying to be every mom’s favorite skater’-&&

Duane's the type of guy to ask to see your junk then go to school and tell everyone you're gay. - Uncle Flea


gringo_viejo

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #24 on: March 01, 2026, 06:47:49 PM »
Street skating… Japan has a very different relationship with streets that we do. Things are generally much more respectful of shared and private areas, so generally the idea of graffiti and skating in public and private property is pretty frowned upon, especially when you get out of the big cities. Street skating is totally possible, but it can’t be done in an arrogant, often confrontational way like in North America. It’s more subtle.

I appreciate this nuanced (dare I say subtle) response.

I’ve never been too bold in terms of barging spots… but there was also a point in my late 40s when I realized that if a confrontation happened, I was too old and busted to fight, and too slow to run away. A low key approach and diplomacy were my only options.


There are a lot of unique spots, but as a foreign resident (and with the massive uptick in racism and xenophobia) i don’t want to give anyone a reason to hate foreigners more than they already do. I stick to the parks, which here in Nagano are pretty numerous compared to other rural prefectures. Plus we have a decent DIY scene.

Living in the rural midwest US, I love a little country town that will build a decent skatepark…or at least not immediately shut down a DIY. Des Moines, Iowa built a huge park in 2023, and it’s as if the skate mothership landed in the middle of a cornfield…but there are also way too many places where a couple of prefab metal quarter pipes and a bent-ass flat bar are all there is.

Living here is not easy unless you either live in a bubble of foreigners, have a Japanese partner to take care of the legal stuff, or you speak really good Japanese.

There is a logic (and a lot of the time kinda illogic) to the way the society works, and no-one teaches you, it just takes time to understand the smaller societal rules. The language is the same. I learned the fundamentals in university back in Canada, which helped me learning it by myself later on. But it’s not easy, especially reading and writing. It took me about 3 or 4 years, maybe more until i felt kinda comfortable conversing.

But the thing is, I never feel completely comfortable here, except in very specific places. No matter how much i conform, fit in, learn the language, i will always be treated differently. Although in some ways its much better than when i first arrived in the 90s, its looking like its doing to get worse very soon, as politicians here are following Trump’s lead in demonizing foreigners.

I cam here as someone who was a big nerd about Japanese traditional culture. And totally idealized the place. The first few years were great, but when i came back after i hiatus, i hated a lot of it,. The inflexibility, the close-mindedness, the total lack of awareness about political and environmental issues. Japan is at least 30 years behind the rest of the world on a lot of societal issues.

But it’s like anywhere. It’s got good stuff (which its very good at showing) and bad stuff (which its also good at hiding).

It’s fucked up that other countries are modeling their behavior after DT…and that Canadian expats, of all people, would suffer for it.

Easily once a week I think, “I wonder if I could move to (x) foreign country, where maybe democratic institutions are stronger and 49%of the population aren’t such dicks.”

But I also remember studying abroad and being lonely as fuck for six months.

…and then coming “home” and feeling the same way. All the impenetrable social groups and opaque, stylized rituals. Right here in my backyard.

But I feel I’m part of the skate and snowboard community in my area, and there are a lot of people my age which makes it a lot more comfortable and relatable.

This right here, though.
Funny how often we end up typing some variation of, “man, life’s fucked up, people are fucked up, but isn’t skateboarding awesome?”


Shoes are just hard-palmed gloves for your ground hands

j....soy.....

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #25 on: March 02, 2026, 12:38:35 PM »
I’m half Japanese but so far removed from Japan.  My Japanese dad hasn’t even been there.  It’s pretty regular here where I meet Japanese skaters and you can see how much they love the day to day freedoms we have here.  Great place to visit but seems pretty suffocating.  I believe though they can have really rich and supportive scenes where here: I find is pretty transient and people take things for granted.  I think if I lived there I’d hang onto it for dear life but feel safe that I’m in a country where subcultures thrive. 
« Last Edit: March 05, 2026, 12:31:54 PM by j....soy..... »

gringo_viejo

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #26 on: March 05, 2026, 10:59:30 AM »
It’s weird how “just do what you like, and let other people do their thing” is such a ten thousand year struggle for humans.

Ok, Dept. of Pithy Aphorisms is closed for the season, I promise.


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gringo_viejo

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #27 on: March 12, 2026, 11:27:19 AM »
Just gonna put this here for your consideration (from the Parking Block Diaries)

I have always been a very tactile skater. I do tricks for the sensation they give me, the experience. That's why I can do the same tricks over and over again and never get tired of them. That's why I get irate when I can't get some trick i've pulled a thousand times.  Its not perfectionism or competitive drive, I simply fiend for the sensations my tricks give me and I go crazy when I can't experience them.

When I look at a clip of something that felt pure and powerful and perfect when I did it, yet looks stiff and forced when I watch it, it always triggers a poisonous dilemma in my brain, a dilemma that cuts to the soul of skating.

Skating has a dual nature: it is a full sensory experience on one hand, and a visual commodity we can only consume by watching on the other. When it comes to the actual experience of skating, does it really matter what something looks like? Is perfection of style and form worth chasing after for reasons other than the visual consumption of your personal skating by others? Does "bad style" really matter to anyone but those watching? And aren't we supposed to not give a shit about what anyone thinks

Or, to bring it back to that personal dilemma: should you change the way you do something that feels good just so it looks better?



This is interesting to me as an older skater. On the rare occasion when I film myself, I’m never stoked on the result. Everything looks slow and stiff. I look like listening to your own voicemail recording sounds.

But when I’m on the board, it feels amazing. I feel rad.

Thoughts?


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DNTRODDEN

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #28 on: March 12, 2026, 12:37:53 PM »
Over 50
Started skating again after a very long time away.
My issue is remembering how good I was when I stopped, not how bad I was when I started

Chavo

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Re: Skateboarding After 50
« Reply #29 on: March 12, 2026, 09:39:56 PM »
Was in my mid 20s when I started lurking Slap and felt like I was older than most posters, now I'm 52 and am still older if not one of the oldest.

Now on a serious weight loss regimen to get a few more good years of skating (broke some ribs and had 3 avulsion writ fractures in the past 2 years).