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View Full Version : Did you jump ramps as a kid?



sknhgy
12-24-06, 09:33 PM
We used to set a board up on a few bricks in the alley. Then you'd get a running start and fly over it on your bike.
For some reason I can't see doing this now.;)
For one thing, there aren't any alleys where I live.:rolleyes:

Monoborracho
12-24-06, 09:40 PM
How do you think I got this scar on my cheek?

Digital Gee
12-24-06, 10:14 PM
I tried to stand on my saddle when I was a kid, no hands. Did a wonderful belly slam and slid on the pavement a few feet. Loose gravel under my skin from head to toe. Lots of fun! :D

Juggler2
12-24-06, 10:27 PM
We used to set a board up on a few bricks in the alley. Then you'd get a running start and fly over it on your bike.
For some reason I can't see doing this now.;)
For one thing, there aren't any alleys where I live.:rolleyes:

Yup, we used to do that, except we lived on a dirt road. I remember one of the bigger kids ran over me once... that hurt! I remember my Dad used to do a trick, he'd ride my bike backwards sitting on the handlbars. I'd forgotten all about that, till your post jogged my memory, thanks! :D

vger285
12-25-06, 04:01 AM
Yea, i used to sit on the handle bars and ride backwards,jump the ramps in the alley, put the playing card /baloon on the rear frame/to spoke to get the sound of a motor bike.how cool was that!

stapfam
12-25-06, 04:26 AM
Never had to bother with trick riding when I was younger. I lived just below the North downs and although I did not realise it- My love of Mountain biking was nurtured on Them Thar hills. Raleigh Trent Tourist with 3 speed Sturmey Archer and mudguards was not the best hike for offroading but Plenty of natural drop offs- Ramps and Trees to hit. Still have the affinity with trees so nothing has changed. Only thing is that I cannot remember having to cycle up the hills to be able to get in a downhill run.

sknhgy
12-25-06, 09:04 AM
I forgot about the balloons and baseball cards in the spokes. BTW, it has to be a baseball card in order to be authentic.

eubi
12-25-06, 09:11 AM
I forgot about the balloons and baseball cards in the spokes. BTW, it has to be a baseball card in order to be authentic.

In my group, it had to be the Joker from a "Bicycle" deck.

We used to jump the cutouts in the curb for driveways. Going down a hill, you could weave on and off the sidewalks for multiple jumps.

WHOOOOHOOOO!

BlazingPedals
12-25-06, 09:54 AM
We used to jump the cutouts in the curb for driveways. Going down a hill, you could weave on and off the sidewalks for multiple jumps.

WHOOOOHOOOO!

Me too. The curb cutouts at each driveway apron. We'd jump one up onto the sidewalk, then down the sidewalk to the next driveway where we'd jump the cutout back onto the street. At the end of the street was a park. We'd build up as much speed as we could, then slam on our coaster brakes when we hit the grass! Longest skid without crashing would win!

Artkansas
12-25-06, 09:57 AM
We used to set a board up on a few bricks in the alley. Then you'd get a running start and fly over it on your bike.
For some reason I can't see doing this now.;)
For one thing, there aren't any alleys where I live. :rolleyes:

When I was a kid, no one in my area had thought of ramps yet.

I did try to jump a hole in the ground though. In front of all my friends. Not very successfully. :rolleyes: I never tried it again. My Mom never replaced the bike.

big john
12-25-06, 10:12 AM
Some friends and I were jumping off a small terrace at a construction site to show off for some girls. I did a pretty hard landing and my frame broke at the head tube sending me into a face-plant. I then had to carry it 2 miles home as it wouldn't even roll. It was an English 3-speed and I bought another frame from a kid in the neighborhood for $2.

vger285
12-25-06, 10:24 AM
My first set of wheels was a red scooter 6inch wheels,man i went everywhere with that thing(neighborhood) then a used fat tire bike,then a new 3speed english racer,then a roadbike raceing,then a tourning bike,then a new mountain bike for raceing offroad,now i ride it during the winter and you won't believe what im back to riding come summer?? ( a kickbike) scooter! i love it! talk about full circle!

bcoppola
12-25-06, 12:32 PM
We used to jump the cutouts in the curb for driveways. Going down a hill, you could weave on and off the sidewalks for multiple jumps.

WHOOOOHOOOO!

No hills here but: Yeah! On a "Stingray conversion" we'd call it now (old kids bike frame w/banana seat and butterfly bars). I had a setup like that with a big knobby rear tire. I was hot s***!

Oh, and you had to follow up a series of good jumps with a celebratory wheelie of course!

Bud Bent
12-25-06, 02:51 PM
We had a steep hill we used to go down for speed, then cut into the last driveway before the corner, and up the side of the driveway, airborne to the middle of the yard. One day, while doing this, I lost the pedals with my feet, and of course on that old bike, the pedals were the brakes, so to avoid a trip over a two foot concrete wall onto a sidewalk, I intentionally put the bike down, only to roll off the wall and land face first on the sidewalk. I swelled up so much over one eye, it closed my eye completely, and I missed a couple of days of school. That was the end of my jumping career.

SemperFi
12-25-06, 02:58 PM
Never did that when I was a kid. I had a Schwinn that was built like a truck with the shock absorber on the fork...I forget the name of the model...but it weighed a ton. Don't think it would have been airborne for very long.

Frankenbiker
12-25-06, 05:16 PM
Our neighborhood street wasn't paved back then, just a dirt/oiled road so we didn't have curbs and I never saw any ramps. I had my banana bike with baseball cards in the spokes for effect. I learned at a very early age never to ride a bike barefoot. I still cringe at the vivid memory of my mangled and bloodied big toe. I'm sure my mother also has a vivid memory of me walking into the kitchen as a nine-year-old making bloody footprints throughout the house as I looked for her.

Louis
12-25-06, 05:38 PM
I can't remember any ramp jumping or wheelies.

I grew up in the country where there were few paved roads, most roads were gravel or dirt. The only trick riding I can remember doing is getting up to speed on a gravel road then doing a side slide by hitting the brake with the right foot to lock the rear wheel while leaning the bike left side down on the extended left foot. When done properly this trick could shoot a spray of gravel about 20 feet. Great fun.

Remember those rear hub brakes that required a backward pedal movement to engage?

jppe
12-25-06, 06:04 PM
No jumps here. Just paved roads and dirt roads.

BluesDawg
12-25-06, 06:26 PM
Heck yeah! We'd build ramps from boards and bricks. Half the time the bike would slip off the side of the board before we got to the end. Or the board would break as we rode up the incline. But that wouldn't stop us. We persevered and when it all came together we would sail off the end of the ramp for several inches, sometimes over a foot!
Any natural bump became a launch pad for jumps or wheelies. Daddy must have had the handlebars on my first 20 inch bike rewelded a dozen times. We lived on top of a pretty steep hill on a dirt road. I would fly down that hill on my bike or in my Western Flyer wagon with the pull handle folded back so I could steer while sitting in the wagon. The only way to stop the wagon before going into trees and bushes at the bottom of the hill was to crash the wagon. I stayed covered with scratches and scabs all the time.
Sometimes you have to wonder how any of us survived our childhood.

edp773
12-25-06, 06:46 PM
We placed a wooden jump ramp in the road with bricks or a cement block to hold one end up. The biggest problem we had was breaking the pedals off of our stingray bicycles. Of course there was the occasional broken forks or loose handlebar crashes.

Then the neighbors put a big pile of dirt in a vacant lot. This caused even more broken bicycles.

A friend and I decided bicycles needed rear shocks like motorcycles. We took a shock from a moped and made a rear monoshock stingray. The welds did not last long over the jumps, bit it was cool to us.

littledog
12-25-06, 09:08 PM
My first set of wheels was a red scooter 6inch wheels,man i went everywhere with that thing(neighborhood) then a used fat tire bike,then a new 3speed english racer,then a roadbike raceing,then a tourning bike,then a new mountain bike for raceing offroad,now i ride it during the winter and you won't believe what im back to riding come summer?? ( a kickbike) scooter! i love it! talk about full circle!

I have a Sidewalker scooter. It is a gas. Before that I had a BMX scooter with the 12" wheels waaaaaay back in '85. Cro-moly frame and a gyro. Even learned a few simple tricks on that one. Love them scooters:D

Akugluk
12-25-06, 09:55 PM
big piles of dirt... sometimes people use boards, but dirt is much more plentiful around here (notice I'm speakng in the present tense). I was always too scared to try things like that, but just this last spring I saw an impressive sight: a bunch of kids (I knew most of 'em) taking turns barrelling down a slope to what must have been a 4 or 5 foot ramp they'd drug out there. They'd go as fast as they could, hit the ramp, ditch the bike, and land in a pile of snow in the ditch off the road after falling some 15 or 20 feet (roads around here are built up quite a bit for natural snow removal). I just stood there and stared. They wore helmets and some body protection gear, but I was very impressed (but whether it was by the feat, or their recklessness, I'm not sure)

vger285
12-26-06, 10:58 AM
I'll ride my mountain bike(Giane atx880) till spring and the:D wind dies down, then the kickbike comes out for the rest of spring and summer,on most of our rides, the regular bikes get there first, but i put in the most work and reap the most benefits! It's not for everyone,but i love it!:D

Terrierman
12-26-06, 11:02 AM
The first new bike I had was a Candy Apple Red Schwinn Stingray with a white seat that had fake roll and tuck accents. I got it for my birthday when I was in the fifth grade. Hell yes we jumped ramps, the most fun was ramp to ramp.

Skipper
12-26-06, 05:46 PM
This time of year, we used to ride our bicycles on frozen Lake Mendota in Madison, WI. We used the expansion cracks in the ice for ramps. We'd pile up all the snow we could gather in the 'landing' area and let her rip. Tons of fun. We would also hold our coats open and use them for sails while riding no handed across the ice.

After getting dried off one time, we had to push a john boat out on the ice to fish our bicycles out of the Yahare River. Two of us had found a patch of thin ice. Thank heavens for shallow water.

Hwy 40 Blue
12-27-06, 11:40 AM
Heck yes, vivid childhood memory of Robby Stout and I putting two big plywood boards across some tires, and "flying" over this at a top speed of maybe 8 mph because his yard wasn't too big and we couldn't get much of a head start and my bike dropped off the edge like an anvil. I ate a bunch of dirt and started crying and Robby was laughing so I think I probably had to beat him up. I was a tough little cookie.

Digital Gee
12-27-06, 11:45 AM
Heck yes, vivid childhood memory of Robby Stout and I putting two big plywood boards across some tires, and "flying" over this at a top speed of maybe 8 mph because his yard wasn't too big and we couldn't get much of a head start and my bike dropped off the edge like an anvil. I ate a bunch of dirt and started crying and Robby was laughing so I think I probably had to beat him up. I was a tough little cookie.

That reminds me of the time I was riding with my kid sister back in the woods. I was about 12, and she was about 7. We got to this big ravine, and I mustered up all my bravado and said we could ride down the slope to the creek below. She (foolishly) agreed to give it a try. Down I went, slip sliding through the brambles and the brushes, and when I glanced over to my side, I saw, to my horror, my little sis doing a flip right over her handlebars!

She ended up with cuts and bruises from head to toe; I had to haul both the (quite heavy) bikes UP the hill and back to the street, and we had to walk home -- the breeze from riding was too painful for her. All the way home I could hear my mother's voice asking who was the knucklehead who thought it would be a good idea to ride down that hill.

I don't remember what actually happened when we got home, but I DO remember my sister didn't quite trust her older brother after that, for a long, long time.

RockyTopBiker
12-27-06, 12:56 PM
I trashed a Swinn Black Phantom (or maybe Black Panther, I'm not sure) jumping on ramps made of boards, not to mention leaping from the seat to grab an overhanging limb like Roy Rogers. (Trigger just crashed when he ran out of steam). Somebody told me that the Swinn would be worth a fortune if it was still mint, but it wouldn't be worth near the fun I had with it.

Ned

Hwy 40 Blue
12-27-06, 02:43 PM
Ain't it great being a kid?

swan652
12-27-06, 03:31 PM
Didn't do ramps but broke my arm while doing "Cooler King" (Steve McQueen, The Great Escape) slides in the grass. I wish I had back all the baseball cards I sacrificed in my spokes. Bet I could buy a really nice bike with those collectibles.

SemperFi
12-27-06, 03:48 PM
I wish I had back all the baseball cards I sacrificed in my spokes. Bet I could buy a really nice bike with those collectibles.


Ah yes, what I wouldn't give to have that Mickey Mantle rookie card back again. :(

Tom Bombadil
12-27-06, 06:55 PM
I raced down hills, took curves too fast, and drafted behind cars, but I never jumped ramps.

As to baseball cards, we took special care of them. Had complete sets from 1964, 1965,and 1966. That is, until we moved in 1973 and my mother threw them all out without asking us. They would be worth thousands today. Even when she threw them out, they were worth hundreds.

Sandwarrior
12-27-06, 10:34 PM
At one point in my life I had a bicycle with a banana seat and those "Y" shaped handlebars. When I lived at Ft Lewis in Washington, we used to go to the Playground at the top of the hill in the housing area and Joust:eek: Our shields were garbage can lids and our lances were brooms with newspaper and a sheet padding the broom end.

jwbnyc
12-28-06, 12:34 AM
Sure. Boards and Bricks. Dirt ramps and Berms.

There was one gravel parking lot that was basically built up above the surrounding grass about Six Feet. This yielded a huge berm that went vertical over a length of maybe a Foot or Two. It had just the right curve at the bottom.

We'd barrel down the grass covered hill that was adjacent for about a 1/4 Mile and launch off this thing. Big air. Lots of broken frames/wheels/nuts. We'd never end up very far from the berm - maybe Ten Feet or so. It was all vertical.

Good times.

:)

eubi
12-28-06, 09:32 AM
Never did that when I was a kid. I had a Schwinn that was built like a truck with the shock absorber on the fork...I forget the name of the model...but it weighed a ton. Don't think it would have been airborne for very long.

Hahaha. Headlight built into the front fender?

That sounds like my dad's bike. He used it on his paper route when HE was a kid in the mid 40's.

I pedalled it up the hill by my house...once.

After they were divorced, my mother GAVE IT AWAY!

I would LOVE to have that monster today!