[Sportsandrec] Jumping Rope

Lori lori at asmodean.net
Mon Apr 29 14:14:13 UTC 2013


Personally, if using some type of demarkation for orientation, I would 
make sure it was a very thin material that does not slip. I personally 
would not like something thicker as if you jump off with one foot it 
would bother me kenesthetically. I do understand the idea of maintaining 
placement though especially if you have other jumpers or people in the 
workout space.

It's been a while, but when I first learned to jump, I went slow motion. 
I would actually bring the rope over and in front and hear it hit the 
surface of the floor and then jump. As your body gets coordinated, you 
can definitely pick up the pace and jump at a fitness level.

On 4/29/2013 7:05 AM, Tristan Pierce wrote:
> Use a mat to absorb shock and for orientation. Everyone migrates when jumping. If you use a mat for orientation you will know when one foot goes off the mat and you can adjust your orientation before the rope hits something. There is also the Jump Snap. It is a talking, ropeless jump rope. You can buy it online, just Google Jump Snap. APH also has the Jump Rope to Fitness kit that includes multiple traditional ropes (three sizes), the Jump Snap, an orientation mat, and guidebook. The kit probably has more in it than you need so if you have an exercise mat just check out the Jump Snap. It counts jumps, calories, etc., like a talking pedometer.
>
> Ms Tristan Pierce
> Project Leader
> Research Department
> American Printing House for the Blind, Inc.
> 1839 Frankfort Avenue
> Louisville, KY 40206-0085
> 502-899-2380
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Sportsandrec [mailto:sportsandrec-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of JUSTIN LOUCHART
> Sent: Sunday, April 28, 2013 6:03 AM
> To: Sports and Recreation for the Blind Discussion List
> Subject: [Sportsandrec] Jumping Rope
>
> Hi, all,
>
> Running is my absolute favorite thing. I love it. The problem is that my lifestyle does not allow for consistency. I travel for work, so I'm always in a different place and around new people.
>
> My plan is to start jumping rope while I'm traveling or whenever I can't access my running guides for some reason. Probably I'll run something like three times a week and do a jump rope/weight training routine on the opposite days.
>
> Does anyone have advice for someone just starting out with a jump rope? I'm relatively new to not being a couch potato, so I have no idea what to expect.
>
> Thank you all for any thoughts you might have. I'm open to anything.
> J
>
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