Ultimate Kong Tutorial (Learn how to vault for parkour)

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  • čas přidán 28. 06. 2024
  • Learn the kong vault (also known as a cat pass or monkey vault) from our Ultimate Kong Tutorial. Origins Parkour coaches breakdown this fundamental parkour technique into drills and exercises that will take you from beginner to intermediate in the kong vault. While this is intended to be a beginner parkour tutorial, even experienced parkour athletes may learn something new.
    If you're in Vancouver and want to receive coaching at one of the premiere parkour gyms in the world, come check us out at Origins! You can also show your support by hitting LIKE on this video, SUBSCRIBING to the channel, and dropping a COMMENT down below! All of these things help our content reach more people :)
    You can also check out our website: originsparkour.com
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Komentáře • 13

  • @napolihuhn
    @napolihuhn Před 5 měsíci +8

    Litteraly best tutorial for a kong ever ❤

  • @kazimdhanif3238
    @kazimdhanif3238 Před 6 měsíci +5

    Finally a tutorial
    Pls make more of these❤

  • @egondugas
    @egondugas Před 6 měsíci +3

    I love your tutorials. I have trouble teaching gather steps, and the armswing for kongs, and teaching it as a split foot plyo makes so much sense! Though some people struggle with coordinating all the limbs on that, even.

    • @originsparkour
      @originsparkour  Před 6 měsíci +2

      Glad you liked it!
      It’s true; coordination can be really poor when learning this type of jump set up. We often give more specific cues, when being general is more helpful for beginners. For example: I notice someone isn’t setting their arms right, so I tell them simply where to put their arms. The problem is that they weren’t thinking about their arms and now they are going to move slower and more robotic in order to appease the arm cue I just told them. The same person may have more success If I have them think about performing a more visually familiar movement like running up to a net to jump and block a volleyball or dunk a basketball. It’s all about giving them context for something they already have a grounded visual of.

  • @dickensrivers9862
    @dickensrivers9862 Před 27 dny

    Superior breakdown of movement/teaching technique

  • @me24601
    @me24601 Před měsícem

    Great Tutorial! I had never tried the Kong because I was always sure I would faceplant and bust my teeth out. But I had never heard of, nor seen the Ground Kong progression either. I am going to start working on this now.

  • @uvewott2243
    @uvewott2243 Před 6 měsíci +3

    I actually teach people to jump of two legs together rather than of a split-step. Split-step makes it a lot more confusing for beginners- they begin jumping of 1 foot instead of 2. With enough experience jumping of 2 feet together split-step comes naturally

  • @Aulig
    @Aulig Před 6 měsíci +2

    Nice upgrade from your 10 year old video - although that one taught me the kong :)

  • @arthurhakobyan5948
    @arthurhakobyan5948 Před měsícem

    Awesome tutorial,
    Thanks so much guys!!!

  • @jonalejm2700
    @jonalejm2700 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Hey my man. How’s your recovery going after the microfracture surgery? I started following you after I had the same injury. However, I had to get two more (MACI procedure) because the microfracture was a complete failure…

  • @no_not_that_one
    @no_not_that_one Před 3 měsíci +1

    There’s a kong pre I want to do from a rail to a piece of elevated concrete, both things are very short, about pelvis height, any tips on specifically kong pre-ing shorter obstacles?

    • @originsparkour
      @originsparkour  Před 3 měsíci +1

      When konging lower structures it helps to set up your take off further away. This ensures a more horizontal trajectory and allows you to use your arms more after your dive.

    • @orbismworldbuilding8428
      @orbismworldbuilding8428 Před dnem

      Think of a short obstacle kong as a dive roll in disguise where instead of rolling you use your arms to pivot your body back upright