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the approach; the take off; the air borne position and the landing.
Hop, step then jump. The hop involves landing on the same foot that was used for take-off, the step lands on the opposite foot and the jump finishes in the sandpit (normally a two-footed landing).
back of the board for your approach and front for the jump
quick variation (jump) of the phase of the grid (mains)
No
Triple jump and long jump competitions are often conducted with the same track and landing pit. Take off lines are marked on the track to indicate the separate starting points. High jump requires a landing mat, uprights, crossbars, and a running and take-off area.
You get in a vehicle and find a ramp, jump it and GOOD LUCK LANDING!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
For landing when they jump and to help them climb.
Saute
Not as scary as landing on your face.
1. If your foot crosses over the front of the marked line 2. If the jumper walks back towards the front of the pit after he jumps andexits the front of the pit. 3. If the jumper touches any of the outside edges when landing in his jump. 4. When a jumper is excecuting his jump and happens to enter the sand on his second phase (the step) then it is a fault.
absolutely not