Results For Category: "Circus"

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Circus: this isn’t ‘just for fun’

Back in the days of TSNY Logbook, version 1, I had a conversation with some colleagues about the conditioning requirements. At the…

Standing on the shoulders of giants | A tribute to Bob Christians

On Monday, I heard the news of the passing of Bob Christians and though I never had the pleasure of meeting him,…

What’s On Your Preflight Checklist?

Before pilots take their planes into the air, they run through a preflight checklist. The basic—yet critical—premise is that it’s better to…

By Anatomography (en:Anatomography (setting page of this image)) [CC BY-SA 2.1 jp (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.1/jp/deed.en)], via Wikimedia Commons

Exercises Every Aerialist Should Do, part two: thoracic mobility

You know, there’s a piece to this expanding and wonderfully complex puzzle that is the healthy flyer/aerialist/circus artist that has been nagging…

Stopping the flinch: getting serious about core control

For many, it happens the moment they start pulling when doing a pull-up or a climb. It’s also there all too often…

Strong stable shoulders: How to grip the bar and why your head position matters

This month, things are going to get practical, comprehensive and maybe a little bit controversial. Over the past two months, I’ve focused…

Why anterior core control matters for your (aerial) shoulder health

There’s so much I want to share with you and, for now, just the one blog post. The goal of this month’s…

Exercises Every Aerialist (and Flyer) Should Do: part one

In the world of recreational flying trapeze, you’ll very often hear “you don’t need to be very strong, flexible or athletic to…

The Flying Trapeze Paradox

Well here we are. The Method Behind the Madness series has run its course. The goal all throughout was to highlight the…

Improve Your Flying in Your Spare Time

So you’ve fallen in love with the flying trapeze. Or perhaps for you, it’s Silks, Static Trapeze or Trampoline. No matter the…