Silks
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Gazelle Droplet to Straddle is a mini drop that we teach in our beginner level classes, once students are comfortable with a variety of easier skills in the fabric knot. We first learned this move when our aerial colleague Rebekah Leach showed it to us during a teaching nerd-out session, and after further exploration it became one of the very first drops that we teach our beginner level students.
When we teach this skill we teach our students how to keep themselves safe in drops, so there are actually a lot of cues we consider very important and we go over them in this video.
Become an Aerial Fit Online member to access the video for Gazelle Droplet to Straddle. This in-depth video will explain how to properly train this skill. It also includes cross references to the most important Building Blocks, Common Mistakes, Related Drills, Ground Drills, Variations, Next Steps and Sequences.
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Some of the most important aerial silks skills, related movements, and prerequisites from our aerial video tutorial library that students should be very comfortable doing to succeed at Gazelle Droplet to Straddle.
These are the most common mistakes we see with students when they are learning how to do the aerial silks skill Gazelle Droplet to Straddle and detailed directions on how to fix these problems to make the skill look and feel easy.
These similar aerial silks skills and aerial drills are helpful to troubleshoot and help with problems. Students don't need to have mastered the Gazelle Droplet to Straddle to work on these related skills and drills. These drills may help your students make important connections and answer the question "What am I doing wrong?".
These are some of our favorite ground drills for aerialists for Gazelle Droplet to Straddle. They can be used as part of the ground warm up or as part of the aerial class teaching progression.
These are different variations of Gazelle Droplet to Straddle. Students should be very comfortable with the current skill before working on these different or more advanced variations. They can be used for further exploration, managing students with different levels and adding variety to aerial silks choreography.
These are the next steps we teach to our aerial silks students after they’re comfortable with Gazelle Droplet to Straddle. The next steps can be started right away and they lead toward specific future goals which are often the most advanced aerial silks skills.
These are some of the more advanced silks skills that build on the strength and control taught in Gazelle Droplet to Straddle. They are not the next immediate steps, but rather long term planning goals.
These are aerial silks sequences, transitions, and combinations that include the aerial skill Gazelle Droplet to Straddle. They are fun, creative, and challenging sequences from our aerial video tutorial library.