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Trickline Progression Kit

Once walking is easy, the trickline is where slacklining becomes a sport. A bouncier 2-inch line tensioned tight for jumps, spins, and chest bounces; a backup anchor system (redundancy is safety); and a crash pad for the hard bails. The trick is the commitment — you either commit to the air or you do not, and hesitation is how you fall wrong.

Trickline Progression Kit

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3

FAQ

Common questions about this kit

What makes a trickline different?

A wider (2-inch), tighter, bouncier webbing designed to rebound — the slackliner uses the bounce like a trampoline for jumps and spins. A beginner line is for walking; a trickline is for flying. Tension is much higher, so the rigging must be bomber.

Why a backup anchor?

The main line is tensioned hard, and a failure (a slipped knot, a failed ratchet) is a projectile. A backup anchor (a second line or chain) catches the main line if it releases. Redundancy is the rule when you load a line this hard.

Do I need a crash pad?

For learning new tricks, yes — you will under-rotate and land on your back. A gymnastics crash pad under the line turns a season-ending fall into a bruise. As the trick becomes reliable, you can do without, but learn with one.

What is the first trick?

The chest bounce and the butt bounce — drop onto the line and use the rebound to stand or launch. They teach you to read the line's rhythm before you add rotation. Master the bounce before the spins, always.

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