History
It was in January
2006, that Dale Annous arrived in Lincoln with two very different
intentions. The first was to attend the Lincoln University for the
sake of his education. And the second, for the sake of his love
for parkour, and his belief that everyone should at least have the
opportunity to sample its unique thrills, was to form Lincolns very
first Parkour community.Wasting no time, Dale immediately made his
presence on the Lincolnshire parkour scene known through the internet.
Using forums such as Worldwide jam and Urban Freeflow, as well as
finding videos on you tube and Myspace, Dale slowly began to build
a list of potential traceurs to approach.Firstly he contacted Jake
Kelly, a traceur from the Boston area. Unfortunately, with Dale
being based in Lincoln, this made regular training sessions a real
problem. When Dale got in contact with Ben Christian, a Sleaford
based traceur, communication became a lot easier. After the first
meeting, Dale and Ben continued the search for other practitioners
of parkour, and came across Lincoln and Metheringham based teams,
Linx Freeflow and Team Flying Daggers.After Dale got in contact
with both Stuart Palmer of LFF and Jonathon Parker of TFD, it was
not long before traceurs from all corners of Lincolnshire came together
for their first major jam. It was an immediate success, with a dedicated
training atmosphere and a genuinely friendly collection of people,
all discovering new techniques and philosophies about the parkour
discipline.Several weeks and an equal amount of astoundingly successful
training sessions later, on May 15th, The Lincs Parkour website
and forum was released. Immediately after, popularity for the new
born group grew rapidly and gained interest from the even further
reaches of Lincolnshire including Spalding and Grimsby.
Now that Lincs Parkour had established a firm (but still developing)
presence in the parkour scene, awareness of the growing interest
in the discipline had grabbed the attention of Parkour organisation
“Worldwide Jam”. In October of 2006, Daniel Illabaca,
Luke Markey, Brad Wendes, Brad Moss and Chris Harbour all came down
to Lincoln for a week in order to hold the cities very first parkour
workshop, and train with the new and enthusiastic community.This
workshop gained immediate attention from local newspaper “The
Lincolnshire Echo” who printed an article about parkour, and
the Local parkour community.
In the following weeks, Lincs Parkour’s forum membership rocketed
like never before. So many people, had gained a sudden interest
in this exciting and adventurous new sport and were almost begging
for a chance to try it out and train with Lincs parkour.After this,
popularity for the community went from strength to strength. Interviews
with local TV and radio stations, several articles in local papers
and even a short ten minute documentary entitled “Jump Lincoln”
all helped to place Lincoln’s parkour community firmly on
the map.The sheer scale of the community became apparent to all
at the very first annual trace gathering, when out of 120 traceurs
attending the event, Lincoln arrived with the biggest following
of all.
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Success
throughout 2007 was phenomenal for the community, with an astounding
three members becoming sponsored athletes for Worldwide jam and
Urban Freeflow and several other members performing jobs such as
workshops, after school classes and public shows.Lincs Parkour has
recently set up a workshop which is already a resounding success
with young people all over Lincolnshire and continues to grow in
popularity week after week.
Intentions
Lincs Parkour
have the exact same intentions now as we did in the beginning, to
help promote and teach parkour to absolutely anybody who is interested.
We are a team and a community, dedicated to assisting anyone who
requires help getting started, or further developing their skills
in parkour.We do not consider ourselves an organisation, we are
not work colleagues. We are an incredibly close collection of good
friends who are always looking for friendly and enthusiastic new
people to join us. We aim to promote a fun and constructive atmosphere
at every single jam and event in order to display what an effective
and pleasant community we run.We also aim to promote parkour accurately
to the public in order to spread a positive message and help people
to gain a more detailed understanding of what exactly we are doing.
We take care in how we convey ourselves to the public by maintaining
a polite and more importantly, environmentally cautious attitude.
Anyone who believes that we seek to vandalise property or simply
cause any form of general nuisance, we tend to approach and describe
to them our true intentions.It has always been our intention to
spread the word of parkour far and wide, and with our workshops
and many close friends such as Worldwide Jam, Trace, and the Sayian
clan all striving towards similar goals, the future for Lincs parkour,
and parkour in general is looking brighter than ever. |