Reality Assassin wrote:the cards were as slippery as eels! How do you get past this new card nightmare, or is it purely experience and practice????
It's a process known as 'working them in'.
I always get funny looks when I tell people exactly what I'm doing, though I suppose I do get some kind of sick pleasure from it.
You're right though, new bikes are awkward to work with. Different people have different ways to break them in. Some people give them a few aggressive Faros, some give them a good springing.
Personally, I give them a good ten to fifteen in-hand riffles shuffles with good hard waterfalls at the end. That sorts them. A good guide is if you can get a perfect thumb fan out of them without too much difficulty. Then they are ready.
Pretty much every manoeuvre is harder with new bikes. There's kind of a 'tail off' when it comes to cards, if you know what I mean. Certain moves are eaiser with fairly new cards, but others are easier with well worked-in ones. You have to find a balance at somewhere in the middle.
A DL is much harder if the cards are all worn differently for example, because it will be more likely to flash. But hiding a break or injog will be much easier with worn cards.
I find that my repertoire changes over the life of a deck. Is this just me? Or am I sad?
I mean, try doing a Triumph with brand new cards. At a certain point in the routine, the deck seems to scream at the spectator that something is
definitely not as it seems (you know what I mean here - I'm trying not to expose.... The bit where you do the standard display of the mixed up deck).
Anyways. Off I go again.