How the Pogo Stick Leapt From Classic Toy to Extreme Sport
Three lone inventors took the gadget that had changed little since it was invented more than 80 years ago and transformed it into a gnarly, big air machine
- By Ariel Sabar
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2012, Subscribe
(Page 5 of 7)
Unwilling to risk another failure, Bruce Spencer turned to heavier but tougher materials, first a space-age thermoplastic and, finally, aerospace aluminum. Riders could pressurize the tube with an ordinary bike pump. The Spencers sold their first Vurtego in January 2006. Brian soon leapt over that taxicab on Letterman’s show. In August 2010, at Pogopalooza 7, in Salt Lake City, Mahoney, the Canadian, set a new pogo high-jump record—on a Vurtego. The Spencers told me they sell around 800 a year, all through their website.
I met with Bruce and Brian Spencer in a narrow, sky-lit work space in a nondescript commerce park in Mission Viejo, where they personally assemble their pogo sticks. Saddleback Mountain rose in the haze beyond the parking lot.
It was a Wednesday afternoon, a week and a half before Christmas, and father and son were scurrying to stay atop a rush of holiday business, including a first-ever order from Egypt, the 42nd country in which Vurtego has found customers.
I had a hard time tracking down Bruce Middleton, who would eventually tell me his theory of “conceptual basins.” Old e-mails and phone numbers didn’t work, and his name was common enough to make identifying the right man tricky. I eventually found him on Facebook, which his daughter had nudged him to join.
His life had seen some ups and downs since his Flybar pogo stick came to market. When we spoke by phone, he told me that he had split with SBI Enterprises. He was now living in a single-room-occupancy hotel on skid row in Vancouver, British Columbia. (Middleton said the company owed him money; SBI’s president told me the parting was amicable.)
“I thought my 15 minutes of pogo fame were all finished,” Middleton replied, dryly, to my first Facebook message.
I said I was interested less in his fame, such as it was, than in the workings of an inventor’s mind. How does a grown man decide that a quiver of giant rubber bands is the key to pogo’s progress?
Middleton, 55, told me that the Flybar was his answer to a question that came to him when he was 16. His girlfriend had lived 15 miles away, on the other side of Vancouver’s Lions Gate Bridge. During bike rides to her house, after reaching high speeds, he hated having to brake at lights and squander all that kinetic energy.
Might there be some way to store the energy lost to braking? Could you convert it to potential energy and then release it to propel you back to your original speed? (A form of such “regenerative braking” is now standard in hybrid vehicles like the Toyota Prius and Honda Insight.)
For decades, the question remained one of the many intellectual riddles caroming around his brain. Middleton entered MIT at age 16, with dreams of becoming a theoretical physicist. He soon suffered what he termed a “moral crisis” over the detachment of science from real-world problems like global poverty, and dropped out .
He traveled to Venezuela to tend to disabled children at one of Mother Teresa’s outposts. Back in Canada, he worked a series of menial jobs—parks laborer, millworker—and eventually became a stay-at-home dad. In the late 1990s, he began bicycling with his two young daughters to their school and found himself newly curious about regenerative braking.
He considered affixing some kind of steel spring to his bike. But he concluded that a strong enough steel coil would easily weigh as much as an adult rider. Rubber was lighter than steel and, pound for pound, could store as much as 20 times the energy. Still, he’d need more rubber than could be elegantly integrated into a bicycle frame.
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next »
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (4)
i alwaysed liked pogo sticks even though i could only do 2 tricks 1=bounce up and down 2=jump on and off stuff. but it is still fun
Posted by Bryce on September 24,2012 | 08:32 PM
I used to pogo when I was about 6 or 7 years old... Did some really radical stuff like jumping up and down the stairs and picnic benches. One day my mom saw me pounce up the stairs and onto the picnic bench on the porch, from there I launched over the rail for a 12 foot drop, I had no problem with the landing but for some odd reason my stick disappeared after that day ...
Posted by mikem on September 13,2012 | 09:36 PM
Ariel: I was looking for a way to email you. In 1967 I met an inventor, John Ray Wilkinson, who had made a 2-stroke powered pogo stick. I believe the device was published in some motorcycle related publications of the day. It would boost the rider to some considerable height - and though I raced motorcycles at the time, I was unwilling to try the thing myself. I am a designer and builder of unusual engines myself - and have run my engines on karts. One of my engines helped get me a job at McCulloch corp where I designed engines for snowmobiles, motorcycles, karts, helicopters, etc. I can send you some photos of powered pogo sticks (Von Dutch designed one too - don't know if he built his or not). Thanks for the article.... Best regards, Mike David Savin
Posted by Mike Savin on September 5,2012 | 07:53 PM
Wow, I loved this article. Fascinating portrayal of the three very different inventors with three very different paths to successful pogo making.
Posted by Kathy on August 21,2012 | 08:09 PM