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 7 of 7)
But neither Brown nor Middleton was aware of the extreme sports scene when he began; Spencer, though familiar with skis and surfboards, never saw his pogo as any sort of rival. The trio’s motivation—simply to shake up a tired design—was probably not unlike those of earlier inventors whose ideas never got off the ground.
What none of the men knew then was that teenagers weaned on the X Games were rummaging through their garages for any old gizmo to take higher, farther or faster. The pogo appealed to kids who couldn’t—or didn’t want to—compete with the skateboarding hordes or who saw in its goofiness a kind of geeky cool. For several years before the supercharged pogos came to market, teenagers were refining low-altitude tricks like grinds and stalls on conventional sticks and swapping ideas and videos on websites like the Pogo Spot and Xpogo.
This time, when inventors came along with a new and better design, there was a market waiting—and a culture that could make sense of it as the latest extreme pastime.
I caught up not long ago with a few of the country’s best extreme pogoers. A Pittsburgh TV station had hired three members of a troupe known as the Pogo Dudes to perform in a parade.
Fred Grzybowski, a compactly built athlete who is the group’s éminence gris at 22, had driven to town with Tone Staubs and Zac Tucker, all from Ohio. Grzybowski ekes out a living with public performances, corporate functions and commercials. Staubs, 19, has kept his day job at a gas station. Tucker, 16, is a high-school junior.
The night before the parade, I watched a rehearsal in a faintly lit parking lot near Carnegie Mellon. The first thing I noticed was a set of cylinders that looked more like shoulder-mounted rocket launchers than any pogo I remembered from childhood.
Grzybowski, in hoodie and jeans, docked his iPhone into a portable speaker and cranked up the song “Houdini,” by Los Angeles indie rockers Foster the People. The Pogo Dudes were soon leaping through a routine of gravity-snubbing stunts with names like “air walk,” “switch cheese” and “under-the-leg bar spin.” (Fred rides a Flybar; Tone and Zac, Vurtegos.)
At a VIP brunch at a local Marriott after the parade, Grzybowski told me that he’d gotten his first pogo for Christmas when he was 8. It was a plastic stick with an anemic steel spring. But he persevered, learning to ride with no hands or while eating a Popsicle.
Transposing skateboard tricks to a pogo made him feel as if he were “creating something new,” he told me. But it wasn’t until he saw previews of the Flybar and Vurtego on the Xpogo website that he grasped how far his eccentric hobby might take him.
“I don’t think we would be where we are without the technology,” Grzybowski, regarded for a time as the best pogoer in the world, told me. “The technology pushed us forward and made us see new tricks were possible.” In an action sports culture that prized “big air,” he said, “the bigger sticks added legitimacy.”
They were also just a lot of fun. “It’s a weightless feeling,” Staubs told me, as he massaged a sore knee after the parade. “It puts this feeling inside your head that you can go high, you can do anything, you’re invincible.”
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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