Published: July 18, 2017 By

President of the CU slackline club and two sponsored student slackliners share their perspectives on the burgeoning alternative sport


Years ago, alternative sports engagement on the 羞羞视频 campus implied tossing a Frisbee across a crowded field, or hacky-sacking oneself into an acrobatic frenzy by the University Memorial Center Fountain. These days, there鈥檚 a group of young men and women slacklining across Norlin Quad with a great deal more skill than you see it tried in local parks.

Three of them recently discussed the sport and its place on campus and in student life: Tyler Shalvarjian, a recent CU 羞羞视频 graduate from Los Angeles; Eli Ellis, a continuing geology student from 羞羞视频; and Justin Wagers, a recent graduate from the University of Puget Sound in Tacoma, Wash., who was raised and lives in 羞羞视频. His mother, Tina Pittman Wagers, is an instructor of psychology at CU.

Ellis and Wagers are each bona fide, sponsored athletes (by Slackline Industries). Wagers is a trickliner, meaning he flips, grabs, spins and performs a universe of unnamable tricks on a line two inches wide. While all three men are skilled highliners, able to traverse lines hundreds of feet long high above a canyon, Slackline Industries sponsors Ellis for it.


wagers

Justin Wagers. Photo by Craig Levinsky.


For the past two years, Shalvarjian served as president of Slackers at CU, the CU 羞羞视频 slackline club, which he helped expand from its student-base of 30 to include the greater community of 羞羞视频鈥檚 roughly estimated 300 slackliners.

Shalvarjian earned his degree from the Leeds School of Business with an emphasis in marketing, and has already started his own healthy-alternative coffee creamer company (an idea he originally pitched in an entrepreneurial class), which he plans to base in 羞羞视频. He is something of a leader in the local slacklining community, a role that Shalvarjian shouldered quite naturally. , to have slacklining legalized and formally regulated in 羞羞视频, something the sport very much needed as it rapidly grows in popularity.

During introductions on Norlin Quad, Ellis set up a short practice line, one inch thick, roughly seven feet off the ground, and the three young men were running up and down it. While watching the other two, Shalvarjian explained that the health and condition of the trees was more sacred and protected than that of the slackliners themselves.

Then, Ellis and Shalvarjian took turns on the line, stopping to execute poses. Wagers, alternatively, repeated backflips and grabs as if he were on a trampoline. Ellis, too, flashed a few tricks. And this more-or-less represented the differences in the three men鈥檚 styles.

Here is the interview, edited for length:

How did you get into slacklining? What鈥檚 the learning curve?

Shalvarjian: I started just before coming to CU. I saw a Facebook video of a friend slacklining over a creek鈥 It took me about a week to do a full cross. Slacklining kind of taught me that practice makes perfect. Once you get that basic balance on the line and those first couple of steps, the rest comes a lot easier. You just have to scale gradually, scale in length and height and sag, which is how loose you set the line, how much tension it has.

Ellis: I started in middle school. There are always slacklines around 羞羞视频 and at The Spot, here in 羞羞视频. I was on the team there for a while. I coach there now. It probably took me a couple of days to walk it, and then try stuff besides walking it. As soon as we could walk it, my friends and I just started trying tricks.

Wagers: I just watched YouTube videos and thought it was awesome. It took me about a week, just trying after school, trying to get one more step further, and one more step, and then finally I could walk it. I started early in high school, learning in my back yard, but it didn鈥檛 come easy. I was probably doing it for about six months before I did my first flip, but I was big into the video aspect of it. I started making videos of myself, and other friends of mine would collaborate on them and that鈥檚 how we pushed each other, through landing a new trick and making it look cool on video.

How do you get a sponsorship?

Ellis: You either know the people and are involved with them already through the community, or you can put together videos and send them into different companies鈥 Just hanging around, getting noticed.

It鈥檚 nice just to hear the canyon beneath you, birds and stuff. I also like to listen to music and zone out and kind of feel the line, and really embrace the moment, not try to rush it."


Ellis

Eli Ellis. Photo by Katrin Bell.听

What鈥檚 the benefit of being sponsored?

Wagers: As a trickliner, if you have a good sponsorship, you get paid a bit monthly, and you get free travel accommodations to competitions. There are different types of sponsorships. A lot of people have clothing sponsors. It鈥檚 mostly just to support what you love. Not a lot of people can really live off of slacklining right now.

Let鈥檚 talk about highlining. You already told me some people do distance, some do tricks, but you鈥檙e all into highlining in one degree or another.

Ellis: I like to set up the biggest highlines I can, as I high as I can over a canyon. The biggest line I鈥檝e set is directly over the top of听[a canyon here in 羞羞视频], about 300 feet tall, 380 feet long.

I know you guys are tied to the line for safety when you do that, but I imagine there are people in this world who do that without the safety measures?

Ellis: Free solo? People do it. I think the record is close to 200 meters long, 100 meters high, in British Columbia.

What does it feel like when you鈥檙e walking a slackline, 300 feet above the ground, with nothing beneath you?

Ellis: The best! Empowering. I love looking down and seeing trees. They look so much cooler from up top than from the ground鈥 I try to highline once a week at the minimum, but that just takes a lot of planning, because I need other people to go with me. I need to tape my webbing and get my gear in order, and make sure I鈥檓 bringing just the right gear I need, not too much or too little.

Shalvarjian: We went longlining yesterday on a 160-foot line. I can walk three times that distance when I鈥檓 10 feet off the ground, but when I鈥檓 a hundred feet off the ground, I can鈥檛 walk that line, nor can I even walk a 40-foot line. It鈥檚 just a totally different mental game.Ellis: Walking backwards, looking down, when you can see your leashing in front of you and you know that if you fall it鈥檚 gonna get you鈥 I like that.

Shalvarjian: I participate in controlled risk. I tend to think about the worst that could happen. I think the weakest point of a highline is the harness or the rope that I鈥檓 tied into, and I always think, what if I slip out of the harness and die? I don鈥檛 want to die yet. But that鈥檚 just something we all fear. It鈥檚 not much different up there. You get into this mental game with yourself, 鈥業鈥檓 not going to stand up,鈥 or, 鈥業 can鈥檛 do this,鈥 or, 鈥業鈥檓 going to fall out of my harness and hit the ground,鈥 or whatever it is. It鈥檚 more mental, highlining.

Ellis: It鈥檚 nice just to hear the canyon beneath you, birds and stuff. I also like to listen to music and zone out and kind of feel the line, and really embrace the moment, not try to rush it.听


Tyler Shalvarjian

Tyler Shalvarjian. Photo by Craig Levinsky.听


Do you guys go sky jumping?

- No way. No.
- It鈥檚 so dangerous.
- It鈥檚 hard to鈥 I think鈥 No, it鈥檚 just so dangerous.

That surprises me.

Shalvarjian: It鈥檚 not an adrenaline sport.

Wagers: Definitely not.

Ellis: People think it鈥檚 an adrenaline sport, but if you鈥檙e full of adrenaline you won鈥檛 be able to stand up. I just always think how beautiful the spot is, and that it鈥檚 safe, and we鈥檝e all put a lot of time into making this safe thing happen. I know it just feels really good and I just try to focus on how good it feels in the moment, focus on some good music.

So, do you guys watch Man on Wire religiously, or what?

Shalvarjian: Not at all. People always say, 鈥楬ey, look it鈥檚 a tight rope.鈥 Nope. Different sport. It鈥檚 a slackline.

Wagers: They鈥檙e totally different disciplines, but they鈥檙e both really difficult.

Ellis: The world record is two miles on a tightrope but that鈥檚 just two miles of the same ten steps, because a tightrope is tied off and anchored just about every ten feet-

Wagers: Where on a slackline, the line moves and it鈥檚 different at every step of the line.

Ellis: You get nodes, because a longline has听sinusoidal听waves, so if you鈥檙e standing on a node point, certain points are really easy to stand on, like impossibly easy. You鈥檒l just step on a point and it will be dead still, and sometimes, it鈥檚 really funky and that鈥檚 kind of the fun, I think.

Wagers: Every line movement just comes from your energy, from standing on the line, so it鈥檚 kind of up to you to control it as much as possible.

Everything about slacklining seems like a Zen practice. It鈥檚 very in the moment. Is there a Zen aspect to highlining?

- Very
- Yes.

Ellis: Super meditative.

Wagers: It can get you really focused. I鈥檓 told a lot of people have one mantra that they鈥檒l see in their heads over and over when they slackline. A friend of mine just says, 鈥榦ne more step, one more step.鈥 It鈥檚 a really meditative thing. If you want to walk something really long, you have to only be thinking about that one thing and not have other thoughts confounding your focus.

Tell me about the future of slacklining. Are you in the X-Games now? Do you see your sport getting there?

Wagers: We did some demos in the X-Games. We did a competition down in Austin last year at the Summer X-Games. Eventually maybe we鈥檒l get there. It would be cool for tricklining to be there.

Ellis: The main thing at the Go-Pro Games is the Slackline Industries demo competition.

Wagers: GoPro Mountain Games are up in Vail every summer. We throw听a big trickline competition in the middle of Vail Village, and it鈥檚 kind of the central spot, and everyone comes and checks this competition, among other mountain games, kayaking and mountain biking, climbing and everything else.


wagers, shalvarjian, ellis

Shalvarjian, Wagers and Ellis. Photo by Craig Levinsky.听


And the community? How many slackliners do you have in the club? How many in 羞羞视频?

Shalvarjian: In 羞羞视频, on campus, we probably have about 30 active members. There鈥檚 a core group of 10 and 15. And Slackers at CU, it started as a student organization, but we invited听the community to be a part of it, as well. We have 300 people on our Facebook group. There鈥檚 a Facebook group called slackchat, and they just hit 12,000 members. That鈥檚 the biggest online organization, and that鈥檚 global.

I don鈥檛 want to compartmentalize the different styles of Eli and Justin, but it seems like Justin is more of an athletic walker with overlapping components maybe of Eli鈥檚 and Tyler鈥檚 style, but it seems like your style, Eli, is more about, 鈥渋t鈥檚 one of the coolest things you can do in nature. You鈥檙e from here. And this is just a great way to connect to nature.鈥

Ellis: That鈥檚 exactly it. I really like climbing, but highlining has just captured my interest more. I just love being suspended out there. My favorite thing is when birds start flying next to you. It really feels like you鈥檙e flying. That鈥檚 why I do it.

Tina Pittman Wagers, mother of Justin, suggests, from a clinical perspective, slacklining offers more than just the thrill of walking a 100-plus foot line of rope.

鈥淭here鈥檚 starting to be a little bit of research emerging on some of the cognitive benefits of slacklining, much like other sports or activities that require a lot of singular focus,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 be on a slackline doing something difficult while thinking about 15,000 other things. You have to just focus on that one thing, and there鈥檚 a lot of benefit to that.鈥

Interview by Craig Levinsky
Images by Craig Levinsky and