It wasn't until I started my second wave of interest in juggling that I had a chance to see any good diabolo stuff. It was the fall of '95 and Fred Garbo did a show in the Krannert Center for the Performing Arts at the University of Illinois. He had a great show, and when he did his diaoblo routine I was floored. I had never seen anybody do these kinds of tricks with the diabolo. I finally had seen somebody doing some really cool stuff with the diabolo and now I was interested in learning. So I picked up his video with his diabolo routine in it and started working on figuring out his tricks.
Shortly after that I started asking some of the club members about Fred and any other people who worked with the diabolo. They pointed me to a couple of IJA tapes where people had competed in the championships and had done diabolo routines. The first one I watched was Jeff Mason's '88 routine. I liked it and he had alot of good stuff in it. However, when I saw the '93 IJA tape with Fritz Grobe's gold medal routine I was knocked outta my chair. Talk about totally awsome, I loved this routine. I must have watched it a dozen or more times in a row. This got me hooked on learning the diabolo and also to eventually learn how to do two diabolos.
So I learned a number of different diabolo tricks and started working on learning two diabolos. I started getting successful in keeping two diabolos in the string for quite a few rotations, but I had the problem of not keeping them spinning fast enough. I had gotten some pointers from Peter Caseman (another great diaboloist from Madison) at the '96 Madfest festival. Finally after quite a bit more practice I can keep two diabolos going for quite a long time. I have now been working on two diabolo tricks. Some of them that I can do are over the leg, over the arm, sun to the front (I think that's what it's called), a suicide, and a few other tricks.
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