ENC task: 'Kerb 2 kerb' precision broad-jump
31s
THE WHAT & HOW:
An environmental-communication (ENC) context applying the precision broad jump into real-world structures through kerb-to-kerb jumping. The practitioner jumps from one kerb to another, aiming to land precisely on a defined target with control and minimal time to stabilisation (MTS). It transfers a known jumping pattern into a variable environmental setting where judgment and commitment are continuously tested.
The main focus is applying the movement directly into the environment in a measurable and self-regulated way. If unsure whether a kerb can be cleared, the gap can be measured in paces and matched against known broad jump distances already achieved in practice, allowing the practitioner to judge whether the attempt sits within a workable range (around 80% max, but exploration to max is also possible with full commiutment). The aim is to select and validate real-world jump opportunities using lived reference points.
A key quality is exploration of the environment. Different kerb distances, surfaces, and layouts create naturally varied problems, encouraging the practitioner to identify opportunities and apply the same solution across changing conditions. This turns the practice into ongoing environmental mapping rather than fixed repetition.
Execution is based on committed attempts into clearly chosen targets, aiming to “stick” the landing cleanly with minimal stabilisation time. Repeating a successful kerb jump three times in a row confirms control before moving on, reinforcing reliability over isolated success.
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