How to Skip Rocks
An expert rock skipper can achieve dozens of skips in a single throw. To begin your quest for stone skipping success, follow these steps:
1. Select a skipping stone
The stone should be mostly flat, about the size of the palm of your hand and about the weight of a tennis ball. Triangular stones tend to skip best. Avoid circular stones. They’re less stable.
2. Grip the stone properly
Hold it with your thumb and middle finger, then firmly hook your index finger along the edge. Your thumb goes on the top of the stone, not around the edge.
3. Throw the stone
Stand up straight, facing at a slight angle to the water. Try to maintain this position during your entire windup and release. The lower your hand is at the release, the better.
Throw out and down at the same time. A skipping stone is bouncing off the water, so give it plenty of downward force. Try throwing faster instead of harder — strength is not the key, quickness is.
4. Release the stone
The faster the stone is spinning, the better it will skip. Spin it as hard as you can with a quick snap of your wrist. The stone should hit the water parallel to the surface.
Tips by Jerdone McGhee, founder of the North American Stone Skipping Association.
i did 21 skips with a triangle rock
I think the wrold record is 45
My record is 18 skips of the rock. Triangle is best, square is good, too.
Thanks for the Information. It actually helped with a Science project of mine. 🙂
Triangle stones ARE actually better.
my record is 17
at lake mead i skipped rocks with my friend… my dad said to use round rocks 🙂 i used triangular ones, and they DID work a lot better!
i already know
i skipped about 10
the most skips i have ever done is like seven or eight. anybody else?
go at 22.5 angle
how do you know it was 22.5 angle…?