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FloppyFish

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  1. Here. It is a scare technique involving sliding on all four's. Very fun. Very effective. Duct tape, hm? Yes, yes, of course, but what about gorilla tape? Would that be better or worse?
  2. Hello, I need a bit of help. Hopefully there are some sliders on here. I'm only 19, but I've been scaring at haunted houses for four years now (including this year, which has already started for the haunt I am working at). Growing up an avid fan of Knott's Scary Farm, I've always wanted to work there, but wasn't 18 while I lived there, and once I was I moved away for college...anyway, three years ago, at my first haunted house, I wanted to be a slider. So, I made the gloves, with some guidance from westcoaster, i believe, got knee pads, and epoxied some sheet metal to my regular tennis shoes. It was the most fun I had ever had, and it worked wonderfully. It was beautiful. By the end of the two or three weekends I slid, my shoes had totally fallen apart. After having to sadly refrain from sliding, due to the locational conditions of the haunts after this first one, I can now do it again. Fuck yes! I still have the gloves - they are great - I have the knee pads, but the shoes I can not get to work. I got some steel plated boots, which I have now twice tried to attach sheet metal on top of, using a different epoxy each time (jb weld the first, and loctite the second), with both failing after only a few slides...does anyone know how this can be done? The whole package. boots knee pads gloves
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