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A method of swing on a swing is disclosed, in which a user positioned on a standard swing suspended by two chains from a substantially horizontal tree branch induces side to side motion by pulling alternately on one chain and then the other.

InventorSteven Olson
Primary Examiner: Kien T. Nguyen
Attorney: Peter Lowell Olson
Current U.S. Classification472/118
International Classification: A63G/900

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Citations

Cited PatentFiling dateIssue dateOriginal AssigneeTitle
US242601Mar 21, 1881Jun 7, 1881SWING
US5413298May 14, 1993May 9, 1995Door frame mount for swing

Referenced by

Citing PatentFiling dateIssue dateOriginal AssigneeTitle
US6932710Sep 15, 2004Aug 23, 2005Board swing
US7811202Nov 24, 2005Oct 12, 2010Redcord ASTraining apparatus
US8096922Sep 17, 2010Jan 17, 2012Redcord ASTraining apparatus
US8181265Sep 15, 2005May 15, 2012Microsoft CorporationSecure machine counting
USRE41363Dec 8, 2005Jun 1, 2010Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.Thin film transistor substrate

Claims

1. A method of swinging on a swing, the method comprising the steps of:

a) suspending a seat for supporting a user between only two chains that are hung from a tree branch;
b) positioning a user on the seat so that the user is facing a direction perpendicular to the tree branch;
c) having the user pull alternately on one chain to induce movement of the user and the swing toward one side, and then on the other chain to induce movement of the user and the swing toward the other side; and
d) repeating step c) to create side-to-side swinging motion, relative to the user, that is parallel to the tree branch.

2. The method of claim 1, wherein the method is practiced independently by the user to create the side-to-side motion from an initial dead stop.

3. The method of claim 1, wherein the method further comprises the step of:

e) inducing a component of forward and back motion into the swinging motion, resulting in a swinging path that is generally shaped as an oval.

4. The method of claim 3, wherein the magnitude of the component of forward and back motion is less than the component of side-to-side motion.