Meet the adorable and scarily talented 6-year-old girls taking the skateboarding world by storm

Group has a skateboard line for young girls, video tutorials

'We're here to show you that skateboarding is not just for boys,' girls say

Parents say girls do tricks 'grown men' are afraid to



A trio of 6-year-old girls, known as the 'Pink Helmet Posse,' are skating all over Southern California.



Members Relz Murphy, Sierra Kerr and Bella Kenworthy have even got the attention of industry vets.



'They're incredible,' Jamie Owens, editor of Transworld Skateboarding Magazine, told GrindTV . 'I've seen a handful of teenage girls in the park, but never girls this young. They're the real deal.'

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Sierra Kerr, Relz Murphy, and Bella Kenworthy, from left to right, form the Pink Helmet Posse of girl skateboarders

Relz Murphy, pictured on board, is 6 years old

'I have daughters myself, and I was so pumped when I saw this footage and sent it to my wife, because our girls are just getting bit by the skate bug, and this will put them over the top,' he added.

It doesn't hurt that Bella's father, Jason Kenworthy, is a professional action sports photographer. Kenworthy also told GrindTV of his pride in his daughter.



'Last week she wanted to drop into the deep end of a huge pool in Encinitas, which is just nuts. I was pleading "Why? You don't need to!" But she insisted,' he said.



Kenworth told the website that she indeed completed the drop. 'It was great, but I won't lie, that whole little episode aged me a few years.'



Bella shared some of her favorite aspects of skating with website Girl is NOT a 4 Letter Word . She told the website she's been skating for 'a little over a year' and her favorite tricks include carves and grinds.

Relz Murphy, pictured, allegedly got her start after her parents enrolled her in skateboarding lessons

Sierra's father is Josh Kerr -- the eighth-ranked surfer in the world, GrindTV reports. It adds that Kerr and Kenworthy worked together for years and decided to teach their daughters how to ride boards as quickly as possible.



'By 5 she was riding alone, which was pretty cute and fun then,' Kerr told the website. 'Now, though, it's freaking me out. She's dropping into 11-foot bowls. There are grown men who've been skating for years who won't do that.'



Relz Murphy got her skateboarding start after parents Gary and Rebecca decided to put all their children in skating lessons, GrindTV adds.

'Watching your 6-year-old daughter hit tile in a 13-foot bowl, that is pretty cool. But watching her confidence grow—not just with skating, but in life—that’s even better. If that’s all she ever gets out of skating then we’ve succeeded,' Gary Murphy said.

The girls soon welcomed their nickname, the Pink Helmet Posse, and got their parents to let them launch an official skateboard line for young girls. They also launched a series of skateboarding video tutorials.



'We know it can be intimidating, but we're here to show you that skateboarding is not just for boys,' their website reads.



'Come skate with us' it adds. 'You don't have to have a pink helmet, but we think it looks pretty cute.'