by dtc » Tue Jul 01, 2014 10:14 am
The waveform board is the costco board! I think they are $99 new in the store (I dont live in the US so not sure). From all accounts, for a cheap beginner board they are pretty good. Some people will say get a 'real board' but, personally, for the first 3 or 6 months of your training (until you are semi regularly catching unbroken waves) they seem to be a reasonable choice. Being foam they are more bouyant, so an 8ft will be ok in that aspect. You will end up buying another board if (well, when) you decide to keep surfing
When we move to 'real' boards, there is obviously a difference between 8ft and 9ft in terms of manouverability, but its not huge. The difference you will notice between 9ft and 8ft is much less than between 8ft and 7ft...
However, 9ft longboards are certainly manouverable enough, just check out people like Alex Knost on youtube. Its a different kind of turning than a shortboard, but its totally doable.
In any event, as a beginner this isnt what you should be concentrating on - in due course yes, but for the first 6 months or year (depending on how often you surf) you are a long way from doing those lovely carving turns or whatever. Surfing is harder than you expect when you see all those people on the waves flying around, but most of them started 10years ago or more and surf every day
So if you want a cheap board to start off, then by all means get the waveform. You will end up buying another board in due course, but if you are fine with spending a little bit now as a tester, rather than going for the hard surfboard straight away, then give it a go. You can't have fun without a surfboard
Its certainly much easier if your board can fit in the car