by kilroy » Tue Jul 16, 2019 5:53 pm
by dtc » Wed Jul 17, 2019 12:16 am
by waikikikichan » Wed Jul 17, 2019 1:45 am
kilroy wrote:1) Can read the waves, etc, and paddle, but I'm just not catching anything
2) I have a 10'6", 23.25"wide, 3.25 thick, single fin, nose rider.
3) I took it out on a decent day and it beat the crap out of me. It was unstable... I kept moving around on it, trying to find the balance point but I'm not sure I ever got it.
4) Everything I paddled for went under me, no matter how hard I dug.
by kilroy » Wed Jul 17, 2019 6:41 am
waikikikichan wrote:kilroy wrote:1) Can read the waves, etc, and paddle, but I'm just not catching anything
2) I have a 10'6", 23.25"wide, 3.25 thick, single fin, nose rider.
3) I took it out on a decent day and it beat the crap out of me. It was unstable... I kept moving around on it, trying to find the balance point but I'm not sure I ever got it.
4) Everything I paddled for went under me, no matter how hard I dug.
First I am not a troll and asking genuine question to get a better understanding of exactly what your situation is.
1) If you can read waves, then you know WHERE to be and WHEN to go. If you can paddle, then you know the HOW to get on a wave. Then what is the problem ? Could it be a wonky board ?
2) If your 10'6" is a true "Noserider", then it should have a large concave area under the nose. That's to help you noseride, but it sacrifices a bit of paddling. If you are not noseriding, you should not order nose concaves.
3) Thus your Positioning on the board was wrong. Just a inch too forward or too back makes a big difference in paddling and glide. ( Thus I don't think it's the boards fault ). And when you feel unbalanced on the paddle, you might unconsciously widen you knees and dragged a foot in the water, which slows you down even more.
4) Don't need to paddle harder, paddle smarter. If the waves past under you, you were too far back on the board. If you never pearled/nose dived that day, then easily you could of move up more.
by kilroy » Wed Jul 17, 2019 7:07 am
dtc wrote:its....you![]()
Sure there are boards that people describe as 'dogs' but that really means its a bit slower or bit harder to turn or paddle than expected. Maybe 85% as good. But you arent in the 85% level yet, you are in the 25% level. So it would be highly unlikely you have a board that is impossible to catch waves with.
It is a big board and that does have consequences - the obvious is that a big board takes a while to get up to speed (and nose riders arent designed to be easy to paddle, they are designed to be nose riders, and are usually a bit slower). So you need to allow a bit of extra time (ie extra paddle distance) and correspondingly start your paddle earlier, which might be well before the wave arrives. It also needs a bit of paddle strength because its big - you may not have that, or at least you start getting tired quickly.
The board I think has plenty of volume for your weight. Its probably over 95L - its definitely in the ballpark for your weight and abilities (basing that assumption off the walden mega magic at 10'0'x 23 1/2 x 3 3/16 = 96.2 ltr - and yours is longer and slightly thicker).
So adding all that up, yes the board you have is probably slightly 'harder' to paddle (and hence harder to build up speed and therefore harder to catch waves) than another similar sized board (particularly an all rounder board). But the difference between 'slightly harder' and 'the most paddle efficient board possible' isnt great. Your board is absolutely not preventing you from catching waves, whats preventing you is... you.
That hopefully doesnt sound too harsh; basically you are a beginner again and beginners take a while to catch waves. You need to build up some paddle fitness (swimming is good as well), you probably need to build up some of those 'surf muscles' that dont get used that much in day to day life if you arent regularly exercising (core, glutes, shoulders etc).
Maybe try a session in the white water just to get the feeling back a little bit. Back your expectations down a little bit - with previous surfing experience you will probably progress more quickly than the average beginner, but you need to start down at the start, build the foundation and then move on up.
keep up the stoke!
by waikikikichan » Wed Jul 17, 2019 7:30 am
kilroy wrote:I was really focusing on my paddling and I'm not sure what more I could have done... Deep, cupped hands
by dtc » Wed Jul 17, 2019 12:44 pm
kilroy wrote:[ I was using muscles I don't usually use, that said, it did seem to be a lot more work than I thought a board that size would be. Then again... There were young clearly experienced guys, probably 1/3rd my weight on boards way bigger than mine. So I started to think maybe my board wasn't as upsized as I thought it was. That maybe I really did need that extra inch of thickness, and another couple inches of width. Hence the question here...
by Ratfinksurfer » Wed Jul 17, 2019 1:26 pm
by kilroy » Wed Jul 17, 2019 4:21 pm
waikikikichan wrote:kilroy wrote:I was really focusing on my paddling and I'm not sure what more I could have done... Deep, cupped hands
Screeeeeeechh ( record scratch ), did you just say CUPPED HANDS ??? That right there is a problem.
by kilroy » Wed Jul 17, 2019 4:29 pm
dtc wrote:kilroy wrote:[ I was using muscles I don't usually use, that said, it did seem to be a lot more work than I thought a board that size would be. Then again... There were young clearly experienced guys, probably 1/3rd my weight on boards way bigger than mine. So I started to think maybe my board wasn't as upsized as I thought it was. That maybe I really did need that extra inch of thickness, and another couple inches of width. Hence the question here...
I doubt that anyone else had 'way bigger' boards than you - I'm not sure I've seen more than a handful of 10'6 boards and there are a lot of longboarders where I surf. A lot of youngsters (hipsters?) are into longboarding nowadays and are very good surfers; dont measure yourself against them
I mean, there is nothing bad about getting a bigger or thicker board if you want; I dont know that you need it but if it makes you feel more comfortable or confident then its worth it. But I would give it a few more sessions and see how you progress. It may be that the noseriding shape just isnt working for you, for example
by kilroy » Wed Jul 17, 2019 4:36 pm
Ratfinksurfer wrote:How many sessions will it take to get better? Probably a lot. It seems like One step forwards and two steps back sometimes. I've even felt like I was actively becoming a worse surfer! But surfing takes a lot of practice. And it's not exactly a sympathetic sport in that regard either. One trip to the beach might equal just one or two actual rides! I could get one or two actual rides on a skateboard on a fifteen minute smoke break! So unless you've got a wave pool it's just putting in the time bro. And yeah, under paddling is a common mistake. I know because I do!
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