by sinistapenguin » Thu Apr 29, 2004 1:09 pm
My first suggestion to overcome the faceplanting thing is to cheat. Paddle into the wave at an angle, so that rather than drop straight down the face you drop diagonally down and already start moving along the wave.
The 'pearling' as it is called is mostly to do with positioning. You may have your weight a little too far forward. Unfortunately, too far back and you'll still go down.
Your board may be a little on the small side, but if you persevere you should be OK - how narrow/ thin is it?
As for paddling out. The waves tend to dump a lot more at low tide in the newquay area - in towan it's close-outs galore at low tide and not worth bothering!
Here's my tip - before you go in, spend about 10-20 mins watching the waves (I know this is difficult) you should be able to work out roughly how many waves are in a set.
Paddle or walk out to the impact zone (where you are normally getting caught) If you time it right, you should be able to paddle out in the channel and get over the next wave before it breaks. If not, get off your board, turn it to face the shore and put the fins up in the air - grab the leash where it meets the board. Duck under the wave and pull down on the leash. Keep doing this until the set has passed (you shouldn't have lost much ground) then get back on and paddle like crazy before the next set comes in.
Doing it this way means the waves don't pull you in to shore too much and by holding the leash where I said, your board doesn't float miles away and isn't a danger to other people.
It aint pretty but it works! - 16 years of surfing and I only mastered duckdiving last year!
Practise duckdiving in the summer when the water is warm and the waves are small!
Cheers
Sinsita