by Jripper53 » Fri Jul 19, 2019 8:30 am
by waikikikichan » Fri Jul 19, 2019 9:36 am
Jripper53 wrote:People have suggested longer boards but I am an athletic guy coming from a skateboarding/snowboarding background and understand board balance well, which is why I think that size would work to learn and catch waves (am I wrong?).
by dtc » Fri Jul 19, 2019 10:00 am
by BoMan » Fri Jul 19, 2019 7:07 pm
by pmcaero » Sat Jul 20, 2019 12:38 am
by Jripper53 » Tue Jul 23, 2019 1:36 am
pmcaero wrote:I started on a Bic and also have a Torq, get a Torq longboard
by Jripper53 » Tue Jul 23, 2019 1:40 am
BoMan wrote:Do you have some experience in the water or are you a new surfer? If you are new, consider renting boards before you buy. Try a 7 footer and some longer ones as well. With a 9 foot board you'll be able to get more waves and practice riding.
by Jripper53 » Tue Jul 23, 2019 1:46 am
dtc wrote:Bic vs Torq - doesn’t really matter
7ft vs something longer - matters. Go at least for the 7’6 and practice paddling and wave reading (key skateboard skills...)
by Jripper53 » Tue Jul 23, 2019 1:53 am
waikikikichan wrote:Jripper53 wrote:People have suggested longer boards but I am an athletic guy coming from a skateboarding/snowboarding background and understand board balance well, which is why I think that size would work to learn and catch waves (am I wrong?).
You don't need to catch the mountain on your snowboard, but you do need to catch the wave on a surfboard. And you don't have to use your arms/upper body to push your skateboard forward. Agreed, the balance part will probably be easy for you, but surfing is 90% paddling 10% riding. Are you wrong ? I would say so, hearing 100's of newbies thinking the same way you do, and finding out the hard way. But go for it, if the board doesn't work out, keep it for when your ready to move down.
by oldmansurfer » Tue Jul 23, 2019 3:06 am
by dtc » Tue Jul 23, 2019 3:49 am
Jripper53 wrote:Do you think a 7'6 or maybe an 8' would be suitable? I just can't imagine lugging around a 9+ foot longboard everywhere, having to store it in my apartment, and most of all, feeling like I couldn't maneuver it on the wave once I started to catch on. .
by waikikikichan » Tue Jul 23, 2019 3:52 am
Jripper53 wrote:I am totally new to surfing. I've just body surfed and boogie boarded as far as wave riding is concerned.
Jripper53 wrote: Do you think a 7'6 or maybe an 8' would be suitable? I just can't imagine lugging around a 9+ foot longboard everywhere, having to store it in my apartment, and most of all, feeling like I couldn't maneuver it on the wave once I started to catch on. But I am determined to learn, catch waves, progress, and get further into the culture of surfing so if you say a longer board is the way to go I'd be pretty apt to take your word for it. I wouldn't want to waste money and learn the hard way, I just want to surf. What lengths would you recommend? Any specific boards you had in mind? Just trying to pick the brain of someone with real experience.
by Jripper53 » Tue Jul 23, 2019 5:01 pm
oldmansurfer wrote:Perhaps you should look at this before you figure that you will out grow your longboard
by Jripper53 » Tue Jul 23, 2019 5:07 pm
waikikikichan wrote:Jripper53 wrote:I am totally new to surfing. I've just body surfed and boogie boarded as far as wave riding is concerned.Jripper53 wrote: Do you think a 7'6 or maybe an 8' would be suitable? I just can't imagine lugging around a 9+ foot longboard everywhere, having to store it in my apartment, and most of all, feeling like I couldn't maneuver it on the wave once I started to catch on. But I am determined to learn, catch waves, progress, and get further into the culture of surfing so if you say a longer board is the way to go I'd be pretty apt to take your word for it. I wouldn't want to waste money and learn the hard way, I just want to surf. What lengths would you recommend? Any specific boards you had in mind? Just trying to pick the brain of someone with real experience.
With your background in bodysurfing and boogieboarding, you are way way ahead of the game compared to other beginners. You won't be in the white water, body all bent but going straight. You know the motion of the ocean, so that's half the battle. If you don't want to waste money, ( which even if you bought the 7'6" and couldn't ride it, you can ride it a few years down the road, so it's not a waste ) , trying borrowing a 8'0" from a surf buddy. If it's "easy" then get the 7'6".
by Jripper53 » Tue Jul 23, 2019 6:08 pm
dtc wrote:Jripper53 wrote:Do you think a 7'6 or maybe an 8' would be suitable? I just can't imagine lugging around a 9+ foot longboard everywhere, having to store it in my apartment, and most of all, feeling like I couldn't maneuver it on the wave once I started to catch on. .
Lugging the board around is an issue, of course, if you are using public transport or maybe walking a distance down to the beach. But, trust me, the extra length seems to disappear very quickly when you are on the water ie no longer is a big board you are lugging around, its a useful manoeuvrable water craft. And on your small mushy Florida waves, the extra float is really useful (have a look at what everyone else is surfing - I am pretty sure there are a lot of 9ft boards).
At 160lbs you probably could go a bit shorter than someone at 185lbs, so an 8ft might be ok. However, the benefits of an 8ft board are outweighed by the benefits of a 9ft board, so unless there is a particular reason why you need an 8ft (eg transport), then may as well get a 9ft. As others have suggested, try renting a board (although - if you are a beginner, you will probably miss waves and fall off almost as much on a 9ft as an 8ft as a 7'6ft - so you may not be able to tell the difference all that much, other than in ease of paddling and maybe stability when sitting on it).
There are plenty of good brands and boards - your Torq or NSP boards are fine (people seem to prefer Torq over NSP) if those are the boards you are looking at
Nothing wrong with getting a wavestorm either, to get you in the water while you are thinking about where to go next
by Jripper53 » Wed Jul 24, 2019 8:36 pm
by waikikikichan » Wed Jul 24, 2019 9:49 pm
Jripper53 wrote: Maybe these pics will help to foster some suggestions for boards that would be suitable.
by BaNZ » Wed Jul 24, 2019 10:19 pm
by oldmansurfer » Wed Jul 24, 2019 11:45 pm
by steveylang » Wed Jul 24, 2019 11:51 pm
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