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More "starting/learning surfing" questions

PostPosted: Fri Apr 21, 2006 10:04 am
by Adam B(GMF)
OK I know this has been probably asked before (I've had a quick search and couldn't find these answers)

I want to get into surfing this year. I was planning on taking a short weekend course then looking into doing a week long course somewhere warmer - is this a good idea?

I'm a decent skater and a reasonably good snowboarder (love that back-country), I've good balance skills and good core strength but am 29. Supposing that I pick it up at an above average pace - what sort of time-scale am I looking at before I have enough skill to have some fun and not fall off all the time?

Anyone recommend a specific surf school that does weekend courses that i could get to from London - or should I just pick one from the BSA website?

Any other advice?

Thanks

Re: More "starting/learning surfing" questions

PostPosted: Fri Apr 21, 2006 10:26 am
by drowningbitbybit
Hi adam,


Adam B(GMF) wrote:I want to get into surfing this year. I was planning on taking a short weekend course then looking into doing a week long course somewhere warmer - is this a good idea?


That should see you right. You'll still be at beginner level for the longer/warmer course though. Dont go booking yourself on an intermediate course in advance until you've tried the weekend course! :wink:
Then spend a few weekends of surfing practise before spending money on a course so you've got the basics nailed.


Adam B(GMF) wrote:I'm a decent skater and a reasonably good snowboarder (love that back-country), I've good balance skills and good core strength but am 29. Supposing that I pick it up at an above average pace - what sort of time-scale am I looking at before I have enough skill to have some fun and not fall off all the time?


The hardest parts about surfing have little to do with balance (at least at the beginning) - paddling, getting to their feet, timing, getting to the waves, generating speed are what people struggle with.
However, you should be up and standing on white water within a day or two, and from then on its a steady progression. But it takes a long time to get even half-decent. I've been doing this years, and Im still only half decent :roll:
As for being 29? Plenty of people a lot older than that here! :D



Adam B(GMF) wrote:Any other advice?


Move. Living in london and trying to surf sucks! Yes, me too, stuck far too often, far away from the surf :(
But while in London, abandon ever planning anything in advance for a weekend, and spend all your time watching pressure charts waiting for the right day to travel
:wink:

See you out back.

8)