by waikikikichan » Wed Mar 09, 2016 1:12 am
by Big H » Wed Mar 09, 2016 2:20 am
by Tudeo » Wed Mar 09, 2016 3:54 am
oldmansurfer wrote:Tudeo wrote:Adrenaline.
I write a report after each surf, partly because by reliving it, I can feel the joy even more than while actually surfing. While surfing things mostly just happen.
But often It's difficult to remember what exactly happened, I think this is because of the arenaline rush I experience when surfing serious waves.
That is interesting. I may start doing this but oddly adrenaline makes me remember waves rather than the other way. This ultimately might be useful in learning to surf over a long period of time. Just to keep track and document problems/successes you had with whatever board/fin configuration
by dtc » Wed Mar 09, 2016 5:58 am
by pmcaero » Wed Mar 09, 2016 12:23 pm
by oldmansurfer » Wed Mar 09, 2016 6:05 pm
Tudeo wrote:
Well, there are the moments that are visually and emotionally etched in memory. In my mind later I can still see the event and can even feel the emotion running through my system. The bottom turn i did a few days ago, the speed, the sound of the board clattering, the pressure on my legs, the depth of my crunch against the g-forces, the view of the lip of the wave trying to catch me, those things can stay vividly with me for some time. That's pure stoke for me.
But other times at the end of a session I have a hard time recalling events. Thinking about it and writing it down sometimes brings back the memories, and by that the stoke.
Who knows the mysteries of the brain? It could be adrenalin or it could just be some kind of brain damage caused by old hobbies..
Writing reports also helps me understanding surfing spots and what conditions to look for.
by RinkyDink » Wed Mar 09, 2016 10:57 pm
by mjames » Thu Mar 10, 2016 5:22 pm
Big H wrote:I get what the OP is talking about though....I think it's a learner problem as I went through it as well.....about a year ago I got to where I could get up quickly and get out onto the wave but didn't really know too much about it, which on good days was fine but on bad days when there was a disconnect somewhere in the process, I couldn't break it down and figure out how to fix things...seemed like from the time I would start to paddle for a wave things sped up like they were on fast forward.....I learned to put my hands further back to pop up and to control that cobra arch right at the moment of truth to either hold up on the wave to keep from sliding right down the face before I could get up or to "dive in" and throw my head down and forward to get over the hump of a slower fatter wave....doing that gave me a little more time to control the get up and make that first turn and was a critical part of my learning...........I went from "here goes nothing/I hope this works" to "let's catch this wave riiiiiiggggghhhhttt NOW!". Difference is that the whole thing was a blur before, just stumbling over myself to do the movement as fast as I could the second I got that feel to get up, but seemed more often than not to be a stroke off the beat....now I can better anticipate when that time is going to occur and am ready for that feel before it happens (experience) so the get up is less of a reaction and more of a planned, controlled movement....that arching buys an extra split second as well....as far as the actual pop up, its too fast to guide, it still just happens....
.....................
There was an illustration that I saw in a surf instruction book.....two pictures of the same thing side by side.....it was a point of view photo as the surfer would see if they were paddling to the beach......one was of a beach, palm trees, mountains behind and the tip of the surfboard was in the bottom of the picture; it was captioned "what an experienced surfer sees".....the second was the size of the first picture, only the tip of the board was in focus and huge in the picture....you couldn't really see anything beyond that....the caption was "what a beginner sees".
by Big H » Thu Mar 10, 2016 5:32 pm
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