by hundreth » Wed Aug 03, 2022 6:35 pm
by waikikikichan » Wed Aug 03, 2022 9:46 pm
hundreth wrote:Hi everyone,
Beginner surfer here. After taking a few lessons and renting larger foamies on my own for awhile, I finally took the plunge and bought my own board so I can go out more often.
I settled on a 7 foot wavestorm. I did this for a few reasons, the biggest being that it comfortably fits in my car. The second reason is that I wanted to learn to pop up without both feet on the board. The third reason being that the 7' wavestorm still has about 70 liters of volume, and I thought this would be more than enough.
I'm surfing out in New York @ Rockaway beach. The waves aren't great, they're very small and mushy. I find myself having a hard time catching them. I can't tell if this is because of my paddling technique, my positioning, or the board holding me back.
I know that volume isn't everything, but is a 7 foot foam board that much harder to catch waves on than an equivalent volume longboard? Should I continue on improving my technique or did I limit myself with board choice?
Thanks for your help!
by hundreth » Thu Aug 04, 2022 1:43 pm
waikikikichan wrote:hundreth wrote:Hi everyone,
Beginner surfer here. After taking a few lessons and renting larger foamies on my own for awhile, I finally took the plunge and bought my own board so I can go out more often.
I settled on a 7 foot wavestorm. I did this for a few reasons, the biggest being that it comfortably fits in my car. The second reason is that I wanted to learn to pop up without both feet on the board. The third reason being that the 7' wavestorm still has about 70 liters of volume, and I thought this would be more than enough.
I'm surfing out in New York @ Rockaway beach. The waves aren't great, they're very small and mushy. I find myself having a hard time catching them. I can't tell if this is because of my paddling technique, my positioning, or the board holding me back.
I know that volume isn't everything, but is a 7 foot foam board that much harder to catch waves on than an equivalent volume longboard? Should I continue on improving my technique or did I limit myself with board choice?
Thanks for your help!
Questions:
1) What size was the "larger foamies" you rented ?
2) I understand the size limitation of a car/apartment but why did you want to "learn to pop up without both feet on the board" ?
( that is making things more difficult than it already is )
3) Forget about "volume" at your stage. No "volume chart" caters to newbies.
4) What IS your paddling technique ? Do you have a strong swimming background ?
5) Where are you positioning yourself on the board ( that you wanted to have you feet not on the deck ) ? Where are you positioning yourself in the line up compared to the other beginner surfers ?
by waikikikichan » Thu Aug 04, 2022 8:53 pm
by oldmansurfer » Thu Aug 04, 2022 9:21 pm
by hundreth » Fri Aug 05, 2022 1:46 pm
waikikikichan wrote:How tall and heavy are you ?
by waikikikichan » Mon Aug 08, 2022 9:17 pm
hundreth wrote:I usually try to keep myself in a position where the nose of the board is only a few inches out of the water. This usually means my feet are slightly off the board. I try to position myself near other surfers, slightly more on the shoulder, and I even paddle into the same waves at the same time to see if I could catch the same wave. They catch it, I'm left behind.
hundreth wrote: I'm an ok swimmer but definitely don't have any formal background. I feel faster and more effective paddling on my own than with a board, which seems wrong. I find that when I'm paddling, the board is wobbling, I'm shuffling my legs to maintain balance, I have a hard time keeping my back arched, and I'm expending a ton of energy to get nowhere.
by hundreth » Wed Aug 10, 2022 8:08 pm
waikikikichan wrote:hundreth wrote:I usually try to keep myself in a position where the nose of the board is only a few inches out of the water. This usually means my feet are slightly off the board. I try to position myself near other surfers, slightly more on the shoulder, and I even paddle into the same waves at the same time to see if I could catch the same wave. They catch it, I'm left behind.
At 5'7" on a 7'0" board your toes should still be on the board during the paddle. You try to keep the nose a "FEW" inches out of the water ? Few meaning more than two ? Then that is too much. You are pushing water like a snow plow. You need to move your body more up.
Questions:
1) When others catch the wave and you miss, is it because the wave passes under you and leaves you out the back OR because your nose pearls / digs and slows your momentum ?hundreth wrote: I'm an ok swimmer but definitely don't have any formal background. I feel faster and more effective paddling on my own than with a board, which seems wrong. I find that when I'm paddling, the board is wobbling, I'm shuffling my legs to maintain balance, I have a hard time keeping my back arched, and I'm expending a ton of energy to get nowhere.
It has some to do with a too small board, since you haven't learned the basics on how to paddle correctly on a larger more stable board.
Questions:
2) Why are you arching your back during the paddle ?
3) How is your hand shaped when it enters the water ? Cupped ?
by waikikikichan » Thu Aug 11, 2022 8:00 am
by hundreth » Mon Aug 29, 2022 9:35 pm
by Geezer » Tue Aug 30, 2022 3:51 am
hundreth wrote:I can't tell if this is because of my paddling technique, my positioning, or the board holding me back.
I know that volume isn't everything, but is a 7 foot foam board that much harder to catch waves on than an equivalent volume longboard? Should I continue on improving my technique or did I limit myself with board choice?
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