Hey guys and gals,
I've been reading the forum for awhile and I just started to surf a few weeks ago. I always wanted to get into it but circumstances always got in the way, procrastination, etc. The end of this summer, however, I'm going to Costa Rica with my girlfriend, and decided that I wanted to figure out how to do it before I go. I'm 36, and wish I had started sooner, but I'm thrilled that I can enjoy this awesome sport for a long time to come (I hope).
Anyway, I read a ton of stuff on the pop up, and practiced quite a bit beforehand to make sure I had the strength to do it in the water. I took my first lesson a few weeks ago in really choppy conditions, and while it was fun and challenging, the instructor was a kid who told me nothing more than what had read on my own online and in this forum (in his defense it was a really rough day, and I think he was a bit overwhelmed just trying to keep me from getting stuffed by the unpredictable waves). I was able to stand up a few times on the first day, but it wasn't really anything close to riding a wave- more of the standing up too late after the wave has passed, or standing up in the whitewater and then falling off because the wave has died out. Lots of hard wipeouts and pearling too, but all taken with a smile! But even just standing up for that split second was enough to leave me wanting more. So I went for it and bought a funboard from a local shop and just resolved to get out there and figure it out on my own.
The second and third time out were pretty tough- just figuring out the board and trying to figure out the trim and get used to the feel was challenging enough w/ out the waves coming. I kind of just chalked my first few outings up to just trying to get comfortable in the water paddling and sitting out there balancing on the board and moving around (and most of all wanted to have fun). I did my best to stay away from crowds and find my own little waves. My beaches are on the east coast (US)..surprisingly, while these beaches are pretty crowded in the peak of summer, there are lots of jettys up and down the beach which serve to create workable little swells up and down the coast, so each time out I was able to find something pretty nice to surf for a beginner.
Anyway, the third time out I was getting a little overwhelmed. In retrospect, I had no reason to think this would ever come easy, but I'm somewhat obsessive I guess and just wanted to be in control, even though with surfing it is the opposite- you are slave to the wave in the sense that whatever the wave is doing you have to work with it. So being a control freak I had to let go a bit and just try and go with it.
Anyway, during this session I'm watching this older guy surf and pop up (really smooth surfer), and I kept noticing that when he popped up his board didn't move an inch, and his popup just looked effortless. It was just totally stable as if it were on land. So this helped me to step back and think about what I was doing out there instead of just flopping around and getting frustrated. So I remembered the advice given in this forum about how it's easier to pop up when the board is more stable, and the way for this to happen is when the board is moving fast after you catch the wave. So, thinking about that helped, and the way I was popping up before my board was moving all over the place and it just felt impossible, because I was not doing it at the right time, and it actually felt harder than doing it on land.
So, I forced myself to suck it up and use my board as a bodyboard, and just ride a few waves in on my stomach, trying to feel how the board planes through the water on the face of a wave. I think this helped me put things together somehow, because after that I popped up on a wave before it broke and it felt 10 times easier, and just the same way guys in here talk about not knowing how to describe the popup, this felt like the same thing- it just happened, whereas before I was thinking about 10 things at once and could barely get up. BUt this time there were no steps to it, no knee first or anything like that, and it seemed to take very little effort. Man did I race back out to the "lineup" after that, hooting and smiling the whole way! I finally felt that stoke that people so often talk about...just every synapse in the body firing in turbo mode! Then looking out and seeing dolphins out there jumping around with the sun shining- what a sport!
The 4th day (yesterday) I was able to pop up successfully pretty much every time except for the odd stumble or late takeoff. My point in writing this is to just give my thanks to all the people who wrote about their own experiences in here and to encourage others who are in the same boat to stick it out and try to listen to people in this forum- they are really spot on with a lot of the advice. Most of the thoughts I had about catching waves were taken from descriptions on this forum, and they really gave me thoughts and things to focus on while I was out there struggling.
I kept going back to the tip fact that it is much harder to pop up in whitewater, and that popping up on the unbroken wave is much easier than popping up on land, and you don't have to be super strong to do it. And all that was very true for me.
Oh and another thing that really helped me was keeping my knees together on the board for balance. Before, I found myself kind of straddling the board with my knees to help with balance as the waves roll you around. And this might feel like it is helping, but I noticed that when I started to paddle for a wave, if I got my knees in place together on the board, this facilitated a much more synchronized popup and just made the board feel more stable during those split seconds during the takeoff.
Anyway, sorry to have made this so long, but I'm infused with so much positive energy I had to let it out! Can't wait to figure out how to make a bottom turn! Thanks again everyone for contributing, it helped me a ton. Now I'm hooked for life!