by tonylamont » Tue Dec 30, 2014 7:01 pm
What you are doing is an important step in learning to ride unbroken waves, so in that sense it is "right." However, to effectively surf you need to go sideways so you can work the area between critical part of the wave (where it is breaking) and the shoulder - in other words, stay ahead of (or just at the edge of) the white water.
The reason you are slowing down and then being caught by the whitewater is that you are dropping straight out of the powerful part of the wave where water is moving the fastest (higher up, near the lip) and down into the flat of the wave where water is not moving very fast and there is no real power. Then you get an extra push when the white water catches you. You also are likely catching the wave a little too late if it is breaking into white water around you before you are up and standing.
As soon as you can catch green waves a decent percentage of the time, you will want to work on angling your takeoffs, going sideways on the wave and staying in the top part of the wave. Once you have that down consistently, you will want to work on cutbacks to stay in the powerful part of the wave. Watch the Surf Simply video on angling takeoffs if you have not done so already.
Of course, waves and conditions are different every day and this is not an immediate step. As you progress, you will find that some days you are angling sideways with ease and other days it will seem that the wave always closes out, you can't ever get ahead of the white water, or you just screw up and drop down to the flats and get bogged down. In addition to learning the physical skills necessary to surf, wave judgment and timing is an extremely important factor in properly catching and riding waves - it takes a long time to get that wired.
In short, sounds like you are taking the right steps, just keep working at it. Good luck.