by holdmeup » Thu Mar 21, 2024 11:49 pm
by Geezer » Fri Mar 22, 2024 10:30 am
by Geezer » Fri Mar 22, 2024 10:39 am
by holdmeup » Fri Mar 22, 2024 10:57 pm
by BoMan » Tue Mar 26, 2024 6:47 pm
by TeeBee89 » Sun Mar 31, 2024 1:55 pm
by holdmeup » Wed Apr 03, 2024 4:02 pm
by TeeBee89 » Sun Apr 07, 2024 4:00 pm
holdmeup wrote:tb89: excellent stuff and i read you on all counts. the one-more-wave thing has been a real buzz kill to otherwise very good sessions. did it today, in fact. half an hour to get a crappy wave in, when i shoulda just paddled in when i figured twas time to go.
by holdmeup » Sat Apr 20, 2024 11:21 am
by TeeBee89 » Sun Apr 21, 2024 11:28 am
holdmeup wrote:yes, indeed, very helpful, and thanks. meanwhile, i've done some serious backsliding, and the lulls have returned. will reread everyone's thoughts from above and see if i can't get my groove back ...
by holdmeup » Sun Apr 21, 2024 11:30 pm
by TeeBee89 » Mon Apr 22, 2024 12:16 pm
holdmeup wrote:still backsliding, still trying to puzzle out the whys and wherefores. today, it took me 1/2 hr to catch my first wave, then caught but 4 or 5 more in the next 1.5 hrs. one thing i know is holding me back: sitting too far outside. it's been a lifelong problem and pretty much without reason, since when i do take off late, i make it 95% of the time and i generally get a bunch of huzzahs from the crowd. i guess it's just not my comfort zone, so i retreat to the outside and start missing wave after wave and continue on like that until the end.
yes, negative mindset. it's a thing. and i've got a bunch of it. i mean, i've had a few other surfers -- better surfers -- slide by me and say, dude you're not getting your fair share; get on it.
and sometimes i do, but most often -- bleh. i mean, part 2: my issue isn't with riding waves -- once i'm on, i do well -- it's all in the catching. all. crap.
by stepphiesecret » Mon Jul 15, 2024 1:44 pm
Geezer wrote:I can relate; this is something that happens sometimes. I've tried many different approaches in the past to break the cycle and get a sesh back on track. Being active and paddling around trying to catch waves rather than wait for them, change peaks, dip inside and go for less than perfect rather than waiting on the perfect wave. Part of the issue I think is that just exactly that happens; I get a few and then see a few go by that were better waves than I'd gotten to that point. So I wait for "that" wave....and wait.....and wait. Sometimes my trying to be active and increase my range has negative results....I zig when I should have zagged and decide to go inside then that perfect wave I'd been waiting on comes through and I'm too far out of position to get it. Then it starts to build in my head and I forget how simple it can be. I sometimes blame it on shifts in current and changing tide levels; makes my inept lull easier to swallow. LOL
I saw a video, I forget the series but it was a British instructional series that had 4 vhs tapes or dvd's (remember either of those?!) Anyway, they recommended going to the beach or well inside if a session was off the rails and observe, get your head together and then go back out. This is the best advice I've ever gotten on this and I'll do it if things really do go bad. A slightly less effective fix doesn't require going all the way in; just park out in the channel off the shoulder where you can see the face of the waves breaking. Idea behind both is to relax, get back into the flow and rhythm of things, to see where the waves are breaking, where the foam is after they pass, the boils, the lineup points and where those who are having success are....having success and exactly how they are getting in. Then I go back out to the peak and will almost always be right back in the saddle.
Other factors can be in play; especially after a layoff I will fatigue noticeably after the first half hour and my performance falls off. It happens to a degree regardless of my fitness; first few waves are the easiest. Tides and currents are easy to scapegoat but they need attention and adjustments need to be made, especially when rips slowly change position and travel laterally longshore down a beach changing wave dynamics or tide levels on breaks particularly sensitive that only really "work" in relatively small windows.
I have a theory on why those first few waves are good for me. I come to a break and first I sit for at least one set to see what's going on with the ocean, where people are, where the best entry points are - I get a pretty good picture of things. Then I paddle out while watching the waves all the way out and get an idea of where I want to be. Then I paddle to that spot and sure enough - I get one in short order. The trick of going to the beach to re assess or my abridgment of sitting on the shoulder are modifications of the first paddle out and is the best "pre shot routine" I've figured.
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