by Broosta » Tue Jul 22, 2008 12:02 am
by drowningbitbybit » Tue Jul 22, 2008 1:28 am
Broosta wrote:So the natural randomness of nature beat him really.
by drowningbitbybit » Tue Jul 22, 2008 1:32 am
clarksville wrote:Beginners are always going to be looked on in a slightly joky way by people who are really good at something, however they do it, I would imagine. I'm beginning to think that beginners trying to learn in a fully random Earth-style beach setting might be viewed as foolish. Or getting in the way.
by rich r » Tue Jul 22, 2008 12:40 pm
by isaluteyou » Tue Jul 22, 2008 7:03 pm
Y'know Star Trek holo decks and all that.
but newbies are often actively "encouraged" to go elsewhere
by Jonah_Fro » Wed Jul 23, 2008 11:55 am
drowningbitbybit wrote: but newbies are often actively "encouraged" to go elsewhere.
by Real Pol » Wed Jul 23, 2008 4:12 pm
drowningbitbybit wrote:Broosta wrote:So the natural randomness of nature beat him really.
Nah, i remember that program - it was because he was a complete wimp!
"Oh, I really dont think I should surf today as my ribs really hurt"
by clarksville » Wed Jul 23, 2008 8:26 pm
LOLRuss wrote:I'm fat. It took me 5 months of at least once a week surfing (waves permitting - every day) to get the pop-up. Now I'm working on my bottom turn.
by clarksville » Wed Jul 23, 2008 8:34 pm
Broosta wrote:I got up and riding on my first day of surfing when I was 15. It was perfect conditions for learning tho and I was very fit and do have a good amount of natural ability for surfing(I have since found). If the conditions had been less than ideal it would have been a different story on the day (as it was for me many many other days after the first day!).
I think its impossible to tell who might be best at surfing as you actually need more than balance, strength, stamina, blah blah blah. You need recklessness, determination, belief and desire too. Very difficult to quantify precisely.
There was a program on uk tv called 'In At The Deep End' or something similar, and on one episode there was a guy who had to learn to surf well enough in 1 month to enter a contest against other longer served novices and not be sussed as the 1 month old surfer.
He failed due to not being able to get out back. Had he got out back then he may have succeeded as he'd been trained by pros with techniques like being towed behind a boat just to get the hang of steering and balancing. So the natural randomness of nature beat him really. Bottom line is you need the groundwork of relentless paddling out against endless lines of whitewater so you begin to learn your place in the water. Like the Karate Kid 'wax on, wax off' stuff.
So back to your story, yes they 'could' all be up and riding in a day but only if conditions were favourable and then they would really look like beginners(kooks) whilst doing it. They would wobble about like hell and have poo stances, and be scared shitless if the waves got over 3ft, and it would be really really obvious to an experienced surfer. Maybe after 3 months of ideal conditions they would loose that beginner look, but they/anyone would all be absolutely rubbish at surfing after 1 day.
by clarksville » Wed Jul 23, 2008 8:45 pm
drowningbitbybit wrote:One big difference with surfing is that, at a lot of places, it can be genuinely unfriendly.
In any other sport or activity Ive ever been involved in (particularly climbing and motorbikes), the experienced ones are happy to help and like to see newbies giving it a go. In surfing that can be true (like here on this lovely forum for instance) but newbies are often actively "encouraged" to go elsewhere.
by clarksville » Wed Jul 23, 2008 8:47 pm
rich r wrote:Figure in the future, they could also have personal simulator trainers that are really like the real thing. Y'know Star Trek holo decks and all that.
That would take care of the speedbump factor, as well (kooks on the inside, people paddling out, etc..)
by clarksville » Wed Jul 23, 2008 9:07 pm
Jonah_Fro wrote:drowningbitbybit wrote: but newbies are often actively "encouraged" to go elsewhere.
I'm imagining this surfing world being some kind of man made station or off world platform? If so, the concept of localism and surfing heirarchy could be interesting to explore. I'd guess that at some point, the safety protocols would be shut off and the "real" surfers would then ride.
Dunno. Cool idea tho. Any idea when it's likely to be published?
by clarksville » Wed Jul 23, 2008 9:14 pm
by Real Pol » Wed Jul 23, 2008 9:59 pm
by Broosta » Wed Jul 23, 2008 11:29 pm
by drowningbitbybit » Thu Jul 24, 2008 12:53 am
clarksville wrote:If you were stuck in space but you could make your artificial beach recreate the current surf conditions on one beach on Earth, perfectly, all the time, which would it be?
by RJD » Thu Jul 24, 2008 1:39 am
by drowningbitbybit » Thu Jul 24, 2008 2:23 am
RJD wrote:
Half of surfing is physical ability, half of surfing is skill, the other half is stoke.
by clarksville » Sun Jul 27, 2008 10:01 am
Real Pol wrote:Aberdeen Beach!
Legendary with all surfers world wide!
Wait till you see, everyone on here will agree. They all want to surf it (but are just wannabes only a hand full of us live up to the challenge).
Next question.
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