tony1904 wrote:My last question is how far does the wave have to be before I can start paddeling for it? because I dont want to paddle to soon and waste a lot of energy.
This is impossible to answer precisely because it depends entirely on timing. If you're too far outside, you may have to paddle way early. You will notice really advanced surfers can often do a two stroke entry to a wave - they just 'happen' to be at the right place at the right time for that to be possible. The reason being - they can read the waves, they know whats going to happen based on the previous sets and what is on the horizon. So, the key thing is: pay attention to those around you, the coming sets, and where they break at all times. You will develop intuition about where to be, and how much you have to paddle. You can actually ask people about it too, lots of people are willing to point out little things in the water than can guide your positioning. In fact, a nice old guy will even help you with your timing if you ask - "Paddle now! GO GO GO!" I've gotten some of my best waves when I was having trouble getting timing down, that way.
There's nothing like that feeling where you nail your positioning just right, and you paddle just a few times and get right up for a long ride. Hardly ever, ever happens to me - but it feels great when it does

It just takes time. At first you'll find that you're out of position a lot. As your endurance and wave reading increase - you'll be moving around more and you'll just happen to be where the waves want you to be. There are no shortcuts.
In the meanwhile, I wouldn't sweat wasting energy. You're not wasting it - you're getting stronger
