by dtc » Tue Aug 26, 2014 1:09 am
Just do a turtle roll. They arent particularly hard. Just roll the board over, grap both rails with your hands fairly close to the nose, then sink yourself (and the nose) as far under the water as you can (you are facing back toward the shore, stretch out your arms and make sure the nose doesnt hit you on the top of your head). Ignore the tail - if the nose is under the water, then the waves wont get under the board and all that happens is the waves push the tail down, if anything. Sure in quite big/powerful surf, this doesnt work, plus you need to get your positioning right (you can duck duck under a wave landing on your head, but you can't turtle underneath it), but it means you have control of the board. Its almost the same as your 'grab the leash' thing, but instead of holding the leash you are holding the rails. Put some wax on the rails at the right place (top and side and underneath), it really helps
Another option for small waves only, is to jump off next to the board, grab the nose with one hand and sink your entire body under the water dragging the nose with you. But you need a strong grip and small waves - most of the time you are better off just turtling. If you do this, wax the nose. This was my original technique (learnt before I knew what I should be doing) and I need to train myself out of it, but its easier to learn than a turtle roll, and I find it easier to face into the wave than away from it. But given that you are starting new with no bad habits, maybe only use it if you really cant figure out the turtling.
For small white water, you can just straighten your arms and raise your body above the white water and push the nose of the board slightly under the water.
If you have a big board, you may not be able to duck dive. If you sit on the board, does it sink under you? If it doesnt sink past your, say, belly button, then duck diving it very deep will be hard. Some people can do it, but its difficult and technical (my view is that you can learn to duck dive a small board and then modify that technique to duck dive a larger board, but its almost impossible to learn to duck dive with a big board, because you need the technique first in order to know how to do the 'technical' stuff needed for a bigger board ie the gap from not being able to duck dive to being able to duck dive is too great with a big board to be overcome*)
*: this is my excuse and I'm sticking to it!
(edit: see Jaffa has already said this!)