by IanCaio » Mon Jan 19, 2015 4:35 pm
Hey folks,
I've been spending my last weeks on vacation focusing on learning how to surf, something I should have started way before. I bought a 6'1" shortboard, not a really proper board for a begginer, but it's what I found for the money I had. I wanted to make a post to share my experience so far, and maybe give some tips for people on the same situation as I was.
I've taken my board to the beach about 8 or 9 days, each day for at least 6 hours, once I've even stayed 10 straight hours surfing. Since it's harder to start on a shortboard, in my head longer sessions could accelerate my learning.
The first days were kind of frustrating obviously, being caught inside, learning how to balance while paddling or even sitting down on the board. Trying to read waves, pearling. But it was fun anyways, somehow I could go home happy even without catching a single wave. In the fifth day I catched my first proper wave, and I dont need to describe how happy I was then. On the sixth or seventh day, I could drop in about 70% of the waves I commited paddling to. Now I'm working on my bottom turn, but things get much more fun after you can pop up!
On the meantime I had some good and bad advice, some good and bad experiences, so I might aswell share it here:
-An obvious tip is avoiding crowds, rather waiting longer on a worse spot then staying in the way of other surfers. In case you get in someones way be friendly and apologise, most will understand. Stay away from the more agressive ones.
-Try to keep you upper body still while paddling, it's way harder but it's worth practicing. Also focus on having a good paddling position to avoid pearling or dragging too much water. Dont forget to take your feet out of water or straightening them to stop dragging!
-If you have a shortboard, I find it better to go straight to unbroken waves.
-Commit, if you bail its water, just be carefoul with your board and you should be fine (considering you're on a beachbreak). Also, the moment the wave catchs you, the board might get a little bumpy, and you might think you'll pearl if you pop up. It's normal, but as I said, commit! In no time you'll be able to know when you're actually on a bad position (about to pearl) and when you're not.
-Catch your first waves paddling straight to the beach. Catching waves on an angle is harder, and you should try it after you can catch them going straight. I lost lots of time because of a bad advice that said you will pearl on a shortboard if you paddle towards the beach. You wont! (Unless you are bad positioned on the board ofc)
-Have fun! If you dont have patience to bail a lot before standing up, dont get a shortboard at all. Some people might take more time to learn on a shortboard then I did, some might take even less. If you did some sport before that requires balancing on a board like skating or snowboarding/sandboarding it might help once you pop up. Dont lie to yourself thinking learning how to surf will be easy, but it will be fun!
Feel free to criticise any of my advice, I'm a begginer and it might even help me if you do.
Good waves for you all!