by oldmansurfer » Wed Apr 08, 2015 5:44 pm
If you drop knee then you have had to time the popup as you take off so that will help with surfing. Wave and ocean knowledge will help too and if you paddle to get into waves that will also help. However that still makes you a newbie. I think if you are healthy and fit and can surf a lot then that newbie stage will go by a lot quicker but still you won't be able to just stand up and ride a wave from the get go, or at least not reliably. If you are up for the challenge and have time to surf go for a shortboard (one made for a beginner). If you aren't fit, don't have time, have shoulder or back injuries, aren't used to paddling into waves or get easily discouraged then a longboard might still be a better choice. Some where in between then a fun board might be the thing. I was a paipo boarder back in the day before the invention of the boogie board. I progressed to drop knee and then to just kneeboarding on my paipo board. While I might get lucky and just do everything right, it took me two weeks of surfing every day to get it to where I was most often able to ride a (green) wave in but I learned on a shortboard. It took me 2 years of surfing before I was as good at surfing as I was at paipo boarding. I was extremely fit and completely injury free at the time and while I used fins I was catching bigger waves paipo boarding which meant I had to paddle to catch them in addition to kicking with my fins and I was a swimmer, used to be on the swim team. So your results may vary from that but the main thing is to not expect it to be a piece of cake.
So what is worse.... dying or regretting it for the rest of my life? Obviously I chose not regretting it.