by oldmansurfer » Tue Dec 13, 2016 5:49 pm
by IanCaio » Wed Dec 14, 2016 12:54 am
oldmansurfer wrote:The next to last wave looks like a good wave but you fell? Do you recall why?
oldmansurfer wrote:I don't see what the problem is but your video has me thinking I should make use of my gopro by putting it on the nose. I guess if I break it off then I break it off maybe before that happens I can get some video off it.
pmcaero wrote:looking at your quiver in your signature, none of those boards were appropriate for the mushy waves you were in. You can see that it takes you a lot of extra paddling down the face to get to the pop up, so you waste a lot of wave, and then it closes out on you.
you need a longer / floatier board for those conditions.
Big H wrote:2 ft hawaiian PM
oldmansurfer wrote:I would say that if you want to ride shortboards and are still learning like you are then don't venture into longer boards. It won't help you learn to ride shortboards and it will slow down the process by forcing you learn to ride a completely different board. With a bigger board the paddling will be different as will the positioning for the lineup and process of going through the surf and just about every aspect of surfing will be different.
by IanCaio » Wed Dec 14, 2016 1:00 am
by Big H » Wed Dec 14, 2016 1:24 am
by pmcaero » Wed Dec 14, 2016 1:03 pm
Big H wrote:I was just mentioning to PMCaero that when you say barely 2ft that it's not barely knee high but barely shoulder high....enough wave for a shortboard in other words.
by IanCaio » Wed Dec 14, 2016 11:59 pm
Big H wrote:I was just mentioning to PMCaero that when you say barely 2ft that it's not barely knee high but barely shoulder high....enough wave for a shortboard in other words.
pmcaero wrote:always hard to tell with a fisheye lens, but they seemed kind of crumbly. That's not to say guys cannot shred on tiny boards even in 2ft -not Hawaiian -crumblers (I watched this guy do just that at my break a week ago, amazing) , but there is a certain progression to getting to that point in skill level, and I think a bit more foam would have helped in this case. One day I'll be curious to try a so-called groveler board, see if the flat rocker makes it go faster than a shortboard in such conditions.
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