by mg100 » Tue Aug 01, 2017 12:47 pm
I feel your pain.
I also learnt the hard way, I already know I am not the strongest swimmer, mix that with also being tired from the paddling I often worry about swimming back to shore if I were to lose my board.
I actually didn't realize how hard swimming back to shore would be with the waves crashing on you, that is until it happened.
about a year or two ago I was out on my 3rd surf ever and had an instructor with me, the surf was pretty big, I wouldn't even go out in in now but as I had an instructor with me I thought he knew what he was doing and I would be fine, this instructor also forgot to bring a leash so I knew I would lose my board I just wasn't expecting such a pounding.
I of course lost the board on the first wave I went for, the instructor went off after the board leaving me to swim back to shore, I don't think I have ever been so tired, I was flapping around when I was almost back to shore and I could see the instructor thinking of coming to get me but I made it in the end and took about 10 minutes to catch my breath.
I then stupidly thought I can't leave it like this as I will never surf again so got back on the board and went back out, we used the pier as a rip to get out, before even catching a wave trying to turtle roll the board flew out of my hands and I thought F**k, luckily the instructor swam and grabbed the board quickly and I just said forget it, take me back in so he came to get me on the board and took me back to shore.... well he took me to where I could stand and I started walking to shore then I took a step where all of a sudden it went deep, the rip took me back to the pier and back out to sea so the instructor had to come get me again, this put me off surfing for a while and I needed a few beers after.
I learnt a lot from this.
1. never trust a stupid surf instructor.
2. go out in smaller conditions your comfortable with.
3. get better at swimming.
I am now careful when I go out, if it gets too big and I am not comfortable I will come in, especially if there is no one else around.
As everyone will say if you can't swim back in don't go out, but there are still times I know I would struggle if it happened again.
I think the more I surf the stronger I will get and the better at swimming i'll be, although it probably doesn't work like that.