by Big H » Sun Jan 07, 2018 6:02 pm
I’m late to the party, but at 47 years old, relative newbie (4 years surfing now) and 95kg now I can relate to your situation.
You will not be able to duck dive either choice. Learning to get out back on boards that can’t be duckdiced is a skill and a valuable one in that when and if you ever surf shorter you have developed the savvy to think your way out back rather than just charging into the teeth of the break.
I am not much of a fan of boards like that 7.6 at our size....for me it is a tweener, doesn’t get you in early enough for any appreciable advantage but just as unwieldy as a longer board without the paddle benefits to be able to race out back between waves. For me I have found better to be shorter and lower volume or longer and higher volume....the between size is the worst of both worlds for me.
I have an 8’2” fungun that is super thick (could be 4” thick thru the middle, not sure!) and a 9’2” epoxy performance longboard that is foiled out with a lot of rocker (for a longboard). I have a few others as well but when I compare either of these (which i both surf as 2+1’s) to my 50-50 railed single fin 10’4” (yeah that’s right!) they are nimble, wobbly performance vehicles. BUT they have more in common with each other than do boards I have that are shortboards ( react dramatically to body arch when catching a wave). Point being, I categorize boards into big and small, have no place in my quiver for mediums, and have found when it comes to developing skills on bigger boards that bigger is better. You may not yet have discovered the magic that happens when you move around on a board, how the board responds to going to the nose or backing up to the tail, for over the fin. It is going to take more time than you have invested to date, but learning about how a 10 ft board can feel half the size because you surf off the tail is mind blowing if you have been standing somewhere around the middle and only trimming your turns.
If you want to learn to surf, stay big for awhile at your size and age. I am hyper athletic...have been superlative in all physical activities my whole life (broke my wrist in the 10th grade - street fight.....was the cleanup punch so was the winner and loser) and had to drop wrestling in 10th grade (start of season - varsity) and after 10 weeks in a cast walked on mid season to the swim team (winter sport like wrestling in HS in the NE US) and on the first practice had a qualifying swim for the next meet and took the 100m freestyle varsity spot from some senior (and never swam a day on a swim team in my life). I also used a skateboard as my primary transportation thru my teen years and learned to surf here in Bali on big fast and hollow waves that will break your jaw if you get it wrong (another story).
Again, to the point, in spite of being super athetic and having a skating background ingrained from youth, it took me three years of surfing large, medium and small boards until something clicked and it started to flow. I attribute a great deal of that to continuing to use a longboard intermittently while experimenting with other boards. Smaller boards have allowed me to learn alliteration, but the essence of surfing, learning to read the wave, tap into its power and to react to how it shapes itself when you are on the faciface; that I learned from my longboards.
Honest recommendation I would have had for you is to carry on with the longboard another year before considering anything else. Learn to fade takeoffs, cutback, drip knee, unglue your feet and move up and down the board in relation to the wave and walk at you wish to do. Learn how to paddle, position, get out back again like Lebo said when you are caught inside with a big board and it is nothing but pain on the way all across the horizion.
I am 100% Behring trying different boards. The grass is not always greener, At 8 months for me you still should be on a longboard with your frequency for another year minimum. All the reasons you have whether it is being able to turn, generating speed, riding hollow waves all can be sorted on a longboard, which for your age, skill, WEIGHT is what is needed. Figure out skills on a ongboards and you can translate to shorter and more maneuverable boards. Those shorter boards don’t move themselves and in my experience, the way to learn to move shorter boards and to learn to tap into the wave and respond and ride each unique shape you get up on is to develop that ability on longboards.
BTW, paddle and body position/posture is the key. Whatever you do now in a normal seah, push yourself to do twice as much if you want to move forward.