by dtc » Sat Aug 29, 2020 12:34 am
While softboards are good for beginners for a few reasons, you don’t have to surf a softboard when you are a beginner. Many people learn on hard boards from the start. There is no reason to think you need to have a certain skill level to get one
The main thing to remember when switching is that a softboard is thicker and ‘floatier’ (more volume) than a hardboard of the same length; so your 6’2 softboard is probably around 45-50L volume, which is similar volume to a 7ft funboard. Thus in terms of looking at hard boards, you don’t just swap your softboard for the same length hardboard and expect it to be the same. Volume is not the only difference or factor, of course
As Jaffa said, if you feel that you are still learning and progressing on the softboard, then stick with it. If you have the chance to borrow someone’s hard board, or even rent a board (the instructors surf school might offer this), you can give that a go and see what you think. Ask your friends if they have some suggestions or have old boards laying around that are roughly the right size
Given what you are surfing now, your size and age and frequency, if you asked what I would suggest as a hardboard I would say a 6’6-6’10 funboard. Something like the Torq modfun or NSP elements (but those are just 2 big brands, there are literally 100s of others just as suitable).
But I warn that if you keep surfing as frequently as you are, the funboard probably is only going to be a board for about 12 or so months; you will progress quickly and likely want to try other boards. So I wouldn’t go and buy a new one (unless your parents are very nice people!), see what you can find secondhand (albeit that if you did buy a new one, you can probably on sell it pretty quickly if needed. Or your mum can use it...)
There is no magic answer, the main thing is to understand that volume and size are your friends - go too small and you make things harder than they need to be. At this stage the aim is to learn and bed down basic skills, not to get too far ahead of yourself. In 1 or 2 years, go nuts and get that Steph Gilmore shortboard
Hope that helps