riding a shortboard poorly is difficult and riding a short board well is even more difficult.
Well said. Still, on balance, I think getting started on a short board used to make more sense than getting started on a longboard. With $100 softies and all the crowding that has come as a result of Covid, that equation may have changed, but here’s my reasoning for getting started in times recently past.
Every innovation in surfboard design has been targeted at making it easier for elite surfers to perform better in the surf. Consider that it has always been “the pros’ who have test piloted new board designs. We saw this especially in the seismic shift from longboards to short boards, then again going from single fins to tri fin setups. The serendipitous result is that modern boards, short and long, are much easier to handle than their early iterations.
Now ask yourself, why are there so many more short boarders in the water than longboarders? Two reasons.
I took a boat trip to the Mentawis years ago. I went solo and got on a boat with a bunch of much younger Aussies. I remember we were anchored overnight at Lance’s Rights and in the morning it was really big. Triple overhead. Perfect blue green tubes. I had bought two boards, a 6’ 2” and a 7’6” speed plan board with fin boxes for thruster and quad setup. I paddled out on the 7’6” and got a bunch of great waves. The Aussie guys stayed on the boat and when I got out of the water, they informed me that they wanted to sail off to somewhere else where their boards would work better. I asked them why they each only brought one or two 6’2” boards. Their reply was, and I’m not kidding here, “that’s what Kelly rides.” That’s one of the reasons. New surfers are influenced by other surfers. And since Kelly rides whatever-it-is he rides today, that’s how many make their decision.
The second reason is that it’s just easier to learn to recover from an overpowered turn or cutback on a low volume, low swing weight board than it is on something bigger. The result is fewer fall-downs, more riding, more fun.ok

More random thoughts: I think in the past folks who got started in surfing really wanted to learn to surf better. There was a lot of peer pressure to get at least good enough to not be a hazard in the water. In our new era of entitlement, the $100 softie, and Covid crowds, it may be that just getting waves is the new goal. I’ve heard this phrase, “the waves belong to everyone,” way too many times lately when a drop-in gets called on it. I’m pretty sure the guy who’s been surfing for 20 years is going to get more waves than the guy who’s been surfing for a season or two, whether they “belong” to him or not.