|
New to Surfing? If you are new to surfing you may find the following useful. This page was posted to alt.surfing (google groups) and credit is due to the author, Chris Payne.
So you want to learn how to surf. Why? Because I'm a big fan of Baywatch. Because pro surfing is gonna be my ticket out
of this little nowhere town. I dunno, it seems like it might be kinda fun.
Finding a partner: There are two schools of thought here: I subscribe to the second approach. Probably because that's how I learned and because when one person is better than the other someone is probably not having a very fun session. Don't get me wrong, I really enjoy teaching people. But if its cranking on the outside, either I'm gonna be bored on the inside with the beginner, or he's gonna be in over his head on the outside. [Ken Strayhorn Jr. accurately adds:] Your friend you must choose carefully. He will become your brah, and over time will mean more than anyone else on this planet. Besides surfing, you will drink copious amounts of beer, smoke pounds of pot, and chase boxcar loads of women together. You will lend each other money when times are tight. You will never ask each other for gas cash. You will inform him when his ass crack is showing over his pants. If he doesn't like the woman you are seeing you will drop her like a hot rock. Conversely, if your new woman thinks your brah is a jerk, that's a sign that she's a bozo and should be avoided. Boards and wetsuits will be shared. You will hoot for each other on fine days. You will badmouth anyone who drops in on him. People will come to view you as a team. Surf nazis will avoid you because they know that to fight one of you is to fight both of you. And, years later when you are 40 years old and you and your brah are sitting on a break somewhere listening to the younger guys yacking it up, you will smile and know deep in your soul that there is nothing finer than surfing and the people you do it with. Finding a place to surf: Before paddling out: Stretch. While you're watching the break, stretch your arms and back. Limber up. Getting in the water: Paddling out: Duck Diving: (By Morgan Perry) 2) Push your board as deeply under as possible. The more of your body that you get above water quickly will result in getting the board deeper under. Sometimes I even tilt my board to the side in the water so that there is less resistance to it going down. Some people use only their arms and their knee(s) to push the board down. I like using the ball of one of my foot instead and to raise the other one high to provide more weight on the board. 3) Immediately before the surf subsumes you, pull yourself down to the board and angle the board slightly up to the perceived other side of the break. Too much angle and the nose of the board will catch the break and push you backwards. Not enough and the back of the board will be caught in the suction of the wave as it rushes by you and it won't help pull you through. If you have the right upward angle, and your hands are toward the front of the board, probably about where you press up from, you can thrust the board to the other side of the wave and it will help pull you through. 4) A key is *not* to stay under for as long as possible, just to start deep and shoot up as far on the other side of the turbulence as possible. The sooner you get back up the surface and balanced on your board, the sooner you are able to start paddling again... and that's the only way you really get outside anyway. The line-up: Catching a wave: [That said, Clark Quinn graciously offers these
tips:] 2. Paddle out, and try to catch the whitewater in while riding on your belly. (If you've body-boarded or body-surfed before, skip to step 5) You may have to adjust how far forward/back you lay on the board. You want about an inch of room between the nose of the board and the surface of the water. You'll need to be paddling in and have the wave catch you and push you even faster in the same direction. Stay on the board as you zoom towards shore. Steps 2-4 may best be accomplished on a mat or a boogie board or something else easy to get "wave knowledge". 3. Once you can reliably pick a wave and catch it, start trying to angle this way and that under control. Try going both ways, left and right. 4. When you can zoom back and forth at will, you're ready for a bigger step. Take a wave right before/where it's breaking, and ride it while turning to keep right at where the wave is breaking. Figuring out just where to paddle to so as to catch the wave at the right spot is a major part of the game. 5. When you can catch waves reliably, you're going to want to try riding them standing up. Paddle and let the white water catch you. As soon as you're moving, jump to your feet. This is difficult. It's really worth it to practice the jumping from prone to your feet on land first and get it well-rehearsed before doing it on a moving board on the water. Foot placement is crucial. You'll want your back foot near the tail of the board and your front foot somewhere in front of that, near the middle of the board, say. Look at other surfers. Practice on a rough template of the board on the ground. Ride the wave in. Depending on the size of the board either balance on it (bigger) or move it to stay underneath you (smaller). 6. Once you can reliably get up, you want to start angling while riding the white water. Both ways, zooming back and forth under control. 7. Once you can do that, move to catching the wave right where it is breaking. This will get trickier, because you'll have a more vertical take off point and the board will have a tendency to sink the nose as you go down the face of the wave. You want to catch the wave by angling in the direction the wave is breaking. I'm not sure 2-4 are necessary (certainly not for someone who's been in the ocean on other things, but probably are a good safety precaution. The rules: 1. Wave ownership (The "my wave"
rule) Caveat: If someone is up and riding, paddling into the wave behind them does not give you the wave. Also note: In many low-key breaks, the first person paddling for the wave owns it. Do not expect this to apply in crowded conditions. 2. Dropping in (The "Thall shalt not"
rule) 3. Paddling out (The "Eat it" rule) Author: Contributors to this FAQ: |
Bookmark Us! ![]() ![]() Free Desktop Background click on image above, in the new window, right click, set as background |
Disclaimer The owners and contributors of this site do not accept any responsibility regarding content, errors, omissions or the correctness of the information contained in this site. Use the information is at your own risk. The owners and contributors are not responsible for any loss or accident to you or to third-parties including loss of business, loss of sale, equipment or property damage, injury or death resulting from or to you or other third-parties using the information contained herein. |
|
Copyright All photography on this site has been taken by ourselves (or is used with permission of the rightful owner). Please respect our copyright to these images. We normally grant permission to others use our images in a non profit making situation - please ask first. All text is copyright ©2006 ©2007 www.surf-wax.co.uk Product images in the shop are generally supplied by manufacturers and are subject to their copyright. |
|
| site last updated 14 July, 2008 | |