Some nice surf in this neck of the woods over Thanksgiving.
It was crowded, as it always is, but still fun. It's great to see this run of surf after how bad late summer was.
It looked fun both yesterday and today, but I'm simply too busy. There could be something tomorrow, probably shoulder high in HB which will get me in the water, which would be nice. The tide has been pretty nuts, so a mid-day session, or first light, is probably the only option.
PeachesNcream,
I learned in college, so definitely as an adult. My only advice would be to stay on somewhat larger boards for a while. I probably went to a shortboard too quickly, and it stunted my growth. I don't think it would have made a massive difference, I would probably be about the same, but you want to be as relaxed as possible. Make everything easy.
One thing I noticed was that I improved more in the summer in college than in the winter. This is somewhat incongruous with the Santa Barbara surf, which is much better (albeit still not big) in the winter. But around Isla Vista you can actually get in the water quite a bit in the summer due to thigh high windswells which just seem to popup, and you could walk/bike there easily People say you can't surf in the summer there, but it is surfable more than people think, you just need a funshape. Because I was surfing a 7-8 foot funshape in the summer, I would get in the water more often, and be able to have fun in the thigh to waist high waves, which helped me develop. In the winter, on slightly bigger days, like shoulder to head high, I was trying to surf a shortboard, which I was not ready for. Unfortunately I didn't figure this out for a while.
As I developed I eventually went towards high volume shortboards, like 40-45 liters is my guess, which helped my development more than the standard shortboards. I just wish I had been on those, and funshapes, my whole time in college.
One of the nice things about a funshape is that it will keep you in the water. Even as you get into shortboarding, a funshape is valuable for the quiver. I still have lots of days where I'll go out in waist high conditions and have a blast on a 7'6". A funshape that is your standard board now will still be useful when you develop. You won't really outgrow it.
Just my opinion. Everyone is different. Lots of my UCSB/Newport friends have learned to surf over the years, and from what I've seen the ones who stick with it tend to stay on high volume boards for longer. I will add that I have a good friend from college who grew up on the Big Island and rips, who lived in Newport for many years and would advise many of our UCSB/Newport friends to learn on a shortboard. I will defer to his expertise, he is far better than me and knows far more, but I simply don't agree. He is, and will admit to being, against conventional wisdom on the subject. He started very young, and I don't think he really gets what it is like to start after you have stopped growing. The problem is that he is telling people what they want to hear, that they can learn on a shortboard, which got a number of our friends to simply not progress. Sometimes I would take them out on a funshape and they would say 'wow' and be enthused.
For most of us, our bodies need to get comfortable. The extra foam is helpful in that way.
Everyone is different. I just think going slowly is the best policy. And that funshape will always be useful.
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