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2018/01/21 2 Days learning Surfing south of Sydney
π 2018-01-21 01:01 in Australia, Public
Since I had seen a lot of Sydney already, for my 4th visit there, I figured I would try and learn surfing. I signed up for a so called surf school with wavessurfschool.com.au which supposedly supposedly had 2x 2H of surf instruction, but really it was 15mn of very basic instruction with maybe another 30mn of help in the water, and then that's it. We got maybe 2.5H in the water with very little instruction, and few waves (often a 5mn wait between 2 rideable waves, sucks when you're trying to practise).
We had to get out of the water by 15:00 and basically I learned virtually nothing and wasted my day :(


too many people going to the beach that day and clogging up everything while interrupting our class
too many people going to the beach that day and clogging up everything while interrupting our class

While I mostly lost a day not learning to surf, I went back, the next weekend with a different company, Australian Surf Tours, and this time booked a private set of lessons on a farther away beach by Thirroul (1h30 train ride away):

we started by looking at surf boards to get a feel for what exists
we started by looking at surf boards to get a feel for what exists


this was hard
this was hard


too many times, I ended up like this :)
too many times, I ended up like this :)

Long story short, I definitely learned a lot more. My instructor Tom Berridge did a good job, and while at the time I felt like after some rest I could have done another session, I was definitely getting tired after the 2nd set of sessions after lunch, and struggling to get up and pick the right waves. Tom saved me tons of time by choosing the right waves for me, and pushing me on the right ones so that I got a lot more training than I would have anyway.
Just to show how much I suck, or that it's not super easy, a compilation of failures:

and probably my only time successfully getting up later in the day when I was getting more tired:

It was definitely a good learning experience, but I sure would need a lot more practise before I feel like I'd be self sufficient

A few notes for myself if I try this again later:

  • Toes on the back of the board
  • Lift up and lock the arms straight up without grabbing the edges of the board
  • Stand up with back foot first
  • Try to have front foot as close to perpendicular to the board as possible
  • Quickly-ish put front foot forward without putting a knee down and taking off one hand but not the other
  • Keep enough weight in the back not to nose dive (it will happen anyway if the wave is breaking)
  • Don't put too much weight back that the board, it brakes and stops
  • Look for rip currents where waves break last, and use that to paddle out to the next wave
  • You can catch waves after they break or before. While they break will flip the board over.

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