Slightly more swell

2013-OBP-08-09

Surf: 2.3 ft at 14.8 s from 286° plus a 2.0 ft at 13.8 s from 221°. Moderate wind. Incoming tide.

More swell, but more chop. Then both MORE swell and more chop. Holy crap the more swell.

Here’s me, minding my own business trying to make something out of chest high funky waves when suddenly OMG that’s a much much bigger set. AAAAA paddle for my life. I’m pretty sure Ocean Beach loves to do that to me. Especially if I’ve just blown taking off on the first wave of the set and the next three are snarling. I’m assuming it’s the two long-ish period swells overlapping. Perhaps a couple sets both hit at just the right time to turn little slop into pissed off sets. Ooof. It’s been a long time since I had to walk though my whole “this is going to suck” headgame. I have to say, I kinda freaked out a lil. Sigh.

I did manage to sneak a little fun. I got a couple of long ones. I worked on my swooping quad turns. Fun fun.

Highlight of the day: a whole pod of dolphins when past Chris and Brien inside a wave. I was further out, so I only saw 3 fins surface just in front of Chris’s board. Amazing.

2013-OBK-08-09

Still no swell

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Surf: 2.0 ft at 14.8 s from the SSW at 195°. Incoming tide. Light winds.

Not much happening on the surf front, but met up with a good crew of people up for goofing off in the water. Handplanes, boogie boards, longboards, fat flat shortboards. We had all the bases covered.

Occasionally you could kind of stretch out a closeout into something a little fun, but for the most part, it was all goofing off stoke, party waves, and good times.

Managed to fit both my longboards in the car too. How about that.

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No swell

2013-MT-08-06

Surf: 2.3 ft at 14.8 s from the S at 181°. Low tide.

The swell was too small and too sharply south to really do anything up here today. Linda Mar was unsurfably flat. Montara had a little bit of wave, but plenty of jumble and close out.

Thankfully, there were occasionally bits and pieces that held up, either for a long ride or for a swooping drop and a hint of a turn before closing out.

I tried to work a little on my step, but as the waves alternated between steep closeout and mush, it was hard to really get a good first step in.

I keep crossing my fingers we’ll get those glassy rolling summer days, but sadly it’s all wind and wrong swells.

Ladies surf day

2013-38-08-03

Surf: 2.3 ft at 16.7 s from the SW at 216°. Sideshore winds.

Back to Santa Cruz to meet up with a group of ladies. Nice folks. 🙂

Surf was okay. It was windy and crowded, but I got a few in on my hull. I’d been wanting to test out the new fin in SC.

I think it worked pretty well. I’m not any further on my “be able to articulate the differences between equipment” plan. I felt like I had to keep swooping in order to go down the line, rather than the board just going, but it was much tighter of a turn than usual. One of my best waves was also loud. Sheesh. What is the board doing back there?

With the crowd, it was pretty hard to try and test out the things I learned with Ashley. I wasn’t even trying to cut back (since every wave was a party wave.) One wave a guy was like “you can cut back! go! cut back!” so I tried to remember to lead with my shoulders, all of that.

Caught a movie afterwards:

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Bedtime. I’m totally beat from all the paddling and positioning. Looking forward to sleeping in.

Afternoon wave

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^This is actually from 8/3, but the conditions and crowd were about the same.

Surf: 2.3 ft at 15.4 s from the SSW at 196°. Incoming tide.

After lunch and picking up Beamer’s van from summer camp, we headed out for a few more waves.

It was crazy crowded out there. We opted for the hook to get some shortboard time in, but the place was pretty mobbed. I watched a crew of guys get wave after wave. It was kind of nice to watch the good loggers do their thing after my class this morning. Okay, there’s the left-go-right drop. Okay, now he’s right in the pocket and stepping up.

While that’s great for thinking, it was tough for actually surfing. I got a few short mushy waves that went wide, but everything else I had to pull out of to let a logger through.

Finally one of the older guys called me in to one. Wooooo. It was little, but just right for me to zip zip zip on the fish. I got around a section, I did a little bitty floater. It was enough to make it worth sticking around for the extra session. After that I bellied in and headed home.

Lessons with Ashley Lloyd

2013-38-08-01

Surf: 2.6 ft at 15.4 s from the S at 190°. Incoming to High tide. No wind.

Shortly after picking up my fish from Sunset Shapers, I started obsessing over longboards again. Before I get too wrapped up in shortboard-fishland, I want to learn more about longboarding. While I feel pretty competent on my Stewart, the one thing I don’t have is style. I shuffle instead of cross step. I can get up near the nose, but things don’t quite feel right. The board bogs and I fall on my face. More than one person had blamed this on my Stewart being a performance board rather than a traditional log. While it’s a really fun board for our inconsistent beach breaks (and a great all-arounder), the board hunter in me can’t help but look at more traditional boards. Wide noses, more traditional rails, pin tails, big ole fins. The works.

The problem is, there are so many amazing boards out there. I don’t even know where to start.

A couple of Ashley Lloyd’s boards showed up at Mollusk recently. They’re so beautiful. I highly recommend following her instagram for shots of boards like this one:

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Source: Ashleylloyd on Instagram

While hemming and hawing over wether or not I wanted to buy one of her boards off the rack, Jake recommended meeting up with her for a surf lesson and talking customs.

The short of it, Ashley is great. Take lessons from her! Her site is: She’s a great teacher!

A few takeaways:

Cross stepping and muscle memory – I realized I’ve been going about this both too aggressively and not aggressively enough, if that makes any sense. I realized that I’ve either been forcing steps when the timing wasn’t right, or not taking steps when the timing was right.

Ashley pointed out that I can start with just one step when the timing is right. The important thing, she pointed out, is to build that muscle memory. Step up, step back. And bend your knees! I’m going about this all a little too stiff legged, which makes it harder to get that second step in.

I got quite a few toe touches in. That was pretty satisfying. When it came to more steps, I fell pretty spectacularly on my face except for one backwards fall onto the board. The toe touches alone are plenty to work with for the rest of the summer.

Timing and wave positioning – One thing I knew I was going to need to work on was my timing and wave positioning. Most of the waves up here have very little face before slamming closed, so I have the very kooky habit of outrunning my waves instead of being in the pocket.

Some things Ashley had me work on: left-go-rights and right-go-lefts to set me up in the pocket better than a regular old angle take off. These are pretty fun. It’s great to really swoop that bottom turn.

I’d borrowed her Bing Lightweight Pintail for this class. It made me realize how quickly my Stewart turns compared to something with more traditional rails. The first few turns felt like trying to turn a tanker, but once I get in the swing of it, it was really fun. Those left-go-rights are a blast.

Also in the timing and positioning camp, stalling and cutbacks. I have so many more options for staying in position than I think I do. I need to thing more than screaming down the line. Cutbacks brings me to the next item:

Arms and Shoulders – Ashley gave me a few pointers for how to engage my shoulders to flow into a cutback rather than my usual “stare at where I want to go till eventually I’ve over there” move. She also suggested I loosen up my arms. I’ve noticed in pictures my back arm looks like I’m going to punch someone. More relaxed arms = that extra subtlety for trim and balance.

She suggested a few closing moves to help reinforce what I’m learning. One is flowing over the top of a crumbling section with a big top turn, the other is using those shoulders again to make a more swooping kickout.

Ashley also said I paddle well, which might not seem like a huge complement, but I was stoked to be doing something well. 🙂

All those years of sprinting from the outside to get my waves was good for something.

Esther and Ashley both took a turn riding my board. While they looked beautiful and amazing on it, they both agreed that the board isn’t really helping my cause any. It’s overly sensitive and is not happy when it has more weight on the front. In short, a great beachbreak board.

For now, I think I can get away with practicing the toe taps and the left-go-rights on my board. Hopefully next class I’ll snag one of Ashley’s boards and give that a trial run.

BIG thanks to Ashley for a wonderful surf lesson!

Check her out at: