Sun, crossteps, and hot tubs

2013-SC38-09-14

Surf: 3.9 ft at 13.8 s from the S at 174° with a mix of 3.6 ft at 7.7 s from the NW at 312°. Low tide.

Yay! Today’s surf was SO much better than yesterday’s.

The sun was out, some smooth mellow waves were rolling through, and it was warm. I wish I’d brought my Seea zippy and shorts. Today would have been perfect to try them out. I was cooking in my hoody 4/3/4.

I suppose it’s a fitting day to surf with Blam, back from Hawaii for a week.

While it was rather crowded, there was a nice spot just inside the crowd that was perfect for long rides. I got up the confidence to sneak in a few cross steps. They weren’t totally graceful (I kept having to watch for drop ins and wayward soft tops), but I got several steps in, many without faceplants. I totally shuffled back, I’ve got to work on breaking that habit next.

Esther also pointed out a bad popup habit I need to work on. Basically I pop up twice, once about half way up, then the rest of the way when I’m more sure about the wave. I know that comes from surfing closeouts and getting pitched over and over again. But it’s an extra step I don’t really need.

Got some great comments from friends on my positioning and wave spotting. That was really great to hear. Always glad to know I’m doing something right.

It was really nice to see everyone again. It’s been so long since we all surfed together. It’s great to see how much better everyone is.

All around, lovely Saturday. Capped it off with some hot tub time and a milkshake. 😀

2013-SCH-09-14

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:

IMG_1542

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

Afternoon wave

2013-HK-008-03
^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:

Screen Shot 2013-08-05 at 10.37.53 AM
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:

Weekend

2013-PP-07-20a

Screen Shot 2013-07-20 at 10.30.14 PM

Surf: 3 ft at 16 s from the SSW at 196° rising tide. Light wind.

With a new swell coming after a long dry spell, I knew Santa Cruz would be crowded.

Most of the folks out at 38th were floating around, chatting, so it was pretty easy to pick off waves other people were letting roll past. Still, there were a few close calls when party waves got a little too crowded. For the most part, there were plenty of long rides.

I was starting to feel like a bit of a wave hog as the day went on. We surfed for four hours. At one point, I got an early wave in a set then picked off a later wave on my way back out. No one had cone for it and I was in exactly the right spot, I just had to do it. After that, I let a few sets go, hoping others would snag a good one.

I tried to work on my noseriding again. I had one or two waves where I got really far up. I’m sure it looked beyond awkward. I tried to find myself on the cams, to confirm my inner cringe, but sadly every time I took off on a wave, the camera panned. ARG.

I’m hoping to get some lessons in this year. I want to work on my style and longboarding competence.

The ride back, we went up the coast. Dog out the window. Checking all the surf spots. Sunburned and happy.

2013-PP-07-20b

Early shift

2013-PP-07-02

2013-HK-07-02

Surf: 2.3 ft at 14.3 s from the SSW at 213°. Rising tide. No wind.

YAWN.

There’s a BART strike and Chris wanted to beat the bridge traffic by avoiding the bridge all together. Unfortunately we all had time constraints so “get there EARLY” was the call.

I got up at 3:15, picked up Brien at 4, rolled up to the beach at 5:15 for some serious darkness.

Darkness, and waves. Clean tasty waves.

Yeah there were some long lulls, but it was clean and there were some nice sized sets. Waves were nice and long, perfect for working on my nose ride skills. I got in range, but every time I started to get up there, I’d lose speed like crazy. A few things I think were happening:

– 1 I’m a little too far ahead of the curl. I need to get in position a little better
– 2 Not enough rail/tail engaged in the face. Chris was recommending leaning down-face a little to keep the nose sliding forward.
– 3 My board is more of an all-arounder. It doesn’t have a ton of concave in the nose.
It should still be rideable, but a little bit more tricky.

In addition to the fun waist high practice waves, there were a few good sized chest+ waves in the mix. I got two great rides I was very happy about. One with a mix of turns, long cutbacks, skootching up, dropping back etc and one last set wave in. I was about to paddle over one of the waves in the set, but then changed my mind last minute. After a no-paddle take off, it was a fast, fun long ride all the way into the sand. Wow, was that a FUN one. Yeeeeeooooo.

What a beautiful morning. Big group of pelicans cruised by before disappearing into the fog.

2013-PP-07-02b

Catching up to the swell

2013-PP-05-21

Surf: 3 ft at 16s from SSW at 205° Rising to high tide.

This is the swell. This is the swell that we heard about the whole time in Mexico. This is the swell that was “supposed to be here tomorrow” every day. I’ll admit, I thought about bumping the trip a few extra days to catch it (and to say Hi to the folks from theseea.com who were coming in on Sunday for a shoot), but sadly between obligations back home and flights being crazy expensive if we had stayed, it didn’t work out.

Word from Ed was that when it came in, it came in huge. Big big waves full of thousands of juvenile Portuguese Man O’wars. Not only would I not have known what to do with that much swell, my delicate skin would have been toast after just a few stings. Ouch.

The nice thing about a swell like this swell is that not only did it hit Tahiti, Hawaii and Mexico, but it snuggled right up to Santa Cruz.

Although I was feeling some serious work guilt about coming back from vacation and turning right around for the water, I plowed through my first day back chores on Monday and hit the surf early Tuesday.

Normally I’d want my longboard for this. I’m still skittish about the point when it’s on the bigger side (I either want to be able to duck dive or be able to scratch to safety with paddle power.) My log’s in the shop getting a ding fixed so I decided to try out my new an improved hull skills.

I get some confused looks whenever I paddle over to the longboard peak with my little 6’10. Thankfully I’d just gotten out to the peak when a beautiful wave came straight towards me. Remembered my Mexico lessons and paddled longer, stood up faster and swish…I was off.

It was a pretty good wave. 😀
I was really stoked.

After that it was a lot of floating around, answering questions about my hull, being in everyone’s way, getting a few more waves, and doing some horribly kooky things.

I know I’m gonna be a kook for a long time, but I still am so embarrassed when it shows. I was trying to get out past an incoming wave, didn’t make it, went flying backwards and right over the top of Tim. He’s thankfully great at duck diving so he only got a knee to the back. I was slightly horrified. Glad no one got hurt.

He got some great waves. I saw Darren and Noah get a few beauts too.

Also saw a small pod of dolphins slip right by me. Always a cool thing to see.

Overall, I’m glad I chased that swell down. It was a great end to a fun little surf trip.

Sun in Santa Cruz

2013-HK-05-01

Surf: 9.5 ft at 10.8 s from WNW at 300° Low tide.

I wanted more fish time so I snuck out to Santa Cruz. Rolling up the low tide was a little too low. Like bare rock low. Beamer and I hit breakfast and the hot tub and waited for it to come back up.

The waves were slow and it was tricky to navigate the homeschooler grom stinky-eyeing up the place, but Beamer got lots of nice ones. I paddled and paddled and paddled but only managed one wave.

These one wave sessions in SC are killing me. I want to get better at this fish but it’s so frustrating driving all that way for one wave.

We hit the hot tub again to help my pride recover.

What I lacked in wave catching, I more than made up for in sunburn and hot tub time. Getting ready for Mexico!

South by Northwest

2013-PP-04-16

Surf: 7.9 ft at 10.0 s from the NW at 305°

With the wind howling locally and swell in Santa Cruz being inconsistent at best, finding in a window of “not awful” to paddle out in has been tricky.

While the sunrise was lovely, I was really struggling. The new leash works much better (no tangled up feet) but I couldn’t get in to a wave to save my life. I finally got one and very slowly rode it in. Uff.

Oh, thanks to the orange board, I’m quite visible on the cams:

Screen Shot 2013-04-16 at 3.30.34 PMedited

Kelpfish

2013-HK-04-06

Surf: 9.2 ft at 19.0 s from WNW at 282° Low Tide. Side/offshore winds.

WHEEEEEE. 😀

After surfing the fish every day this week, I wasn’t sure if I was ready for real waves or exhausted.

From the cliff I could see big barreling waves at 38th. Not quite ready for 6-8ft mayhem, I paddled out further east looking for a nice, sensible 4-6ft mayhem.

Now, every time I do something like that, I paddle out, I’m feeling good then that 8ft set I was trying to avoid comes and finds me. Aaaaa. The first few waves I paddled like a maniac (maniac on a tiny tiny board) to get over. The third was going to break to far out so I stopped, waited, and decided to test out the duck dive ability on this board. AAaaand under. Whew. Just being able to do that gave me a huge confidence boost.

When it came to catching waves, I was struggling a bit. There was so much kelp. It was thick, it was everywhere, and with the limited glide it took a lot for me to get going. I drifted further and further from the crowd, looking for a less kelp covered spot where I could go for everything without dropping in on anyone.

A few attempts in, I finally got a wave. I got a nice long face where I could practice this whole turning stuff. It was so much fun. Bottom turn, top turn, bottom turn, cutback, drop, top turn all the way over to the next break. Yeah! I was starting to feel like I was getting the hang of this.

I got a few more as the day went on. Mostly bigger ones that closed out. All and all, worth the extra paddling. Got to watch Beamer and Darren get some nice ones too.