E-Mail:

Top Five Surfing Tips

Evan is a community member who loves to go surfing. Now, I’m not talking about web surfing. I’m talking out in the water on a flat board type of surfing! His tips are excellent. It actually sounds… kinda fun. Who knows? Maybe I’ll attempt it next time I’m on vacation.

Hey Chris, my name is Evan. I love your community and pop in when I have time…which, unfortunately, is not as often as I would like since Advanced Placement courses have commandeered my life. I am currently a 16-year-old junior in high school and, as I said, my courses are extremely demanding. For this reason I love the water… it helps me relax. My summer leisure is spent almost exclusively at the beach. I happen to love surfing. I get a ton of questions from people interested in the sport asking for tips. There is a ton to learn in surfing, and most of it you need to learn by simply going out there and trying. There are, however a couple of simple tips that people should know before they go out and try it. Surfing can be extremely rewarding. It is both soothing and exciting at the same time. It is also potentially frustrating if you try to start without a little basic knowledge. For this reason, I submit my top 5 tips for safe and happy surfing.

  • Probably the most important… Be cordial with the local surfers. Ask them questions! Most of us are passionate about our hobby and love to spread the knowledge. This goes for anything, but especially for hobbies with tight-knit communities. Like myself, many surfers are more than willing to teach you the ins-and-outs of surfing, the tides of your local beach, how to paddle out without being pounded to a sandbar and the courtesy involved with the sport. If you are new, ask for help. Don’t pretend to know what you are doing, you just make yourself look like an idiot. If there is any one thing that surfers hate it’s charlatanism.
  • Buy the right board for your area. If your area has extremely small waves, don’t buy shortboards. Buy a longboard…typically about 8 or 9 feet. This will give you increased surface area for the wave to catch. These boards also sit much higher on the waterline, thereby decreasing fluid friction on the board and allowing maximum paddling efficiency. Shortboards tend to plow through the water and you will not be able to paddle fast enough to catch small waves. On the other hand, larger waves demand great maneuverability… this is best provided by smaller boards. These small boards often feature a stomp pad on the back which is used in extremely tight maneuvers such as cutbacks (placing weight on the back of the board creates a pivot-point around which you can swing the board). If you are unsure about the board to get, ask the surf-shop employees at your local shop. They generally know local conditions and will help you.
  • Use the right wax for your conditions! This is extremely important. One of the most frustrating things is to be out in the water and start slipping off the board because you used the wrong wax. There are typically two types of wax. Cold-water wax is softer and stickier than warm-water wax. If your water is cold enough that this type of wax will not melt in the sun, use it. Empirically, this is the better grip wax… that is, disregarding weather conditions. Warmer weather, however, is problematic for cold-water wax since it has a low melting point and will run off the board leaving your fiberglass board slippery and you will fall off every time you try to stand up.
  • Surf the outside break! I can not stress this enough. I see too many new surfers trying to surf the shore break. This is the most common mistake I see. These are not the waves people surf. If you surf these you will never get any significant ride. You will also put your board at risk of damage if you surf the shore break… the skeg (stabilizing fin on the bottom of the surfboard) will get caught in the sand and snap off, probably also sending you flying into the sand. Look for sandbars where the waves break away from the shore. This allows you to ride waves over the sufficiently deep water over the sandbar and not break your board. It also gives you room to maneuver.
  • If you live in a cold climate, do not go surfing in winter. It may be tempting, and the waves are often best in winter. Many surfers do go surfing in winter, but this is not really a good idea. My father went surfing in cold water in winter as a kid, and he developed a condition called “surfer’s ear.” This is basically a growth in the ear, and he has lost significant hearing ability in that ear. It is caused by cold water entering the ear canal. If it seems unhealthily cold in the water, it is! Go home! It’s not worth losing your hearing to catch a wave.

If anyone learns anything from this… even if they never plan to surf… at least they will have gained knowledge. Extraneous knowledge is never truly extraneous. Knowledge is intrinsically useful.

Private Domain Registration from GoDaddy is a smart thing to do. When you register a domain, your contact information is immediately made available to anyone who wants to see it. Plus, as a listener of The Chris Pirillo Show, enter code CHRIS2 when you check out, and save an additional $5 off any order of $30 or more. Get your piece of the internet at GoDaddy!

12 Comments

I am really glad someone sent these to you. I am new to California and where else do you find all those surfer dudes? I have been thinking about surfing and with these tips I may start this weekend, the waters warming and would be a great time to start I think.

Top Five Surfing Tips March 11th, 2008 at 11:57pm Under UncategorizedSurfingwrote an interesting post today on Here’s a quick excerpt Evan is a community member who loves to go surfing. Now, I’m not talking about web surfing. I’m talking out in the water on a flat board type of surfing! His tips are excellent. It

weight losswrote an interesting post today on Here’s a quick excerpt Related Content: I’m Gonna Get Lei’ed! PacSun Coupons. New GnomeTomes! Diet and Weight Loss Tips? My Mom Needs Help… Read the rest of this great post

unknownn H Top Five Surfing Tips Evan is a agreement member who loves to go surfing. Now, I’m not conversation most plot surfing. I’m conversation conceive in the liquefied on a unappetising authorisation refer of surfing! His tips are excellent. It

Jennifern H Top Five Surfing Tips Evan is a agreement member who loves to go surfing. Now, I’m not conversation most plot surfing. I’m conversation conceive in the liquefied on a unappetising authorisation refer of surfing! His tips are excellent. It

unknownn H Top Five Surfing Tips Evan is a agreement member who loves to go surfing. Now, I’m not conversation most plot surfing. I’m conversation conceive in the liquefied on a unappetising authorisation refer of surfing! His tips are excellent. It

Chris Pirillo says you have to use the right wax Dude…

Why Chris Pirillo is giving advice on how to catch waves is beyond me. Maybe he is having a Gnomedex 3.0 flashback. The Mr. Zogs *** Wax pictured above was purchased at a shop in Sarasota, Florida across from the Daiquiri Deck years ago. I didn&#8217…

There is nothing wrong about surfing the winter. Us New Yorkers do it all the time. Surfer’s Ear develops from water in the ear, warm or cold. There are ear plugs to help correct these issues. The real problem is wearing 30 lbs of soaking wet wetsuit, gloves, boots, etc. making you less maneuverable and more prone to tiring out and drowning. Winter isn’t a good time to really push boundaries but if you want to get better, consistently surfing all year round will keep you from rusting out and come spring and summer all that extra weight and stress on your arms from the wetsuit makes you stronger, so when you shed it, you can paddle longer, stronger, and faster, also it improves how many hours your body can physically handle surfing and padding. Who wants to go out to their first head high day and be tired after 3 waves? I like being out many hours.

thanks for sharing these important tips with us…….it will help me as well as others when we’ll be going on to our next vacation….

thanks for sharing these important tips with us…….it will help me as well as others.after reading out all your tips i got to know many new things about surfing…which i didn’t know before…..

your a kook,
Winter is the best time of the year.
If you can surf a bigger wave get a damn wetsuit and some earplugs have go for it. Or actually don’t More waves for me. While you flail around in summer bullshit 2ft waves.

Please, are you serious? California surfers are such prissy little girls. If you live anywhere on the east coast (I’m from Maine) you know that the best time of the year to surf is the winter. If you don’t surf in the winter you don’t even surf. The winter surfing crowd is a hardy bunch and can hold there own anywhere in the world. But whatever, I echo “Chance” from above… stay out of the water when the waves are good and no one will miss you.

What Do You Think?

 
Blog Widget by LinkWithin