I had two great downwinders in the northerlies of the last 2 days... glad to get a day of rest !
What is it with the wind forecasts at the moment? Friday, I don't think there was any real wind predicted - went to have a lazy paddle downbreeze, but ended up with epic blast down the coast. Yesterday, I couldn't sleep half the night thinking about the 25 knots predicted early for saturday morning (seabreeze, willyweather, buoyweather all saying the same thing) and over 30 in the arvo (two runs... cool!). It ends up being 5kt offshore till lunchtime - never thought I'd complain about that . Then the wind picks up, seabreeze says its 15kt gusts, but it was blowing a lot, lot harder than that.
Here's the video of yesterday. It was pretty hard work as my route was basically convex around the headlands - so had to haul it to get out past the first one with lots of side wind, then really bouncy conditions with waves reflecting off the headlands, but didn't want to get to buggered paddling out further as I knew the winds were going to be offshore later in the run. Which they were... at this stage there were some great runners pushing out to sea, but I had to ignore those. I found I was having to do a fair bit of navigating to get a good line, and it was 50/50 whether to land on the beach or sneak around into the river and paddle against the tide. As it turned out, I got straight to where I wanted without any dramas, but something I'll always be wary of.
Some of the runners were really great - I didn't get some of the best ones on the video as the gopro got folded down when I pearled on the first one and I didn't fix it up for while. For some reason, I can't seem to tighten up my gopro mount enough these days to stop that happening - anybody have this problem? All the water drops are because I got some sunscreen on the lens - the old lick and wipe doesn't work so well then - I'll have give it a good wash.
Nice..
Re your problem with the GoPro moving.. Are you using a screw driver.. or just your fingers?
Also just wondering.. what you're looking at when you look around ?
I only look around when I'm looking for my friends..
DJ
A screw driver will fix your problem.
Looking around.. To the side or back.. is a bad habit.. and looking down at the nose of your board or the water just in front of your board is an even worse habit.. IMO.
A big part of downwinding is reading the water ahead.. and to read the water ahead you need to be looking 'way' ahead.. About half way from your board to the horizon is about where I'm looking.. and when I see something I keep my eyes on it till I'm there.. You just use your peripheral vision to see what's happening right in front of your board and only look down there when you really have to.
I'll try and do a vid soon with my helmet cam and talk while I'm chasing down runners and you will see what I mean.
DJ
Hey Foamballer, you are getting much better each time. Keep up the good work.
The open ocean waters that you are paddling in are a whole lot more difficult than what those guys in Melbourne paddle in, especially when going N-S. Those headlands make things very tricky, as you are finding out, especially when you are relatively close to shore. With where you are at I would hold onto my recommendations on where to focus your attention. Maybe when you a lot more experienced you can start start aiming to link a lot more further ahead. Right now just keep it simple and get rid of the bad habit of looking behind you.
Keep you videos coming...
Come up for a paddle up this way (GC) some time and I will help you out in the water.
thanks Mike,
I'd love to ride a longer board with rudder, but one thing I like about the 14'er is that I can still carry it to the beach easily from where I live (only need to swap arms twice !). A heavier board would not be quite as versatile. I was thinking in term of not catching runners at all, simply the paddling bit. How do you maintain a cross-wind heading when paddling a 14'er even in flat water? I start another thread on that.
Thanks DJ, yeah that's the one I was thinking you meant.
Still be keen to see the helmet cam/commentary thing one day - that would be cool.
I'd tend to disagree with DJ on that one - I read his comment about looking "way ahead" as per his pics above and tried it today. Definitely did not work for me. I have to keep focus on whats happening right in front of the nose of the board (like first long green line in one of the pics above) - that's where I look to see if there is something to accelerate into. The key to going fast is linking lots of little ones into bigger ones, looking ahead for the bigger ones would make me miss all the smaller ones.
If I'm lazy I'll only focus on the bigger ones (but still looking just ahead) that give nice acceleration and sometimes a longer ride, but if I want to go fast i paddle hard for all the small ones and that keeps the average speed up. I never, ever, look back except to look out for mates.
Yesterday was a cracker, I got a 250m run (2.5x the length of a football field) on my GPS where I averaged 18.2km/h - I was about 30meters behind our fastest junior Ethan Koopmans when I got it....when it fizzled out about a minute later he was 60meters ahead.....the kid is flying now on the LE! Winds was ave.22kn gusting to 30 with solid swell running.
DJ - from what I can gather the underlying swell makes a lot of difference. The conditions I see in some of your videos are just great and your approach obviously makes the most of it. It may not be that I'll be able to apply what you're saying in my case, but there's still something to be learned there I feel. I'm like you - I'd rather some many epic runners, rather than lots of little ones or being the fastest overall. I'll never be the fastest overall anyway . I find it hard to methodically milk a little runner to the end, when I'm getting distracted by bigger stuff going on around me.
Peter, the video you posted quite a while back:
Yeah DJ - I'm probably a little too fixated with speed, thats my competitive nature (which I guess should be buried by now...:) so I naturally try and work out what makes us go faster. Chris Bertish is really fast here but our two juniors, Dylan Frick and Ethan Koopmans, are beginning to match and beat him from time to time. We haven't had any of the top international guys come and do our runs so the only comparison we have is the few of us who went across to Hawaii, Dylan did well 2 years ago while the rest of us were humbled - different level altogether. But also different conditions favouring much longer boards.
I was tempted to take a Dave Kalama class but 500USD on top of an already expensive trip made me decide against it. I'd love to hear it from the guru himself....
Dave, if you are reading this, feel free to spill some beans!!!! Or Jacko, or Travis - you guys are flying, it can't be just fitness and good gear!!!
Don't get me wrong.. I don't waste all the pissy little ones.. In fact I use 99% of them... It's only when I see something special that my focus moves from the pissy little ones to the big bugga that's going to be the most fun.. In fact I might even use the pissy little ones to get me lined up for the big one.. These roge wave sets only come along maybe half a dozen times in our hour long run and I hate to see them wasted.. Most people I know do the go,go,go,go the whole way never looking anywhere but right in front of their board on the whole downwinder.. I like to relax and smell the roses.. Look around a bit.. and while I'm smelling the roses or waiting for others to catch up if a good set comes through I find it impossible to let it pass without catching it..
Maybe the reason I have this take on downwinding is my 30-40 years of windsurfing on the bay.. I rarely missed a windy day in all those years.. My big thrill windsurfing was jumping.. Most of the crew would just head out and back on the same track and if a jump came along they'd get a jump.. Without trying to big note myself I'd be getting jumps two to three times higher that most others.. People would often ask how I manage to jump so high.. Well the reason is the same.. Reading the water ahead.. Heading off the wind or going up wind to line up and get that odd big one to launch off.. even if it meant missing heaps of little pissy jumps while I line up the big one... I'm not saying what I think is right or what everyone should do... It's just what I like to do..
DJ
On the subject of keeping it simple... no one noticed that I replaced my manky stretched out - tangled up - read to fail coiled calf legrope. That one's for river paddling only now. Just gone for simple straight ankle version... didn't tread on it once, so all's good there.