Up until now, I've only done a handful of short downwinders, and have only done them solo. I've experience enough to know that it's something I'm going to keep doing and something I want to be good at. I took mikeman's advice from a great thread (www.seabreeze.com.au/forums/Stand-Up-Paddle/SUP/Downwinder-Frustration-Please-help/) and hooked up with Al to see if I could glean a few pointers from a really proficient downwinder. The video shows a bit of the session. I edited out all the times I fell off - which were many and varied - and this is what I was left with. Still working out the video editing thing.
For anyone getting into downwinding, I'd recommend hooking up with someone that's being doing it for a while. I didn't really apply much of the new knowledge straight off, but it is sinking in slowly. Nothing that time on the water won't fix eventually.
In a couple of frames you'll see Al gliding along in the background, methodically milking runners with very economical paddlestrokes. By contrast, you'll see that my natural inclination is to thrash into anything that presents half an opportunity. I think there's a lesson to be learnt there somehow.
Keep at it. Everyone has to start somewhere...
You are still looking behind you a lot, which is not helping you. Try focus on the water around your GoPro, as a challenge, for the next few paddles. Keep on filming and check if you are improving in this area. Once you know where to look you will start working out what to look for.
There are many other good downwind paddlers near you. Try and hook up with them as much as you can as this will really help speed up your learning curve. If someone invites you on a paddle then take them up on the offer.
Keep those videos coming...
Great vid.. and great music.. Thanks.
I don't mean to criticize.. but.. You should try and work towards getting your stance a little narrower.. I know the Glide is only 27" wide but standing too close to the rails (like you are) just makes the board even tippier.. IMO.
Also it's hard to see from that camera view but on that board I have found that if you don't have your toes very close to touching that black stripe at the front of the deck pad you're making it very hard to catch anything.. I've found just being a few inches back from the line makes catching runners much harder.
One more thing.. Don't paddle so much.. It's not a race.. .. Watching yourself on vids is a great way to see what you're doing wrong..
.. and a great way to save a moment/memory when get it right..
DJ
No real downwinder opportunities today, so I thought I'd sneak out at lunch and catch a few of little waves creeping into the river on the 14'er - thought it would be good practice for milking runners.
Here's a random assortment of waves.