found this article on following page:http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/Chris_K48/FORWARD.htm
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The principle behind my safe learning technique is that you can do it slow and low (thus with less fear and danger), but still create the same rotation by cheating a bit. To do this the sailor has to bear off downwind, chop hop and then stick the nose of the board into the area of water downwind (on the otherside) of the mast base/ mast track. (Picture it) The same pull is created by the nose of the board stopping on contact with the water as during a normal loop, and the sailor is flicked onto his back. If he has beared down wind enough beforehand he will probably be able to waterstart away. This is the key to learning to forward. After this it is just a case of doing it faster, more aggressively and off bigger chop or swell when you feel comfortable and ready. Later you often cannot tell whether or not the nose of the board hit as the rotation feels identical. Wait!.. before you rush out and try this, read the extra details that you need to know, click "Conditions and Equipment" below.
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Any comments from somebody who actually did one ?
that's pretty much it - i hope you didn't pay for that advice tho when i was desperately trying to learnem i once came across a website that wanted cash for that
remko de'wierdos "seven sons of freestyle" loop instruction is another great one
judo rolls with the sail on the beach in 12knots is another good 1
Best way to learn forward loops is to start off chop that has a small vertical ramp.
Head slightly off the wind, do a chop hop and with you back hand placed about a half a foot further back on the boom, lean back and pull your back hand as hard as you can (so hard its like you are trying to break your boom). Don't think forward at all. Its a bit of an opitcal illusion. If you use this method to learn, even if you dont get around and let go half way, you will just land on your back on the water and not on your mast.
Not many people will have enough ballls to learn off large waves or lean forward to start with. After you have mastered small ones you can try more difficult stuff later.
Regards,
Scott
A good tip to break the psychological barrier when you are learning them is to turn your head and look back at the clew as soon as you sheet in. If you don't do this it can be quite difficult to overcome the 'catapult relex' IE when your brain sees the water coming at you and you're are seemingly going over the front your back hand sheets out. This is the natural reflex that the brain learns to counteract the catapult and can be quite catastrophic when learning forwards. A forward is basically a controlled catapult so you have to teach your brain to ignore such reflexes. Looking back at the clew, I reckon, is one of the best ways to achieve this.