Hey! You're definitely improving across every video I see and I have enjoyed watching. Just sharing some thoughts that you can take or leave. I don't really buy on-land training. I think it is too disconnected from the real thing - surfing - to actually make an impact. In many cases I think it can also make things harder to learn. In my opinion, it is best to just keep whatever goal you've got in mind, all the time while in the water, and experiment different ways to make it happen. The main things that have helped me in the water are, getting real low before the bottom turn, really pointing the board at the beach so as to gain as much forward speed before bottom turning, and always looking where I want the board to go. If you do these things, you have more speed, then arm movements often naturally follow, since they're mainly automated reactions your body employs in trying to direct the speed. But you can see, speed is the per-requisite. Speed comes from take off, positioning on the wave, and the deepness of the bottom turn. One issue I see with simulateing turns etc. on land/surf skate is that there is too much emphasis on arm movement. The arms are not the main component. Part of the difficulty for coaches teaching any sport is that when they're already adept at a skill, they don't notice every single micromovement and automated reaction to environmental cues when they're doing it. So in attempting to transfer their own knowledge they may end up emphasizing surface level and inconsequential things such as arm-movement, and attempt to train it out of context. All in all, my best advice is to be in the water surfing as much as possible, and to de-emphasize on land training aside from strength and conditioning. Think in simpler and achievable goals such as, paddling as hard as possible, surfing with speed, deep bottom turns, and flow. And don't be afraid to ride a bigger board. Deliberate goals + exploratory practice in the same environment. Good luck!
u need smaller fins and use your chest for turns not your arms. You should focus on style then let the turns come next. Not alway about throwing a turn. some sections you need to pump for speed. some you need to have a long carve for a set up. you look a little stiff. relax a bit enjoy the ride. :)
yoyoyoyooyoooo u GOTTA DRAW OUT UR BOTTOM TURN DOG LOOKS TERRIBLE ... UR BACK FOOT IS PUT FURTHER BAC 1 INCH GET THAT BOARD VERTICLA LEAN WAY HARDER ON THOSE TURN YO use ur power push bac on the water back side is a verticla off the lip frontside floater rair snap idk i am rambling sorry
lol bruhh that back arm and poo stance is painful why did the algorithm do this to me
Hey! You're definitely improving across every video I see and I have enjoyed watching. Just sharing some thoughts that you can take or leave.
I don't really buy on-land training. I think it is too disconnected from the real thing - surfing - to actually make an impact. In many cases I think it can also make things harder to learn.
In my opinion, it is best to just keep whatever goal you've got in mind, all the time while in the water, and experiment different ways to make it happen. The main things that have helped me in the water are, getting real low before the bottom turn, really pointing the board at the beach so as to gain as much forward speed before bottom turning, and always looking where I want the board to go. If you do these things, you have more speed, then arm movements often naturally follow, since they're mainly automated reactions your body employs in trying to direct the speed. But you can see, speed is the per-requisite. Speed comes from take off, positioning on the wave, and the deepness of the bottom turn.
One issue I see with simulateing turns etc. on land/surf skate is that there is too much emphasis on arm movement. The arms are not the main component.
Part of the difficulty for coaches teaching any sport is that when they're already adept at a skill, they don't notice every single micromovement and automated reaction to environmental cues when they're doing it. So in attempting to transfer their own knowledge they may end up emphasizing surface level and inconsequential things such as arm-movement, and attempt to train it out of context.
All in all, my best advice is to be in the water surfing as much as possible, and to de-emphasize on land training aside from strength and conditioning. Think in simpler and achievable goals such as, paddling as hard as possible, surfing with speed, deep bottom turns, and flow. And don't be afraid to ride a bigger board. Deliberate goals + exploratory practice in the same environment.
Good luck!
I think need a propper Surfcoach 😅
Girl, that tan is amazing! El Salvador is truly charming!! ❤️🇧🇷
Your progress is amazing!!😱🤩 Can't wait for a new video!
u need smaller fins and use your chest for turns not your arms. You should focus on style then let the turns come next. Not alway about throwing a turn. some sections you need to pump for speed. some you need to have a long carve for a set up. you look a little stiff. relax a bit enjoy the ride. :)
this is the real life, love it!
Making good progress girl
Your tan is popping!!!! Keep ripping! 💪🏽🧡🧡🧡🧡🧡🧡🧡🧡🧡🧡🧡🧡
Keep pushing Girl you looking great
How tall are you?
Good job 🎉
Can't work out if this is satire
2 month training for contest??? Satire for sure. Bleaching teeth helps her progress.
🌊🌊🇧🇷🇧🇷
👏👏
📈 crushing it!! 📈
🏄🏽♂️🙏🏽
Always crushing it!!!!🎉
Amazing waves. Shame you're a goofy foot. Good luck for the comp.
yoyoyoyooyoooo u GOTTA DRAW OUT UR BOTTOM TURN DOG LOOKS TERRIBLE ... UR BACK FOOT IS PUT FURTHER BAC 1 INCH GET THAT BOARD VERTICLA LEAN WAY HARDER ON THOSE TURN YO use ur power push bac on the water back side is a verticla off the lip frontside floater rair snap idk i am rambling sorry
white teeth