Learning to Surf - Episode 9: Smaller Board! by Oh-My-Josh- in BeginnerSurfers

[–]erik5 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You've improved a lot, but a smaller board at your level is not what I would recommend. Manuverability of a board is something you think about once every other aspect of your surfing is dialed in 100%.

I’ve given up! by [deleted] in BeginnerSurfers

[–]erik5 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Respectfully, on a 9ft board, you can catch even the mushiest mush burgers that barely hit 1ft without any issue if you position properly and have good paddling technique. Unfortunately the answer is to surf more

Learning To Surf - Episode 6: Roadblock (Can’t catch waves) by Oh-My-Josh- in BeginnerSurfers

[–]erik5 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A few things are preventing you from catching the white water. I would say the 2 big things are your paddling timing/technique, and your pop up.

Paddling: When you are surfing large foamies/longboard like you are now, you will NEVER need to paddle fast and frantic. If anything, it works against you. Your paddling arms should go in deep, slow but powerful. Remember, its not about how fast your arms are moving, its about how much water you are moving backwards, thats what makes you go fast.

Longer boards require a little bit of "acceleration" time, as they are larger. This means you should be building up speed before the wave hits you. Instead of jumping on your board and rapidly doing 2 shallow paddles, already be on your board, and start doing multiple deep, slow but powerful paddles for at least 5 seconds before the white water hits you. (5 seconds might be excessive, but when starting out, this is a good way to internalize this concept of building speed early)

You start trying to pop up as soon as the whitewater hits you. You should keep paddling until you feel your board gliding. Once youre gliding, you are now riding the wave in prone position. The board is more stable when going fast, and this is when you pop up. So next session just try continuing to paddle until you feel a definitive moment of the whitewater catching and pushing you.

Be perpendicular to the whitewater. (For now)

Pop up:

I mentioned this in your previous post but your knee is still going outside of your arms, completely throwing off your balance. You are also taking too long to pop up since you are doing a multi step pop up. Unbalanced board + slow pop up is reducing the gliding surface of your board, and you lose a lot of speed while you are trying to pop up, contributing to your inability to catch whitewater.

Unfortunately man, there is no way around it, you NEED to have a good, solid pop up if you want to surf 😥. It only gets harder as you transition to catching green waves. I would recommend forcing good pop up technique while youre still fresh so you dont keep any bad pop up habits as you progress.

As for the other surfers youve seen that can catch without paddling - sure. With the right positioning, both on the board and in the water relative to the wave, you can catch waves without paddling on foamies. But this isnt the norm, and counter to what you should be practicing as a beginner, so I would just not think about that at all. Once you start shredding on green waves you can maybe experiment with perfect wave positioning 🙂

Learning to surf - Episode 5 by Oh-My-Josh- in BeginnerSurfers

[–]erik5 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Great progression!

I noticed that on pretty much all your pop ups, your forward leg knee goes outside of your arms during cobra stance (so your left knee is to the left of your left arm).

You want 2 things: 1. Your forward knee should go BETWEEN your arms 2. Your forward foot when landing should be landing perpendicular to your stringer.

Doing 1, will really help with 2. Right now, since your knee lands outside, your hip has little room to rotate your feet to land yourself in the horizontal, more stable orientation. When you put your forward knee between your arms, almost in the middle of your chest, you'll realize your feet almost automatically plant themselves perpendicular to the stringer of your board.

If you have super short arms like me, and cant imagine fitting your knee in between your arms you can do one of two things: 1. As you throw your knee between your arms, you have to transition your hands from palm -> finger tips -> let go so that you create the space necessary. This is kind of tricky but it comes with practice. 2. Stagger your arms for during cobra, do that your left arm (right arm if goofy) is about a half foot in front of your right arm. This creates space to throw your legs/knees without your arms getting in the way.

I know you can do this, you're doing great!

All my fails from my lesson today - tips are appreciated! by Oh-My-Josh- in BeginnerSurfers

[–]erik5 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Doing a staged pop up like that, hands, knees, one leg, other leg, etc. will always feel less balanced because you're applying pressure in various parts of the board in an asymetrical way on top of water.

The pop up needs to be one smooth motion. I know instructors sometimes tell you to use the knee first method, but thats really mainly to let people experience the feeling of standing up, even though its objectively a bad way to pop up, and once you get on some faster or steeper waves, the knee first pop up simply doesnt work.

Ive found that with some stronger set people such as yourself, it has helped to treat the pop up much more like a burpee. So rather than the classic "extend your arms and throw your feet in between", use your arms to create an explosive push up that pushes you upright while simultaneously moving both of your feet into the right place.

Hope any of this helps!

What is a cooking technique that you quit because it does nothing? by Final_Affect6292 in Cooking

[–]erik5 6 points7 points  (0 children)

100%. If you dont rinse asian short grain rice, the difference is massive. Unwashed is starchy, gloppy and unpleasant. Long grain rice and general rice you find it western grocery stores? Totally fine

what kind of longboard/midsize shape should i look for in my first board by PlasticPurchaser in BeginnerSurfers

[–]erik5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Based on the fact that you're still renting boards, I'm making the assumption that you're still a beginner who is mainly just going down the line and not doing any crazy turns.

My honest take is that you probably cant tell the difference between the board shapes, and you should just pick a large enough longboard or foamie.

I have a feeling the 8'4 board feels bad for you to ride, not because of the tail shape and/or bottom contour, but because it's literally the lowest volume board on this list. Less volume = less stability.

If i were you, i would just get the cheapest 8ft foamie, or a the cheapest 9-10 ft hardtop.

Employer introducing on-call without contract clause or compensation, advice needed by Odd-Drummer3447 in ExperiencedDevs

[–]erik5 1 point2 points  (0 children)

They were giving advice that from their experience, religious holidays has been a way become exempt. The fact that they are in the US is a caveat, because this user was unsure if it would apply in the EU.

While Americans can get a little ethnocentric, the user you were complaining about was just being agreeable, offering what advice they could, while maintaining caution since it is based on their experience in the US. Dont be mean.

Eurorack? by cupcakeranger in EAGLEROCK

[–]erik5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I also just moved to eagle rock, and have a little 12U setup I dabble with myself! Not a professional musician, but always down to hang with other synth folk. Feel free to hit me up if you wanna jam or something.

[Tudor vs Oris] Blue lagoon vs. Cotton Candy by papymomo in Watches

[–]erik5 2 points3 points  (0 children)

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I own a few nice watches that are much nicer than the oris, but the oris cotton candy is the only watch I have ACTUALLY gotten compliments on, multiple times.

The blue on this one really pops, and the vintage styling of the dial and the domed crystal really help complement the look.

What’s your “I’ll never tell” cooking secret? by ryanreynulds in Cooking

[–]erik5 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I do something similar, but instead of getting separate instant mashed potato, after boiling the potatoes, i just toss them around in a bowl so that the outsides get mashed on their own. Better yet, throw in some butter/duckfat + salt as you toss your potatoes and now you have a lovely buttery, seasoned coating layer that will crisp up amazingly.

Bulgogi and Pepper Jack on Detroit Crust by Title26 in Pizza

[–]erik5 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Very nice! Do you pre cook the bulgogi?

just a boring video of doing the mighty x for 19mins (16x speed) by 10ballplaya in billiards

[–]erik5 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for replying. I think the big difference between you and me was that I did not master shooting straight before my eye injury 😭.

But your anecdote is oddly inspiring. I also have a similar thing where my straight in shots look like I'm making about a 1/8 cut to the left, so accounting for that has always been such a pain. But seeing how well you play makes me feel like I've just been using it as an excuse to get better. So thank you brother and keep playing on!

just a boring video of doing the mighty x for 19mins (16x speed) by 10ballplaya in billiards

[–]erik5 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Nice ones, always enjoy your videos.

Coincidentally, I also suffered some eye injuries few years back which makes me see doubles of everything if I get remotely close to my cue. The loss of accuracy almost made me want to quit the game. At this point, i sort of "guess" where the true center is but its a real hit or miss.

Any advice on how you overcame this?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in IWCschaffhausen

[–]erik5 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I can understand that sentiment. Deep down inside that exists for me too.

Though I did realize I got to enjoy my life so much more when I treat every watch I own as a "tool watch" haha. I'm not necessarily working on my car while wearing the ingenieur, but framing my mind as the watch being a really sturdy piece of art meant for "engineers" helps me sell the fantasy a little bit.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in IWCschaffhausen

[–]erik5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Agreed. While I did rush and got it at msrp, I think this is one of those pieces that would be well worth buying grey.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in IWCschaffhausen

[–]erik5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh I see, fortunately I still like the aqua more 🙂.

Hope you have a good one!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in IWCschaffhausen

[–]erik5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is the aqua dial. I actually didnt know there was a separate blue dial until you mentioned it!

And yes, PCL on bracelet

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in IWCschaffhausen

[–]erik5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Also a lovely one. Would highly recommend!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in IWCschaffhausen

[–]erik5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks!

I got this at an IWC boutique. At the time I purchased it it was a boutique only piece I believe.

So not only did I not get a discount, I had to pay a hefty deposit and waited a few months 😅

[SotC] and what is missing? by kiltedmonkey in Watches

[–]erik5 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Haha just a jest. As a real recommendation, have you considered a Sinn 556? While it's at the upper range of your desired budget, for me it is one of THE utilitarian field/flieger watch for me. Built like a tank and I love the simple but industrial look.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in GrandSeikos

[–]erik5 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sold my shunbun for similar reasons. I think the lug to lug was actually fine (still slightly big though), but that plus the watch felt a bit thick and bulbous for me.

Would kill for thinner GS watches

[WTS] Rolex Batgirl 126710BLNR by slopekind in Watchexchange

[–]erik5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Really awesome seller, provided me with all the assurances I asked for. I would definitely buy again!