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I am 5'8 and I want to learn to surf what size board should I look for?

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I am 5'8 and I want to learn to surf what size board should I look for?

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  1. For some reason, it seems like somebody asks this same question at least once every ten days!

    Surfing is an ocean sport. before you decide to surf, decide to know and understand the ocean. Learn to be at home with its currents, rips, undertows and sometimes BIG waves. The original surfers were watermen (and women, both men and women surfed, but certain waves were reserved for royalty).

    I spent almost all of my teen years, swimming, sailing, surfing, scuba diving and fishing. I even surfed in different places the Navy sent me, when it was possible.

    There are good things about both long and short boards. I ride both (one at a time , of course). In the mid sixties, like almost everybody else, I started on a longboard. I went shorter and shorter every summer, during the 'short board revolution.' After getting out of the service, I had afew years of sporadic surfing, before I got back to surfing as much as possibly could. (I've driven 650 miles to go surfing!). I found some days that were just too small anything but a longboard. Just riding one size board is very limiting, conditions change daily in most places.

    I am old, and fat and slow, so even my shortboard is 7'6". My 6'4" is a collectors' item now. Not every break has ripper, head high waves every day. A longboard is great for plenty of glide in that knee high stuff. One more reason to surf every chance I can.

    Surfing is an ocean sport, to do it right, you have to be at home in the ocean, with its currents, rips, undertows and sometimes big waves. I don't just mean being good at swimming in a pool, the ocean can be very unforgiving. I have seen lots of really good pool swimmers have to get rescued. You have to learn surf etiquette (so the experienced surfers in the line up don't want to drown you), how to paddle and take off on a wave, and how to ride a wave. You can't do that without an ocean.

    Lessons are usually the best way to start, unless you are an adolescent or young adult with lots of pals who surf who can teach you. Go to a real surf shop. The folks there can hook you up with lessons, and even rent you a board to learn on. Just work on your basics, and after you feel good, think about buying a board, but don't rush into anything.

    Be careful of what you read here on line. There are lots of really well meaning young folks who have neat answers about surfing, but at 55, I tend to classify anyone under 25 as a kid. After I found this site, I figured that I could answer a few questions, and spread the 'good news' of surfing. After you learn to swim and master the ocean, get your REAL advice from a surf shop, where industry professionals earn their rent money selling surfboards. However, if they think you are just a 'kook' tourist out to rent a board, you won't necessarily get the best attention.

    Most people learn best on long boards, although I have seen lots of surfers start on a short board and master it. Long boards are ideal for learners. There are also good internediate length boards to learn on, funshapes, mini-mals and some hybrids.

    THE REAL BOTTOM LINE IS: Go to a Surf Shop, not a computer. The pros there can give you the right answers!!

    Good luck. Once you try surfing (and learn the 'right way') you'll have fun for life.

    Take the time to check out the links, especially surfingforlife.

    http://www.surfingforlife.com/history.ht...

    http://www.mckevlins.com/nopopstory.htm

    http://360guide.info/surfing/surfboard-t...


  2. it depends on ur weight and size swell ur surfing. and wat type board. if u want a  long board i suggest around a 7 to 7'2 board. if u want a short board i suggest a 5'4 to 5'6 one. but it totally depnds on swell and ur wieght.

  3. there's quite a few factors to consider including your weight, the size swell you typically surf, and the design of the board you are looking to get.  For a guy I would suggest something around 6' to 6'2" in a shortboard, shorter in a fish as long as you're not gonna see anything bigger than chest to head.  With larger waves (typically not good to learn on) a longer board with a skinnier nose becomes better for the conditions.  An average weight girl obviously weighs less than an average weight guy, and not gonna ask your weight online or anything :), so an average girl could ride a considerably smaller board, maybe as small as 5'6" in a fish but I'd still go bigger.  The larger the board the more flotation it provides so you don't have to paddle for the wave as hard and don't have to drop in as late.  Turns and stuff are slower with more board bulk, but by the time you get to that level you should be looking for a different board anyways.  Someone who works in a shop should be able to help you out finding a suitable learner board too.  Hope this helps!

  4. Depends on 1- How much you weigh, 2- What kind of surf you'll be surfing in, 3- your skill/fitness level, 4- your style

    Tough to recommend something, as a 5'8 rider who weighs 110 would use a much different board than one that weighs 150, etc

    If you're not sure what you're looking for, I recommend what Chris K said.

  5. Here's a surfboard calculator that will tell you exactly what you need:

    http://aboutthebreak.com/surfboard_calcu...

  6. surfchee... : wowa, are you implying to learn to surf on a 5'4 short board. you have clearly never surfed, i will not even bother.

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