SOSKA - Kayak Surfing - The Moves - How To Do Them Kayak Surfing - The Moves

How To Do Them

by David Gittens

President - San Onofre Surf Kayak Association - Barbados Chapter

http://members.aol.com/Kayaksrfr1/moves.html

SURFING KAYAK PLAY MOVES. PAPER #1

Ten years ago when kayak surfing began to come into its own, the moves used were

basically straight rides. A tumble was to be avoided at all costs......

Today, thanks to evolved kayak designs and greater imagination, surfing moves

have developed to a point where just about "anything goes." You roll the boat,

you squirt it, you do cartwheels, whatever...... After all, the idea is play,

fun and fitness.

As with all sports, the key to performance is technique. Technique is the key to

performance and practice is the key to technique. Education can make the journey

smoother. Whether you are just starting out or an experienced paddler, if you

want to excel and have real fun you've got to push the limits of your kayak and

yourself.

No move is intrinsically "wrong." The better you understand the mechanics of

motion, the more moves you will be able to do. The fun and enjoyment you get is

directly proportional to the play effort and imagination you put in! YOU GET OUT

WHAT YOU PUT IN! .

IMPORTANT TO REMEMBER:

1. The kayak is essentially controlled and steered by leaning it.

Depending on the design of your kayak, it may have a sharp edge on its side

called a "rail" ... this rail may be on the tail only, or along the entire side,

etc. The rail is there to enable you to make sharp turns by digging it into the

water. You dig into the water by leaning the kayak....

2. Your paddle, although useful in many situations to help steer, (as with a

stern rudder,) should be employed more as a brace to aid balance. Trailing your

paddle in the water cuts speed and slows the boat.

3. Juxtaposition your weight by leaning forward and backward ... note the

effects and employ them accordingly.

THE BASIC MOVES

The BOTTOM TURN and the CUTBACK are the basis of all good surfing. These most

fundamental turns set up nearly all of your other maneuvers ... they are

critical for good technique. Your bottom turns and cutbacks should be done

fairly effortlessly, with a feeling of smooth acceleration, setting up your next

maneuver with plentiful speed. Practice them and master them!

CUTBACK

A "cutback" is a radical change of direction or "cut" of at least 45o on the

face of the wave, achieved by turning either toward or away from the wave peak.

(Remember to lean the kayak and apply a stern rudder.)

BOTTOM TURN

1. You drop straight down the wave's face, bank and turn hard in the trough,

digging in your rail and putting in a stern rudder.

2. Rise back up onto the wave's face ... and continue surfing.

SURFING KAYAK PLAY MOVES. PAPER #2

Your kayak is an excellent tool for exercise, but the whole idea is to have as

much fun as you can! As Dr. Bob Sillery says "for exercise to be sustainable, it

has to be fun!" Learn the following move and put more fun (and showmanship) in

your paddling!

STERN SQUIRT

The aim is to get the kayak up and keep it standing vertically on its tail.

Essential fact #1: surf moves call for power. Most of the power and motive force

comes from the wave ... small waves have little power......

1. You want a wave with a steep face that's just about ready to break. Or a

broken wave.

2. You are paddling out and you see the wave approaching. It's building and

getting ready to break ... or it has already broken and is rolling in. You turn

the kayak parallel to the wave and keep on paddling. As the wave approaches ...

you lean back ... dip the shoreward side of the kayak into the water and make a

single, reverse sweep. (Your paddle is between the kayak and the on-coming

wave.) This is a powerful, deep, sweeping reverse stroke, from stern to bow,

which pulls the bow around to face the wave......

3. As you lean backwards, throwing your weight back, tilting the boat shoreward

... so the side nearest the shore is more submerged than the opposite side ...

the boat comes around to face the wave with the bow somewhat up. You want to

peak the move so the boat comes around to face the wave, just as it comes upon

you.

4. Properly done, the force of the wave, plus your weight thrown back, will

cause your stern to submerge ... the bow will come up ... and as the wave hits

it ... the boat will take a vertical orientation. YOUR INTENTION IS TO KEEP THE

BOAT VERTICAL FOR AS LONG AS YOU CAN.

5. To do this you make little "chip" strokes with your paddle so the boat spins.

These chip strokes can be done on either side. It is the spinning of the boat

that keeps it vertical..

6. Eventually the boat will fall ... either right way up, or on its side, or

upside down. Whatever.

7. Another way to do a Stern Squirt is simply to back paddle when you see the

wave coming and at the moment of impact, lean back, pushing the stern down.

REAR END LOOP

Instead of keeping the boat vertical ... you allow it to loop, that is, to go

right over backwards. This is called a Rear End Loop.

POLE VAULT LOOP

On your way over you make a sweep stroke with the paddle, twist the boat a half

turn, come down on the hull ... and continue surfing.

Essential fact #2: You learn by doing! Go do it.

SURFING KAYAK PLAY MOVES. PAPER #3

N.B. If you want to have fun with your kayak you've got to push the limits! No

move is intrinsically "wrong." Experiment! Play! Don't be deterred by "turning

over!"

FRONT LOOP (or front ender)

(The English call them loops, the Americans call them endos or enders)

The aim is to get the kayak to stand perpendicularly on its nose.

1. You've got to have a wave that's about to break, it has to be a crashing or

plunging wave, not a wave that is breaking at the top and cascading gently down.

In other words, it has to be a wave with a steep face, a wave with some power.

This can be a wave on its own or, if surfing, one that begins to die out and

forms into a secondary wave. Or, it can be a broken wave.

2. You lean forward, pushing the nose of the kayak down as the wave breaks or

hits you.

3. As the bow is pushed under the water ... and the kayak begins to nose dive

... you use judgment to maintain balance by throwing your weight backwards,

laying back on the rear deck. Throwing your weight back slows the boat down.

4. The idea is to get vertical. Once vertical, you let the boat carry over, and

fall forward ... that's a front loop or endo (Or front-ender.)

PIROUETTE

5. You try to keep the boat vertical as long as possible by spinning it. This is

done by employing an across-the-deck paddle sweep which spins the boat.

ESKIMO LOOP

(A pole vault loop with a pirouette)

6. You spin the boat a half turn, land on the hull ... and continue to surf the

wave backwards!

Essential fact #2: You learn by doing! Go do it.

SURFING KAYAK PLAY MOVES. PAPER #4

Essential fact #1: Most surf moves call for power and speed. Most of the power

and motive force comes from the wave ... small waves have little

power......

The moves you can do on a wave depend on the special characteristics of each

wave. Here is an excellent initiatory move ... at the critical point you can do

several things.... an aerial, a top turn, a reverse drop......

1. You've caught the wave and you're flying across the unbroken face, (the

green), gaining as much speed as possible.

2. Ahead of you the wave builds and gets ready to break.

TOP (or lip) TURN

3. Drive your bow into the pitching crest. Use the crest as a pivot point. Lean

the kayak with a hip movement towards the shore and use a rudder on the opposite

side of the crest. Radically change the direction of the craft ... and shoot

down the steep wave face.

NOTE THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THIS TOP TURN and THE 'AERIAL' (paper #7) ... its

not as vigorous ... the kayak does not become air borne.

REVERSE TOP (or lip) TURN

4. As you fly across the wave's face you notice the wave is getting ready to

break. You orient your bow towards the top of the wave by leaning the kayak and

putting in a stern rudder (on the appropriate side,) digging in the rail and

causing the kayak to execute a sharp turn up the face of the wave. As you hit

the breaking crest you want the kayak to be perpendicular on the face of the

wave and flat on its hull. Remove the rudder ... and come down the face ...

surfing backwards (stern first).

5. From here you can do a 180, a loop, or whatever......

FACE ROLL

You are flying across the "green" on a lateral cut just as the wave steepens and

starts to pitch. You remove the paddle from a brace or rudder position and move

it into an Eskimo Roll position. You then roll the craft over, down the face of

the wave, just as ... or just before it breaks. You use the rotational action of

the wave (called "window-shading") to pop upright and continue riding the same

wave.

SURFING KAYAK PLAY MOVES. PAPER #5

TURBO TURN

1. THIS IS A MOVE MADE IMMEDIATELY UPON TAKING OFF, ON THE UNBROKEN OR "GREEN"

SIDE OF THE WAVE.

2. You put in a stern rudder (on the side of the kayak towards the top of the

wave) ... leaning hard on the rudder and digging in the rail. "Push forward" a

little with your paddle, effecting a sharp turn, pointing the bow at the top of

the wave and somewhat stalling the boat. The stern will now be facing down the

face of the wave......

3. Remove the rudder and take the drop down the face of the wave, stern

first......

FLYING TAIL SQUIRT

(can also be done from a turbo turn)

1 You come down the face of a wave and go across the green.

2 Dig in your tail, use a stern rudder and go up the face of the wave.

3 Straighten the boat (put it flat on its hull) and have it perpendicular on the

wave, just as the top begins to break.

4 Now do a tail squirt ... or go over backwards (Rear End Loop) ... or twist the

boat a half turn as you go over (Pole Vault Loop) and continue surfing......

Use a little imagination ... and play! Have fun! That's what its all about!

No move is "wrong!" Laugh at "turning over" Haw! Haw! Haw!

Essential fact #2: You learn by doing! Go do it.

BONGO RIDE

A Bongo Ride is not a move you set out to do ... ITS ONE YOU TRY TO GET OUT OF!

Its when the kayak gets stuck in a broached position on a broken wave and you're

sitting there, being carried (bounced) along.

Try to "free" yourself by attempting all sorts of different things:

1 Lean forward, / lean back; with the help of your paddle, make forward strokes,

reverse strokes ... on the side of the wave, on the shore side...... Try to

get your bow or your stern around.

2 Try a "soup hop" ... get up on top of the foam by elevating the angle of the

edge of the kayak nearest the foam side. Once on top of the foam you can, with

the aid of your paddle ... flat spin the kayak and go to other options.

You get as much fun OUT as your imagination and effort PUTS IN!

SURFING KAYAK PLAY MOVES. PAPER #6

Your kayak is an excellent tool for exercise, but the whole idea is to have as

much fun as possible! Learn the following move and put more fun (and

showmanship) in your paddling! The fun you get is directly related to the

imagination and effort you put in.

ROUNDHOUSE CUTBACK

Essential fact #1: Most surf moves call for power and speed. Most of the power

and motive force comes from the wave ... small waves have little

power......

1. HERE'S HOW YOU DO IT: You catch the wave and fly across the unbroken face;

(i.e. you do not go down the face of the wave to the bottom.)

2. As you gather speed, you cut back making a sweeping turn down the face and

return towards the breaking foam.

3. You run the craft straight into the tumbling foam, as close to the peak as

possible.

4. The closer to the peak you hit the breaking wave, the more dramatic this move

becomes.

5. You allow the force of the pitching foam to knock your bow around, resulting

in a strong turning cut back in the opposite direction ... and you continue

surfing ... away from the breaking foam.

PERFORMANCE. As with all sports, the key to performance is technique.

Technique is the key to performance and practice is the key to technique.

Education can make the journey smoother. Whether you are just starting out or an

experienced paddler, if you want to excel and have real fun you've got to push

the limits of both your kayak and yourself.

The better you understand the mechanics of motion, the more moves you will be

able to do.

TUBE RIDE

You position your craft so the folding peak of the wave drops over the stern,

behind you, or even shrouds the craft completely ... and you continue riding in

the "tube"......

Essential fact #2: You learn by doing! Go do it.

SURFING KAYAK PLAY MOVES. PAPER #7

AERIAL