Monday, July 23, 2012

Forward Loop Technique

Actually this isn't a technique article or anything, there are loads of those out there. Instead it is Bill and Bens (true) stories about their journey to become loopers.

Bills Story
Bill was a young and driven windsurfer with solid jumping. One day he read an article on how to loop that said you could loop before you could gybe. As he was already making a lot of his gybes he was clearly behind the curve. The desire to loop became an obsession. Every time he sailed, no matter the conditions, he threw himself over the front. The crashes were spectacular. Whilst he had 'made' a few back slapping loops, as time progressed he mastered the art of crashing without hurting himself.

He would throw his body between the gap between the mast and nose of the board and hang on for dear the life. After a couple of years of trying, he gave up. Quite a few years later when he started trying them again he realized he had to undo everything that he had learned. Slowly, he dissected the move and rebuilt it focussing on one or two key skills. After a couple more years of trying them in decent conditions he started to make then on a fairly regular basis but always at risk of returning to his deeply engrained tendency to crash horribly.



Bens Story
Ben was a good sailor too but he wasn't comfortable jumping. Instead of throwing himself at the loop he waited a few more years. He developed his skills to a much higher level, sailing waves, freestyle and a variety of different spots and conditions. When he finally tried a loop he was feeling good in close to perfect conditions. Small waves with a nice little lip, slightly side-off so hitting the wave head on he was jumping off the wind, well powered on 4.7. First attempt he water started out of it. By the end of the session he had made one clean. He then started developing his skills in different conditions such as smaller choppy conditions and bigger waves. His progress was quick, easy and mostly incident free.

As I said at the start. These are true stories. However, I did change the names. The truth is that Bill and Ben are my alter egos. Bill is starboard tack Mike, Ben is port tack Mike. 

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