Ju_foil said..
Towed behind boat..Where are you located?
Cronulla, I'm actually looking at paying for a lesson in the next couple of days as they drag you behind a boat as part of it
Hdip said..
I learned on that foil Naish Thrust L 2018. I also learned prone in the surf, by myself with no other foilers around to give me tips. It's possible.
#1 tip. More front foot. Keep the board on the water. This will be difficult with that foil as the early generation foils were constantly trying to THRUST you out of the water. Catch the wave, keep the board on the water, come off the water, put the board back on the water.
#2 tip. Pick your waves very purposefully. Do you have a spot where people go to learn to surf? A spot where the wave just barely crumbles and has no steepness to the face at all. A place where you'd push a 3 year old into waves on a soft top? That's where you want to be. It's difficult though, because you don't want to be around people at the same time. So hopefully there's a corner off to the side you can be alone at. Being around people is just more things to think about at once. You already have 30 things to remember, don't involve watching out for others in the learning process.
#3 tip. You can buy performance at your stage. That is a high performance foil which carves really well. That means it's not very stable in roll side to side. There are slower and more stable foils if you're willing to throw money at the problem.
#4 tip. Do not lean over the rails. Stay centered over the stringer. If the foil goes left, you go left. If the foil goes right, you go right. If you try to correct a foil at your stage by leaning over the rail to correct a turn, the foil will hookup and turn the way it wants to go even harder and you will fall onto a wingtip which is flipping up at you. Don't correct, eject.
#5 tip. More front foot. I can't say this enough.
Wow awesome post thanks so much for taking the time to post that
#1: yep I've been working really hard on holding the nose down during my verrrry extended popup process. But would say surf/sup has made me very rear foot dominant
#2: haha my selection process the past week has being so damn stoked that I'm going out in any and all conditions (I'm in Cronulla so mostly Wanda/Greenhills which seems popular with foilers) At the start of the week it was what I'd say are fairly decent learning conditions the past couple we've had 3ft+ and a bit more dumpy so although I got out there it wasn't pretty.
#3: oh bugger I thought this was a good learner foil (albeit a very old model)
#4: heard the eject advice many a time and doing my best to stick with it. One of my ingrained habits from surfing and surf supping has been when falling to try to grab the board or keep it close to me which I know won't end well on the foil.
#5: hahah true that, I just actually need to be standing long enough to impliment this!
colas said..drc13 said..
But seeing as I was a better SUP'er than proner to begin with it has me thinking, should I whack the foil in one of my board ECS slab in 7'6 (105L) or 7' (95L) as this may help get me more foil time?
Definitely!!!
Learning to SUP foil is MUCH easier than surf foiling because you can paddle with the front foot already the the right place, and in a strap to be sure of the placement to the quarter of an inch.
Front foot placement is the key, as HDip said.
You do not need a back footstrap however, it is harder to takeoff with the rear foot in the back strap.
Without a front footstrap, things are worse, as the SUP board is wider, you have too wide a platform, your foot will wander in all the bad places.
I would buy a dedicated SUP foiling board however. Bother because the mast rails will be stronger (SUPs have volume: being caught in whitewater will exert hug stress on them compared to a tiny surf foil board), and that the angle of attack of the foil wing is critical. If you slap boxes on a SUP, you will probably have it wrong unless you are aware of the issue.
PS: Of course, this only applies if you SUP well enough (dont do your take off with parrallel feet)
Awesome thanks for the advice on the SUP side of things.
Strangely even though I'm predominantly a SUP surfer now it's the prone foiling that strongly appeals to me.
I was half way through reading your message and like awesome do I get my 7' or 7.5' board modded with a foil box then got to the next paragraph. Thanks for confirming that it's not as simple as simply whacking a box in one of my existing sups and getting the best of both worlds.
I probably won't invest in a dedicated foil SUP just yet as the goal is prone foiling for now but I may come back to it when I'm fully foil brained
Amazing replies all thanks for the advice