Showing posts with label big wave training. Show all posts
Showing posts with label big wave training. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 7, 2022

Winter Surfers in Los Angeles...


This is so true... Winter surfers in Los Angeles county California not only take on the the big waves but also take on whatever the ocean throws at them... check this out: 


Are you ready for the Winter? It's just around the corner. Those cold mornings filled with hope that the swell filled in over night! Here's a little something to add some fuel to your fire to get you a little more (if that's possible) pumped for the winter surf season. Thanks for watching! I'm Brad Jacobson and I'll see ya on the sand. Music: Soleil, OTE, Modal Youth and par.


Sunday, April 30, 2017

Why Training for Surfing and Preventing Injuries Go Hand In Hand (Via the inertia)



I know first hand how it feels to have a surf related injury. I've had more than few that have kept me out of the water way longer than I had wanted. This is a cool story on how to prevent that from happening (or at least how to minimize it). Check it out:


By 

We are facing a new era in surfing. Every day, surfers push their limits with everything from high performance aerials to charging big waves  in remote locations. Meanwhile, the industry works to follow this evolution of the sport. They give us lighter and faster boards, warmer and more flexible wetsuits, and better equipment for every phase of finding and surfing bigger and bigger waves.
However, no matter how good our gear gets we are far from being indestructible Gods. We surf on top of an object that can change from toy to weapon in seconds – all in an environment that we can’t control – simply because it gives us the best feeling in the world.

At the highest level, we are seeing more WSL pros sent to rehab more often. On the opposite end of the spectrum, even weekend warriors are not safe. Digging into the 2013 injury update of the WSL (former ASP), we can tell that 12 of the 34 top surfers suffered a range of injuries that kept them out of competition to some degree, with an average time of three months spent out of competition. The affected areas were the ankle/ foot (six surfers), the knee (three), the back (two), and shoulder (one). In Portugal, I’ve conducted my own survey among 500 Portuguese surfers, finding that 78.5% of them had already sustained at least one significant surf-related injury, with an average of 1.62 injuries/year and 43,9% getting re-injured.
This isn’t simply cuts and bruises. In fact only 37.5% of injuries represent “cuts or lacerations,” showing that 76.3% are musculoskeletal injuries (muscle stiffness, sprain/ torn muscles, joint dislocations, etc.) Surfer’s ear, feet lacerations and even hypothermia can only be prevented passively, trough the use of appropriate gear like earplugs, booties or a good wetsuit; However, we can still do plenty to prevent musculoskeletal injuries. This kind of injury can occur through:
– sustained postures, with stabilizing muscles overload (e.g. extension of the spine when paddling).
– overuse or gesture repetition, after an intense effort in a short period of time (like flexion and rotation of the knees and torso when maneuvering).
– impact of the wave and board versus the body (e.g. snapping the lip) or body over the board (e.g. landing a floater/ aerial).
– overuse without recovering or proper resting (e.g. surfing three days straight without stretching).
So why, where, and when to take preventative measures (stretching, training, etc.)?
1.Why?
Why not? The one thing that’s worse than surviving a flat spell is being kept out of the water when it’s pumping because you’ve been injured. The physical demand of surfing combined with standing/paddling transitions (explosive effort), associated arms movement (take off, paddling) and legs (trimming, bottom turn) and the number of hours spent surfing, lead to decreasing performance and riding of fatigue levels in your body while surfing. This diminishes neuromuscular control and exposes the surfer to a higher probability of occurring an injury.
2.When?
Before surfing: with a good warm-up from head to toes, focusing on combined flexion/ extension and rotation movements that put more stress and overload to the main structures in our body.
After surfing: with a complete stretching session going trough the main muscular groups involved in surfing.
At the gym: trough specific functional surf training, simulating surfing moves/ patterns that you do when surfing, using unstable platforms, medicine balls, elastic bands, etc.
For competitors:
During a surf contest: using the recommended physiotherapist at your disposal to help with some dynamic warm up exercises before your heat or muscular recovery and stretching after.
At home: where you can have your own mini gym with a simple medicine ball and some elastic bands.
3.Who?
Everyone! Whether you’re a weekend warrior, a regular at your home break, a kid starting to compete, or a pro surfer – everyone should do some kind of specific training as an injury prevention tool. The difference in the type of training you do – according to the intensity, duration and frequency – should be based on your goals in surfing, age, fitness/ health condition and previous injuries.
After all this, if you still have doubts on initiating an injury prevention routine, take it from Mick Fanning after learning the hard way: “For me, training is a lot of injury prevention. I started training super seriously when I got injured.”






Saturday, May 4, 2013

Don't Panic - Surf Survival Training...


We’ve all been there, that hold-down after getting nailed by a wave and rolled round like a rag doll, that feeling that you’re not coming up and fast running out of air.

Dealing With Hold Downs
Inevitably in this situation your movements become faster and more desperate the longer you are under. This will use up what oxygen you have left in your body even faster, causing you to panic even more.
Over the years there have been many suggestions on how to deal with a major hold-down or wipeout, but the fact is there really is no perfect way to train for it. Many surfers say they try to relax during a long hold-down, which is what we should all do in an ideal world, but actually putting this technique into practice can be easier said than done.

A more practical solution is to increase your lung capacity. This will enable you to take on increased levels of oxygen and give you valuable extra seconds under water. Specialized training in a pool can help you prepare for this unavoidable situation and is known as hypoxic (low oxygen) swimming training. And with the big autumn and winter swells a few months away, now is the time to start. 



Mark Tipple's Underwater Project

Before reading further, hold your breath for twelve seconds.
Seriously. Twelve seconds.
Easy as a mouthful of black rice pudding, wasn’t it? (If you’re old Bali; if you’re new Bali, make that easy as organic tofu scrambled with sun-dried tomatoes with a side dish of wild brown rice, seasoned with natural sea salt and hand-picked jungle herbs).
One lesser known but quite relevant fact of surfing is that most waves, even ten foot boomers, do not hold you down for longer than twelve seconds, and of those that do, most let you up by fifteen seconds.
I was told this fact some twenty years ago by a heavy water man, an Alaska fisherman, North Shore regular, blue water speargun hunter. We were out at Nusa Dua. This was the wet season that Nusa Dua Did Not Stop, and after days and days of double overhead surf with spring tide currents to match, that afternoon was a pleasant overhead on a calm neap tide. I did not believe Mike when he told me. I said no way. After all, I’d spent not an insignificant fraction of my life during the previous week proving him wrong. Those hold downs were way longer than twelve seconds.
But then I started timing my hold downs, and counting others from cliff tops and channels and boat railings. And sure enough. He was right. I did some checking around, and it appears that Rabbit Kekai was saying the same thing way back in early North Shore days.
When my son first started paddling out to big surf, I told him about the 12 second rule, and I believe he found it reassuring.
However, there are a couple really big caveats. One is that the 12-second rule isn’t all that comforting when you pop up in time to see the next wave of a stepladder set ready to dump on you. You still have to get comfortable in heavy water.

Mark Tipple's Underwater Project

Another is that there are bound to be Exceptions to the Rule. If the surf’s ten foot, chances are pretty good one wave in a session or two is going to hold you under for, oh, thirty seconds, with the heels of your foot torqued over your back and scratching your scalp, which seems about five times longer than fifteen seconds. Most surfers, looking at heaving ten to twelve foot surf, are probably thinking about the exceptions to the rule, instead of reassuring themselves that they’ll be all right mate, only a twelve second hold down.
Related to this, it isn’t just how long you can hold your breath underwater, but how quickly you can expel said breath and inhale a big deep one as the wave explodes in front of you. This takes a lot of aerobic conditioning and strengthening of diaphragm muscles.
Also, the real danger isn’t hold-downs but knocking yourself unconscious on your board or the reef, or your leash getting tangled up on the bottom, or a fin chopping through a major blood vessels. Deaths by long hold-down drowning are pretty rare. Off the top of my head, I can only think of Todd Chesser’s drowning as in giant surf as one (it’s believed Mark Foo had his leash tangled up).
I have in the past, during sporadic fits of discipline, worked on my breath holding at the gym. A treadmill is convenient. Jogging at a comfortable pace, hold your breath for twelve to fifteen seconds, exhale and inhale, and hold again. Jog for thirty seconds of normal breathing and then repeat the cycle. This can be varied of course. I’ve discovered that a few weeks of this really truly does help me be less winded in big surf (since I wipe out or blow it with embarrassing consistency, thanks in part to my lousy vision & lack of depth perception). You’ll discover something else that’s interesting. The second breath-hold is actually less difficult than the first. What’s causing the distress and pain you feel isn’t lack of oxygen but the CO2 buildup, and the second time around your body is adjusting. (Note: I am not a fitness expert. I am also not an idiot: DO NOT DO APNEA/BREATH HOLD TRAINING IN THE WATER WITHOUT AN OBSERVANT PARTNER—you can go unconscious via shallow water blackout and drown).

Oakley Surfers Go Through Surf Survival Course

oakley Published on Apr 10, 2013
Nearly every surfer has experienced the sensation: pinned to the ocean bottom, trying to swim for the surface, desperate for a few quick gasps of air to avoid what might happen if they don't. It's a scary moment and therefore, a tough time to stay composed -- even the pros say so. According to Kurt Krack, who teaches a surf survival course around breath holding, composure is key. While on the North Shore, six Oakley surfers took part in Krack's two-day course to better prepare themselves for the type of hold-downs and life-threatening situations that come with competitive surfing and freesurfing waves like Teahupoo, Pipeline, Jaws and many of the other heavy-water breaks around the world.

During the course, the crew of guys -- which ranged from big-wave surfers Danny Fuller and Rico Jimenez to WCT vets Melling and Tommy Whitaker to upcoming pros Eric Geiselman and Thomas Woods -- learned the science of how the body is affected by a lack of CO2 and then got in the pool to put into action their live-saving education. As you'll see, learning to stay submerged for upwards of four or five minutes isn't a feat strictly for NAVY Seals -- one of the guys added almost four minutes to how long he could hold his breath based on what he learned and applied.

Surf Survival Training Camp with Maya Gabeira and Sally Fitzgibbons

redbull Uploaded on Dec 13, 2011
Maya Gabeira and Sally Fitzgibbons take part in a surf survival course that trains them in breath holding techniques that can be applied to surfing.

http://redbullusa.com

SSI Freediving - Submersion Survival Course

Mike Wells Uploaded on Dec 4, 2011
SSI Freediving Submersion Survival Course @ Snorkel Safari.

17 Surfers who love Big heavy waves were looking to improve on their ability and confidence in Huge Surfing conditions where longer hold downs can be an issue.

Throughout the 2 Day program Surfers were introduced to the many benefits that Freediving has, Surfing and Freediving already have a great symbiotic relationship with breath-holds bieng the catalyst.

The Surfers embraced the 4 main points of Freediving
- Conserving 02
- Flexibility
-Equalization
- Safety

Now Armed with Knowledge skills and experience in the realm of Breath-hold and stress management these surfers were stoked!!!

SSI Freediving Instructors Mike Wells, Tanguy Crusson, Brett Davison - Assistants Jeremy Wells, Sdnei Avelar.