err bit of a weird one.
alternates for each tack because left foot always goes in first...
so used to it now that it doesn't make a difference to performance.
Personally I think I learnt more in the first hour of skiing uninstructed (having read up) that in the 1 hour lesson i later took.
on my own i practiced what I'd already mentally rehearsed from what I'd read, in the lesson the instructor just tried to overload us and gave no chance to gain your own muscle memory, etc.
On the straps issue: I vary on conditions.
You've got 3 points of contact on the board (2 feet + mastfoot)
you can distribute your weight over these are desired, so the board need not "know" whether your in the front strap and lightly in the harness, or in the back foot and heavily into the harness (leaning weight forward).
In fact in your worried about sinking the tail too early you can lean right forward and actively lift up on the back strap, which its possible to do up to the point of oversinking the nose
the back strap is my friend, planing or not planing, don't care much for the front one unless im on a wave. .
I almost always go back strap first.
But i'm not heavy footed so I don't sink the tail like everyone on here is saying.
I put my back foot in but don't put any weight on it. I just put my toes in and keep my heel up in the air. All my weight is supported by my front leg and the mast.
I find this allows me to pump the sail a lot better and pull up with my back foot to get on the plane earlier.
Also front hand is always an underhand grip.
Back foot first crowd is definately putting up a valid points. I've always been taught front first. I might gibe back foot first a try.
OK here's my 2 cents worth.
Sailing in pretty messy open ocean and fairly powered up on my outward (starboard) run to inward (port) gybes I will go back foot first probably 80% of the time as this gives me the ability to lock the sail back in without being knocked (forward) off balance by the chop / waves. If conditions are more marginal I'll always go front first as loading up the fin too early usually stalls that momentum you have coming out of the gybe.
I like to get in the front strap first but I find it difficult to find the back strap readily on port tack, no problem on starboard tack.
Any ideas?
Front foot first! Yes you may catapult when learning, but that will teach you how not to catapult front foot first.
Both work. both have their uses. I go into the front or back footstrap first about equally.
Surely everyone has at some point experienced a moment when they had to pull out the front foot for a second, then put it back in without having removed the back foot? Are you gonna pull out both feet and start all over again every time the board starts coming off the plane slightly due to a tiny lull or a wave hit or somethiing?
If you find back foot first sinks the tail or otherwise spoils the trim, you're not doing it right. Why not learn, and then you'll have an extra trick up your sleeve?
I would've spent the first 23 yrs windsurfing putting front foot in the strap first.
Over the last 5 or 6 years, if I'm off the plane, I've started putting my back foot in first as I feel I can get planing more efficiently.
This sums it up really well, for me.
I agree with Bondy.
IMHO, the basic flaw in Barn etc's argument is the assumption that we would be putting weight on the back foot. Not so! When I leap onto a plane and finally put the second, (i.e. front) foot in, the weight is on the mastfoot. The back foot is weightless - it might even be lifting the board up or pushing it forward.
i don't care how many people think there's only one correct way. If the good lord had intended for us to always put the front foot in first, he would've given us two front feet!