OK, I've been windsurfing on a frequent basis for almost 3 years now. For the last month and a half I've been sailing for hours in good wind nearly every day. You'd think I'd be able to gybe by now, right? I've had lessons, watched videos, read articles, watched good gybers in action...what's wrong with me???
I can make the occasional wobbly slow-motion gybe with about a dozen changes of hand position, but that doesnt really count.
Having just conquered waterstarts, I don't mind falling off so much now. In fact, I look forward to each waterstart...but the thrill is gonna wear off sooner or later and then I'll want to gybe more than ever.
HELP!!!!!
You'll get there mate. If I can do it then any drongo can.
For your first planing exit you'll need super flat water, the flatter the better. After you get the knack then you can start to get them in choppier water.
At the end of the day it all comes down to practice, practice and then just a bit more practice... it's a bugger to learn but a huge buzz when you finally get one ![]()
Edit: congrats on the waterstarts! Mind you those uphauls you did at kirra were very impressive ![]()
Don't worry, sounds like you're in the normal sequence, learn to waterstart, then really perfect the art learning to gybe. I always tell people, "the best way to learn to waterstart, is to learn to gybe"
Soon those wobbly gybes will get smoother, then you'll be making more of them, it's just practice and persistence.
Big tip is to practice both ways! I see so many people just practicing out the back, then come into the beach to turn around and beachstart, then they wonder why they can only gybe on 1 tack.
The other thing is try not to think about what you're doing, sounds strange, but the ability to gybe is a learned reflex, once the intellect gets involved it can stuff everything up.
Being too tentative and careful often doesn't help either, sometimes it's better to just go for it, without worrying about if you make it or not.
wet willy, I feel your pain![]()
but wont let it beat me. I am going to get this bloody discipline come rain, hail (well maybe not hail, it stings a bit
) or shine.
I tried the tip re inside foot pointing along board as pressure applied to rail instead of across, and it did feel better. Cant say I progressed any
.
Only hope I can get it to some degree before the season ends.
But like you, I can water start in a blink![]()
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PS Quote from WW last post![]()
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Coolly grabbed the mast and board, flew the sail, whipped it around into waterstart position and hauled ass out of there JUST LIKE A REAL WINDSURFER!!!!!
Yeah, baby!! Take that! And that! And that! You know you like it! ![]()
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LMFAO
You really need to get out a good video which details the 5 steps involved in a gybe. There was one by Peter Hart which I have now forgotten which does just that. ( it might have been called Turning Point. not sure. someone else might know.)
Then when you fall off you will know which step needs work. Otherwise you just keep trying and keep falling off and never really know what you're doing wrong except maybe for some vague analysis like,..
"I think my feet are too far away from the board when I finish my gybe."
Also, as already stated, smooth water makes a huge difference when learning gybes and once you get a few right you can then get them working in chop.
Pweedas, you mean "Turn for the better", I think. I've got it (thanks Nebs) and I guess it wouldn't hurt to watch it a 10,001st time...
Hey I found it! And it is called "Windsurfing Turning Point " (level 4 & 5), a VHS vid with Peter Hart in it and a few others.
I remember now, it cost me 50 whole dollars many years back and I thought i was being robbed, but it ended up the best $50 i spent on windsurfing, because within about 2 or 3 weeks and a few hours in flat water at Safety Bay, I had gybes sorted. Not every one but say 1 in 5. And up to that point it had been none in 105!
Also, when learning any new move in windsurfing or anything else, it helps a lot if you study the steps and then visualise yourself doing it over and over . Step 1, step 2, 3, 4 etc.
You can do this in bed or anywhere. See yourself doing each step and doing it successfully. Don't see yourself falling off even if you usually do. In fact the step you fall off at is the one you should concentrate on and see youself doing it smoothly and successfully.
Your subconcious has a strong effect on your abilities and if you see yourself as failing at a certain point then you are most of the way towards achieving a failure before you begin. This is probably why you are having such a hard time with it. You have established the expectation that you will fall off and then proceed to live up to the expectation.
So what you have to do is alter what your expectation is and change it to the confident expectation of a great gybe.
If you imprint on your subconcious the motions of you, sweeping around a smooth gybe and coming out the other side, you are half way towards achieving just that.
As mentioned, the flatter the water the better. However it sounds fairly choppy where you are sailing. I first nailed a planing gybe at South West Rocks on a north easterly wind and fairly big swell.
The setup was big swell rolling into the bay, cross shore to the nor easter. I timed my gybes to gybe on the face, the swell gave me propulsion to get through the turn. This was on a Bombora proto. It was a nice board, perhaps ahead of its time as it was quite short but very wide from the mid section through to the tail.
After this session I could carve gybe the Bombora on flat and choppy water.
Anyway just focus on getting through the turn. Have a wide grip on the boom. Unhook from the harness lines smoothly and sail downwind unhooked. Push down on the boom with your front hand. Place your back foot outside the back strap. Look to where you want to go. ETC.
The main thing I reckon is you state of mind. If you are determined not to fall off and to make it, you will make it. If you do it half arsed and tired, you'll fall off when a rail trips on a bit of chop or you can't grip the boom properly. Even a wobbly gybe is heaps better than falling off.
The Guy Cribb dvd is great. His muscle memory technique alone has helped me heaps as I now don't even think about the foot change, it just happens, at the right time and right position. Also, practicing your gybes in light non planing winds, using the correct technique has helped me heaps, especially with the rig flip.
ejmack,
Where did you get your copy of the intuition DVD?
I've considered importing it but it works out pretty expensive with the exchange rate.
sounds like u got the concept
next time u go out try and remember these 3 simple words. SPEED, KNEES and COMMIT........
SPEED is your FRIEND, dont be scared, this WILL stop the wobbles and give you a more balanced platform to pull the gybe off on.
KNEES, bend zem more, get your ass down low.
COMMIT yourself to the gybe, lean into the turn, look ahead for your exit, flip, feet etc. it's only H20 if it goes wrong. YES i am going to do it.........
Hey Wet Willy, I've recently started using a gps speedo. Its interesting to watch my speed as I enter a gybe. It seems that if I'm not doing better than 18 knots I wont plane out. My simple point is, it helps to know your speed.
Just out of curiosity what size kit, particularly board, did people learn to reliably gybe on, and I don't mean planing out, just your basic "dry" step gybe?
Re Arlo's Board size post - Carve 99l (I was at least 94kilo's then) then the Kombat 96 and a fear of being eaten by a white pointer of the coast of Adelaide also helped. [
Looking toward the horizon/where you wanted to go and changing feet early helped alot.
Practice on land. Get a broomstick and dance around in your living room. Get the footchange/handchange sequence nailed on dry land before you take it to the water.
OK, I've taken all your advice on board, no pun intended...let's see what happens today!!!!
BTW my main prob seems to be with the rig flip. And as for planing out, that would be nice, but I'd settle for sailing out, as opposed to waterstarting or uphauling out of every gybe...
I think the single biggest thing that helps new moves is to look where you want to be going.
This has helped with my Helitacks alot... I dont get dumped much just need to sort out the rig flip now and I'm set.
And what other people said practice both tacks.