Being Held Down
February 25, 2008
Even the idea of being held on the bottom or stuffed under a ledge of reef can start your heart pounding–and that’s exactly what you don’t want to do. If you’re relaxed and calm you can easily hold your breath for 30 seconds, with practice 60 seconds is easy. If you’re panicked and thrashing around it’s more like ten.
Even a fairly small wave can catch you in exactly the wrong spot and pin you. A big wave has all kinds of unpredictable things happening under it. You might pop out in just a few seconds after a wipeout on a big wave, or you could be down on the bottom looking through a curtain of foam, trying to figure out which way is up.
When everything is going bad, time gets haywire. A big wave period (the time between waves) is 15 to 20 seconds. If you are held down until just before the next wave comes, that’s probably twenty seconds maximum.
A two wave hold down, which is pretty rare and considered to be pretty horrific, is at the very most, 40 seconds, and more likely 30 seconds. It might seem like you’re down there for ten minutes, but even a really bad hold down is in the easy range of holding your breath–if you are calm and relaxed.
Of course calmly holding your breath in our living room and doing it while you’re being bounced across a reef are two different things. But the living room is a decent place to practice. You might also want to try the classic hold down exercise–carrying weights underwater. Good training if the prospect scares you. It doesn’t have to be a fifty pound boulder, twenty pounds of dive weights will give you valuable experience.
Here’s some things to consider when the wave is dropping on your head:
1. Why don’t I have some floatation? You might think it looks dorky, but don’t tell that to Laird–he’s usually wearing an impact vest with floatation when he’s charging big stuff. So do an increasing number of tow-in surfers. Even light ones aren’t as comfortable as no vest is, and they can be a liability in a crowded surf spot–it’s tough to dive under a board that’s headed toward your head if you’ve got a vest on. But when a double overhead lip falls on you and you pop up in the foam four seconds later, that vest feels REALLY comfortable.
2. Your paddle can help. If you held onto your paddle when you fell, it adds a little buoyancy and will help pull you up. When you get hit by a wave, putting the paddle behind your head tends to push you upwards. I don’t know why that works, but in my experience it does help. Once you get out of the impact zone you can toss your paddle towards your board and swim unencumbered, or tuck it in your rash guard for a little added float.
3. Don’t fight the power. When you’re being held down, relax as much as possible during the turbulent stage. You can’t swim against the wave’s currents and you’ll just burn up O2. Wait for the bubbles to start to rise, and follow them up. Watch for your board as you surface, no point in adding a head injury to your challenges.
4. Duck and cover. The most important element is simply being calm and getting breaths when you can. Try to control your body by keeping your arms in and your knees bent and clenched while you’re in the wash. And take your time. Kicking like crazy for a breath works some of the time, but one day a lip will fall above you just before you reach the surface.
5. Take the ride. If the waves are breaking outside your position and you can reach your board, get a good grip on it before the next set hits. If the sets aren’t huge and you are getting hit by mostly whitewater, sitting on the board near the tail, holding on with your hands, and dangling your feet will keep you above the whitewater. If nothing else you’ll get pushed out of the impact zone in the whitewater. Just make sure there’s no one barreling down on you as you sit there like a bobber.
6. Bail if necessary. If the lip is headed straight for your head, or other surfers are headed towards you, conditions might be better a few feet down. Get as big a breath as you can, and duck under, diving towards and under the wave. Arch your back and kick forward and chances are you’ll pop out the back quickly. Just make sure you’re deep enough that you don’t get sucked backward over the falls. That’s always bad.
Retrieve your board, and get the heck out of there. You probably only need fifty feet to be in safer water.
One of the beautiful things about surfing is that you’re on your own. In the toughest times no one can really help you. Maybe not as much as when you jump out the door of an airplane, but how things turn out in the surf is pretty much up to you. A little conditioning, a little practice, and some mental discipline will go a long way to making sure they turn out well.
New Flatwater Sup Catalog from Starboard
January 14, 2008
Starboard is accelerating their Sup program with a new catalog focused on flatwater models. While a few custom designers have built flatwater boards and several innovative builders have released production open water boards (Sandwich Island Composite’s all-conquering F-16 open water racer, and a new 14-foot race board from C-4) I believe Starboard is the first manufacturer to focus explicitly on the flatwater market. The Flatwater cruising, touring, and fishing markets are expected to contribute substantially to, and may even dominate the overall Sup market. Click any image to see it full sized.

The new catalog features existing models pictured in flatwater settings.
Focusing more on the paddling aspects of Sup
The catalog also introduces two new boards
This spectacular point-to-point board with a foot steering option. This board is co-designed by Mark Raaphorst.
There’s a full line of paddles
And starboard has introduced a kid’s Sup board.
Two new boards andthe first Sup catalog to feature flatwater Sup cruising. It will be very interesting to see if this direction yields results immediately. The flatwater market for Sup seems poised to grow rapidly.
Testers–Contact Me
January 9, 2008

I was getting ready to send all the folks that have signed up to participate in the 2008 Maui SUP Board and Paddle Showcase an email with directions for how this is all going to work, and discovered that the file was corrupted. I have some of the names, but not all. Please contact me ASAP and I’ll send you the information. One person I KNOW I haven’t been able to find (browsing back through emails) is a Lt Cmdr in the Navy who plans to come over from Oahu. If that’s you, email me right away. ust send the email to editor at kenalu dot com (Confusion to the spambots — I hope)
How to Paddle Straight
January 2, 2008
[kml_flashembed movie="http://www.youtube.com/v/EfLXV5Iekxc" width="285" height="242" wmode="transparent" /]I shot this with the new rear deck camera mount. It looks like a useful angle. I’m going to try one waist high. Only problem is you’ll be staring at my ass. Hmmm. Maybe not.
Tomorrow–Maui!!
January 2, 2008
Sam is as nervous as a cat. Whenever we bring his crate up from the basement he stays even closer to Diane than usual–which is not that easy for a dog that spends his life ten inches from her knee. I think he’s concerned about being left behind. I can’t blame him–the weather in Portland sucks out loud right now. [Read more]
New SUP Magazine To Launch
December 29, 2007
Right after Ke Nalu launches February 25 with our Board and Paddle Showcase Issue, a new high-style Stand Up magazine is launching in early March. I’m stoked. (click the pages to see them full size). [Read more]
Merry Christmas
December 25, 2007
So much for the “Paddle for Christmas” plan.
The light rain we had this morning turned to snow just as we started opening christmas presents. I had planned to sneak away in the late afternoon and paddle in the Multnomah channel to burn off a little of that Christmas Spirit. I guess not. Merry Christmas to all, and to all a good night. [Read more]
Top Six Reasons to Sail Your SUP
December 21, 2007
Five top reasons why you need a mast track and a couple of beater sails
- Absolutely silly fun. You find yourself giggling wildly every time you catch a wave from the backside.
- Turns flatwater paddling into exploration–you can go anywhere. Take your paddle along in case the wind dies.
- You can go anytime–conditions are always perfect for SOME mode you can transform your SUP board into
- You surf ten times as many waves, in places where there are NO surfers
- Blown out day? YAHOO!!!
[kml_flashembed movie="http://www.youtube.com/v/HqA5n1caLmM" width="290" height="242" wmode="transparent" /]This video is the most eloquent argument possible for why you absolutely want a sail track on your SUP board.
Here’s another video: Cammar (Giampaolo Cammarota) is the master of this sport. If you’re in Maui try to get a lesson with him. He’ll teach you more in an hour than you could learn in a year by yourself, and he’s a great human being. His video got me so stoked on this cold, nasty, rain-mixed-with-snow Oregon day that I tossed the sail in the truck. I’m outta here. Enjoy. [kml_flashembed movie="http://www.youtube.com/v/Aly0TjbeuIw" width="425" height="350" wmode="transparent" /]
Kayak SUP?
December 12, 2007
I think this guy needs a SUP board. Kyle Disque, who is a member of the vintage Triumph racing club I belong to (FOT aka Friends of Triumph) alerted me to this form of Kayaking called Striding where you stand in a kayak with a longer paddle. [Read more]
Shakira SUPs
December 4, 2007
Well, not really, in fact I have deep reservations about showing anyone this video. Not because of copyright issues (though it certainly walks that gray line that the nitwits at the RIAA have done nothing but obfuscate) but because it will take me years to live it down. Watch it at your own risk, and thank heaven that I didn’t have the recorder pointed at my ass.[MEDIA=1]














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