Forward Rotations
Posted: Tue Jun 12, 2012 11:39 am
Just reading through the Loop Motivation and realized how much it reminded me of trying to figure out Sbends on a kiteboard. I've never seen a WS throw a forward loop in person, or another kiteboarder on VI throw a decent SBend, although I know they're out there. But one of the most important factors for both moves seems to be the one that's resulting in all these half way stall-outs.
I'm a kiteboarder (obviously), but I draw from many sources when trying to learn: wakeboarding, snowboarding, surfing, cats falling in slomo... So listen up windsurfers and maybe you'll learn something.
Unlike backrolls/backloops you can't just carve into the wind and hold still, letting momentum carry your petrified ass the other 180. You have to muscle this one around. It's what I call "throwing your shoulders."
Start by practicing in your living room. Imagine holding an ax straight out in front of you and there's a tree to whichever side (or down for front flip) of your shoulder you wish to rotate. You want to look at it then hit the tree as hard as you can starting from a dead standstill with no backswing (lower treestump for ws). Then try it on a real tree until you develop huge abs for torque and heavy shoulders for continuing the momentum.
If you're a kiteboarder, that's all you need to snap a quick front roll or (assuming you can raley) throw a big sbend. For learning frontrolls, try not to send the kite past 12, just pop straight up, and hit that tree just as your reaching the apex. For your first Sbends, throw a medium pop raley and wait till you passing through horizontal to throw the shoulders. Do not try to initiate with a different carve or your legs. Fully laid out looks and feels better anyway. If you're still having trouble, try it with an unhooked sent jump first.
For the windsurfers, one of the biggest challenges I see is that you're pulling the boom toward you with your back shoulder while trying to throw yourself forward and down. So pulling with you back hand is actually bringing your shoulders out of the rotation. Which means you have to throw even harder (the commitment) to counteract this. I know, I know, there's a bunch of other stuff going on with the sail and the board (that a kiteboarder couldn't possibly understand). But hey, there's guys that can throw front flips on snowmobiles and motocross bikes, all initiated from throwing the their shoulders, so no excuses.
That's it, it's just balls and shoulders. Do whatever you have to with the kite or sail, then commit to a hard throw, hold the tuck and I bet you'll be surprised how fast you can rotate.
I'm a kiteboarder (obviously), but I draw from many sources when trying to learn: wakeboarding, snowboarding, surfing, cats falling in slomo... So listen up windsurfers and maybe you'll learn something.
Unlike backrolls/backloops you can't just carve into the wind and hold still, letting momentum carry your petrified ass the other 180. You have to muscle this one around. It's what I call "throwing your shoulders."
Start by practicing in your living room. Imagine holding an ax straight out in front of you and there's a tree to whichever side (or down for front flip) of your shoulder you wish to rotate. You want to look at it then hit the tree as hard as you can starting from a dead standstill with no backswing (lower treestump for ws). Then try it on a real tree until you develop huge abs for torque and heavy shoulders for continuing the momentum.
If you're a kiteboarder, that's all you need to snap a quick front roll or (assuming you can raley) throw a big sbend. For learning frontrolls, try not to send the kite past 12, just pop straight up, and hit that tree just as your reaching the apex. For your first Sbends, throw a medium pop raley and wait till you passing through horizontal to throw the shoulders. Do not try to initiate with a different carve or your legs. Fully laid out looks and feels better anyway. If you're still having trouble, try it with an unhooked sent jump first.
For the windsurfers, one of the biggest challenges I see is that you're pulling the boom toward you with your back shoulder while trying to throw yourself forward and down. So pulling with you back hand is actually bringing your shoulders out of the rotation. Which means you have to throw even harder (the commitment) to counteract this. I know, I know, there's a bunch of other stuff going on with the sail and the board (that a kiteboarder couldn't possibly understand). But hey, there's guys that can throw front flips on snowmobiles and motocross bikes, all initiated from throwing the their shoulders, so no excuses.
That's it, it's just balls and shoulders. Do whatever you have to with the kite or sail, then commit to a hard throw, hold the tuck and I bet you'll be surprised how fast you can rotate.