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How to Noseride POV Full DEMONSTRATION - Overcome Bad Noseriding Habits! TSG
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- Опубликовано: 17 дек 2023
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For anyone who may be looking for any longboard coaching video analysis, we're getting things up and running and I'd be stoked to assess and set up a plan for what you're looking to improve on! If you are at all interested please feel free to email at longboardcoaching@outlook.com
Cheers everyone!
Ben 🤙
The editing mix of onboard and from shore is really nice! The inside rail weight is a great observation that I'll start paying attention too. Cheers
Yewww thanks so much! Glad its helpful - yeah perfect! Let me know how it goes, yeww!!!
Once again, thanks for sharing your knowledge! The example where you showed what NOT to do (lack of pressure on the inside rail) was particularly helpful because I realized I frequently make that mistake. Please continue to show "what not to do" examples in the future if you can 🙏
No worries at all! Thanks so much for the support, and definitely I agree, think I'll do more of showing what happens when we make mistakes and how we can rectify that! 🙏🤙
Great tips. This filming and editing technique is the best I’ve seen. Makes everything a step by step.
Thanks so much! Yeah I'm definitely looking to refine and do more and more of it, its a bunch of fun too!! ahha
Thanks so much for this info. The inside rail locking in before you walk is what I was missing!
No worries at all!! Awesome, so good to hear, would love to hear how its gone!
Ben, you are very motivating, thank you.
Haha thanks so much!!! I really appreciate that, hope you’re getting waves, yewww!! 🙏🤙
Great editing video, super!! Pro longboarding + pro editing ❤ this was super fun
Thanks so much John!! Really appreciate that haha, really liked and enjoyed making this one will have to do more like it in the future!! Cheers, yewww!! 🙏🙏🤙
100th “like” here! And that’s all I got. Nowhere near noseriding, but this helps me understand longboarding better. Thanks also for your POV film and video technique. From the car to the beach, you’re taking us out on your board and the waves w/you.🤙
Thanks so much Laura!!
The best noseride tutorial I've ever seen, thank so much for putting this together. Keen to start using some of these tips in my surfing. Stocked!!! Thanks so much and keep these vids coming. So very useful!
Yewww epic so glad you found it useful Nathan!!! Reallyt appreciate the kind words, will keep them coming haha!! Let me know if there's anything else I can dive into in the vids for you, yewww!!! 🙏🤙🤙
@@BenConsidine just watched the cross stepping video too. Damn so much gold here! Thanks so much. Keep em coming
Great session, good reminder that you don’t need perfect days to have fun and improve. Fantastic work on the editing. This has to be one of my favourites. Thanks Ben!
Best tips yet. Thanks. I'm working on getting back into the whitewater then moving up into the pocket, but often the whitewater pushes the board away from me and I fall. Maybe you can post a video on how to not fall in the whitewater. Consider asking Longboard Sessions what microphone setup he uses because his speech is very clear.
No worries at all! Yeah perfect, the white water is definitely trick to navigate,
I like that idea, maybe something along the lines of how to stabilise and optimise trim in the white water, I'll have a think about that one!
Yeah I have an idea of his setup, just wary of risking my lapel mic in the water!! haha, might have to just buy a cheapy
POV and the commentary really helped break down the process. Excited to give some of the pointers a crack tomorrow.
Epic stoked that helps!! Definitely want to do more of it, still have to figure out the audio issues but feel like it’s a good way to show everything in real time - let me know how you go!! Yewww 🙏🤙🤙
@@BenConsidine Waves weren't walling up super nice today but putting more pressure on the back foot really helped with avoiding nose dives. I felt like my actions leading up to a nose ride were more deliberate and considered, rather than just guessing and hoping for the best. Thanks.
@@heptadecagon_3574 Yeww so good!! Keep it going, stoked it’s helping a bit, hope you get some better waves soon as well 🤙🤙
Loved this vid thank you Ben!
Stoked you liked it!!! Yewww 🙏🤙
Probably the most informative video I have seen yet! Great edits🤙🤙
So happy to hear, really appreciate that!!! Yewww 🤙
You da man big daddy B.C.
😂🤙
Great vid mate
I have a HP longboard with 2+1 would you recommend putting a single 9” fin wayyy back to learn these manouvers
Thank youuuu 😊
The video is a diamond! Ben, I'm always clumsy when walking in the board. Any exercice to improve posture? Keep up the good videos :)
Thanks so much! Stoked it was helpful.
Yeah that's a super common one, and often its because we're leaning forwards too much. Think about keeping your body upright, bent knees and pressing forwards with your hips as you're cross stepping. That's just very brief I know, but the hips are the key to improving posture with cross steps :)
Thank you!
No worries at all! Hope it was helpful!
Great video Ben 👍
Thanks so much!! Hope it was helpful 🤙🤙🤙
@@BenConsidine yeah, you make the crappy surf look good.
Yer Benny
@@leahbrettt haha 😂 thanks!! Found a couple even though pretty ordinary out there, better than the previous videos conditions still hahah
@@sashajanelowerson yewww yeah sash 🤙🤙🤙
Hi Ben - I'm a long-time fan of your surfing, instruction and videos! This was such a great one, with the POV of what to look for in a noseride section. I'm at the stage where I can comfortably cross step to the middle of the board and back but hesitate on the 3rd/4th step. It often feels like I'm moving too fast to keep moving up the board and I freeze through the steeper section and cut back once I'm through it or get too far out on the shoulder. My question - is it possible to be going too fast to noseride? Is this just a mental block? Should I try to burn a little speed before setting my line and moving to 3/4th step? The video makes the steep section look so tame from that bird's eye view perspective...but when I'm on the wave, the sections that are steepening/feathering seem more threatening (!) (I'm surfing 2-4ft point break waves in CA - nothing too wild.) I feel like I'm doing these little stalls, tap backs and avoiding just planting toes into the inside rail and calmly moving forward. Thanks again!
Hey Trish! Such a good question, and a really common one so I hope I can help!
Its a yes and no haha, speed can be really helpful for noseriding, but the speed can often throw people off! So there's definitely an element of mental block, however a few other things to try.
Best thing to do is ensure you're maintaining pressure on the inside rail to hug the wave better and ensure you're not dropping low and risking nosediving. A big thing is also making the first 2 steps too big and leaving minimal room for the last 2 steps which will leave us feeling inherently hesitant and off balance - as a side note, I also just released a video an hour ago covering some of these topics from the perspective of others ive coached via online analysis, so that may resonate and help i hope :)
If you do have any further questions at all though or wanted more depth/clarity on anything please don't hesitate to message - email is longboardcoaching@outlook.com if you did :)
Thank you very much, congrats on your 10k followers! The video with the coaching analysis was great. I marked off the top 1/3 of my board too to help with spacing, which you suggested in an older video...now the rain just needs to stop in CA so I can go surfing! @@BenConsidine
I'm 5'11" 180 pounds. What size board and liters should I be looking for to nose ride?
For yourself I'd be looking anything from 9'4 to 9'6 would be a safe bet. But design can influence things significantly and something smaller or bigger could also work for you. Main thing for noseriding is tail kick and slight nose rocker, and then if you're in the intermediate stages of noseriding a board with wide point in the middle can be really helpful to make things easier, then as you start to advance and get more critical in the pocket noserides wide point back is the go. Hope thats somewhat helpful!
@@BenConsidine Thanks Ben. I just got a 9-9 but it feels very high performance rather than a log. I found a reallly heavy 10-2 wide back vintage board from 1960 with glassed fins. Might give it a try although I'm not advanced yet.