Forums > Stand Up Paddle General

Wear a leggie

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Created by Tryfan > 9 months ago, 23 Dec 2010
Tryfan
QLD, 256 posts
23 Dec 2010 10:05AM
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There are more and more crew getting out there on race sups which is great to see.

At the alley on some mornings there can be more than a dozen doing ins and outs at the point, on 12'6 and longer boards. There were at least that many out there this morning.

It is pretty much a given that at some time, all paddlers will come off while on a wave or paddling through. Saw a lot fall this morning, and have seen the best of paddlers separated from their boards. When you fall off your board you need to ensure it has the least impact on other water users. At least a leggie will stop it doing further possible damage on its way through the crowd.

There are heaps of coil type leggies that don't drag behind the board, so really there is no reason not to wear one when in the surf.

My suggestion is that if you think you don't need to wear a legrope while surfing one of these tankers, paddle out on a short/longboard and sit at the point while other race sups are there and get a feel of it from the other side.


Ali Cat
QLD, 1205 posts
23 Dec 2010 11:19AM
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Couldn't agree more Scotty - especially when there's other people surfing the break at the same time - no matter how small it is.

Yes, I'm guilty sometimes of being one of those without a leggie as usually in training I don't know that we'll be doing ins and outs until we've already paddled down the creek to the beach and I can't exactly just grab one out of the car at that stage.

Just my opinion, but I don't see any heroics in not wearing one - actually I find I'm more likely to fall when I don't have one on, as I'm thinking so much about "what if I lose the board and it gets in someones way that", that I'm not focussed on keeping my balance and making sure I don't fall.

If it's dead flat (like the last few days) then IMO no leggie is ok as there's no waves to push the board into anyone else, but as soon as theres any waves or other water users around then it should be about respect for them, not about whether you think you need a leggie or not.

PTWoody
VIC, 3982 posts
23 Dec 2010 12:25PM
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Strong talk going around that it is going to be mandatory to wear a leggie with a SUP in all Victorian waters. That sucks for the Yarra River, but otherwise a reasonable law imho.

OG SUP
VIC, 3516 posts
23 Dec 2010 12:52PM
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Woody,

Also expect PFDs / paddle vests, fluid / camel back (can be built into PFD) and mini flares minimum for downwinders and maditory check in check out with dedicated land support (again no brainer).

Also strong possibility that boat support / coverage for races will have a minimum of 8 paddlers to 1 boat.

Its all going to get much tighter thats for sure but the orginal proposal was far worse.

Phill

ChrisMcC
NSW, 667 posts
23 Dec 2010 2:08PM
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All I saw at the Alley this morning was some portly dude on a white sup absolutely shredding ...... he certainly was having a stand out session ...... like to know what SUP he was riding ........

PTWoody
VIC, 3982 posts
23 Dec 2010 2:21PM
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Hey Phill, do you know how they define the check in / check out process and what constitutes land support?

OG SUP
VIC, 3516 posts
23 Dec 2010 3:56PM
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Hey Woody,

I would assume its would be the same as for when I ran fishing charters.

You detail the following:

The land based contact for us it was the coast guard or marina in the area we were launching from.

You provide them with:

1) The names and emergency contact details for all people going.

2) The start point and time of the run

3) The end point and expected end time of the run

4) When everyone is back and accounted for you ring them and advise all is well.

5) They sign you out.

Simple process really if they dont hear from you by the intended signout time they contact the authorities.

On Corio Bay DW:

We have the the following contact numbers in the hands of the land based vehicle:

Local Police, Marine Safety, Royal Geelong Yacht Club and Royal Geelong Hospital.

Everyone that paddles must have a PDF, legrope no exception. All PDFs have whistles / camel back with fluid / or bottle of fluid and an enery or chocolate bars.

We use radio contact with the guys that paddle and can talk directly to the paddlers on the water to ensure they are OK in case off server squalls which we do get.

We have a vehicle track and follow all paddlers via binoculars if someone needs to bail they can and will be picked up.

The neck of Corio bay is also quite small so we can ensure by sellecting the take of point carefully that the paddlers will hit landfall from just about any direction. It also means that wind change is less of an issue.

We have access to internet weather reports in the vehicle from mobile phone and know if a significant wind change is likely and can warn the paddlers via radio.

Phill

planesailing
WA, 380 posts
23 Dec 2010 1:17PM
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WOW ! Phil, you guys sound organised..

Crash Landing
NSW, 1173 posts
23 Dec 2010 5:09PM
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Is anyone using a coiled leash for surf?

Ali Cat
QLD, 1205 posts
23 Dec 2010 4:22PM
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Crash Landing said...

Is anyone using a coiled leash for surf?


I've tried both the full coil and half coil leggies with my short sup for surfing and found I ended up treading on the coil whenever I stepped back on a wave, it really annoyed me, and although the coil makes the leggie shorter, when you're standing right next to the plug on a small board, the coil can still hang off the side of the board and the coil creates a lot more drag than a straight one. I also found the coiled leggie has a lot more resistance when you fall off and want to pull the board back in quickly and jump on before the next sets arrives. I prefer to use a standard 6ft leggie when surfing on a small SUP (just not a comp weight one as they break too easily with the weight of a SUP). Just my opinion and interested to see what others think.

I love using the full coil on bigger race boards as with the bigger boards/thicker rails, I find the coil hardly ever reaches the water and doesn't cause any drag in this situation.

daletor
VIC, 301 posts
23 Dec 2010 6:03PM
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Crash Landing said...

Is anyone using a coiled leash for surf?


Used coil leashed at the knee so coil hangs down. No problems. But still prefer my "normal" 10' leggie as weapon of choice.

colas
5364 posts
23 Dec 2010 3:06PM
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Actually, Bruno André has found a way to use of a leash to go FASTER in races.

Article in French: tendance-innovation.blogspot.com/2010/12/le-husky-style-mort-dans-loeuf.html

He calls it the "husky style", and use the leash to lean on it at the waist. He (and other racers who tried it) say that you gain a significant paddle leverage and use less energy to recover from the move. He says it is also faster to unhook the hook at the waist to run on the beach.

(do not pay attention to the rant: Bruno can bit somewhat paranoid and just because the racing authorities have decided to investigate if it was legal or not, he blew a gasket)

Rosscoe
VIC, 505 posts
23 Dec 2010 9:08PM
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Don't like coiled leggies in the surf, as I don't think they are as secure. In small waves there's probably no issue, but if it gets a bit bigger they don't feel as secure, for me anyway.

Also, the coil can soon become pretty straight if you get caught inside any decent set waves. I seem to recall AlSup ending up with a long straight leggie down at Woolamai last summer, in the session where he snapped his 11' board.

husq2100
QLD, 2031 posts
23 Dec 2010 8:47PM
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I think it would be alot better if leg ropes were banned for all surfers SB, LB and SUP.......think about it.......straight away youd eliminate 50% of the line up because they wouldnt paddle out

PTWoody
VIC, 3982 posts
23 Dec 2010 11:44PM
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husq2100 said...

I think it would be alot better if leg ropes were banned for all surfers SB, LB and SUP.......think about it.......straight away youd eliminate 50% of the line up because they wouldnt paddle out


I have to disagree, I think they WOULD paddle out but you'd still lose 50% of the line up to serious injuries caused by some kook's board cleaning up other surfers like skittles.

oliver
3952 posts
23 Dec 2010 8:53PM
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colas said...

Actually, Bruno André has found a way to use of a leash to go FASTER in races.

Article in French: tendance-innovation.blogspot.com/2010/12/le-husky-style-mort-dans-loeuf.html

He calls it the "husky style", and use the leash to lean on it at the waist. He (and other racers who tried it) say that you gain a significant paddle leverage and use less energy to recover from the move. He says it is also faster to unhook the hook at the waist to run on the beach.

(do not pay attention to the rant: Bruno can bit somewhat paranoid and just because the racing authorities have decided to investigate if it was legal or not, he blew a gasket)




Interesting post. From the pics I could imagine this may give you a slight advantage.

Just don't show the authorities, if it looks like fun and will give you an advantage they'll work out some way of banning it.

oliver
3952 posts
23 Dec 2010 8:55PM
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OG SUP said...

Hey Woody,

I would assume its would be the same as for when I ran fishing charters.

You detail the following:

The land based contact for us it was the coast guard or marina in the area we were launching from.

You provide them with:

1) The names and emergency contact details for all people going.

2) The start point and time of the run

3) The end point and expected end time of the run

4) When everyone is back and accounted for you ring them and advise all is well.

5) They sign you out.

Simple process really if they dont hear from you by the intended signout time they contact the authorities.

On Corio Bay DW:

We have the the following contact numbers in the hands of the land based vehicle:

Local Police, Marine Safety, Royal Geelong Yacht Club and Royal Geelong Hospital.

Everyone that paddles must have a PDF, legrope no exception. All PDFs have whistles / camel back with fluid / or bottle of fluid and an enery or chocolate bars.

We use radio contact with the guys that paddle and can talk directly to the paddlers on the water to ensure they are OK in case off server squalls which we do get.

We have a vehicle track and follow all paddlers via binoculars if someone needs to bail they can and will be picked up.

The neck of Corio bay is also quite small so we can ensure by sellecting the take of point carefully that the paddlers will hit landfall from just about any direction. It also means that wind change is less of an issue.

We have access to internet weather reports in the vehicle from mobile phone and know if a significant wind change is likely and can warn the paddlers via radio.

Phill


You just left the following out:

We don't get out in Corio very much, cause it takes so fricken long to get organised.

gumballs
NSW, 408 posts
24 Dec 2010 4:47AM
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HI Mick here,it's interesting reading all your opinions on leggies.I'm only realitively new to SUP although I have surfed at a compeditive level since the late 70s.I feel that for the size and amount of bouyancy of the average SUP plus the fact you also have a paddle to grapple with a leggie of some discription could only be an advantage to a user of any level.And while we're on the issue of water saftey I think that a small handle/toggle rope attached to the nose area on the deck would be a fantastic improvement in the surf as at the moment once your caught inside you have no control over your equipment at all.I've been thinking of putting 2 legrope plugs in about a foot from the nose and rigging up a handhold so at least I can then control my board to some degree.(I've thought about nose riding and think that in the right position it shouldn't be a worry).What da ya rekon??

laceys lane
QLD, 19804 posts
24 Dec 2010 7:44AM
Thumbs Up

oliver said...

OG SUP said...

Hey Woody,

I would assume its would be the same as for when I ran fishing charters.

You detail the following:

The land based contact for us it was the coast guard or marina in the area we were launching from.

You provide them with:

1) The names and emergency contact details for all people going.

2) The start point and time of the run

3) The end point and expected end time of the run

4) When everyone is back and accounted for you ring them and advise all is well.

5) They sign you out.

Simple process really if they dont hear from you by the intended signout time they contact the authorities.

On Corio Bay DW:

We have the the following contact numbers in the hands of the land based vehicle:

Local Police, Marine Safety, Royal Geelong Yacht Club and Royal Geelong Hospital.

Everyone that paddles must have a PDF, legrope no exception. All PDFs have whistles / camel back with fluid / or bottle of fluid and an enery or chocolate bars.

We use radio contact with the guys that paddle and can talk directly to the paddlers on the water to ensure they are OK in case off server squalls which we do get.

We have a vehicle track and follow all paddlers via binoculars if someone needs to bail they can and will be picked up.

The neck of Corio bay is also quite small so we can ensure by sellecting the take of point carefully that the paddlers will hit landfall from just about any direction. It also means that wind change is less of an issue.

We have access to internet weather reports in the vehicle from mobile phone and know if a significant wind change is likely and can warn the paddlers via radio.

Phill


You just left the following out:

We don't get out in Corio very much, cause it takes so fricken long to get organised.


i would never get out if i had to do all that. i have to do solo a lot, so i stick to about 1 k out. i tell someone what i'm doing. also the local lifeguards are right on to it. they radio contact each other if you are paddling- they don't miss much.

also water/fluids, whistle and assort bits and pieces, leggie, phone or plb. the weather charts are important. i wouldn't recommend this to a novice though

Crash Landing
NSW, 1173 posts
24 Dec 2010 9:12AM
Thumbs Up

Sounds like I should stick to the regular leash then. Cheers.

Daneli
QLD, 1538 posts
24 Dec 2010 8:23AM
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gumballs said...

HI Mick here,it's interesting reading all your opinions on leggies.I'm only realitively new to SUP although I have surfed at a compeditive level since the late 70s.I feel that for the size and amount of bouyancy of the average SUP plus the fact you also have a paddle to grapple with a leggie of some discription could only be an advantage to a user of any level.And while we're on the issue of water saftey I think that a small handle/toggle rope attached to the nose area on the deck would be a fantastic improvement in the surf as at the moment once your caught inside you have no control over your equipment at all.I've been thinking of putting 2 legrope plugs in about a foot from the nose and rigging up a handhold so at least I can then control my board to some degree.(I've thought about nose riding and think that in the right position it shouldn't be a worry).What da ya rekon??


Mick, good post. I'd like a handle on the front of my board, but never seen anything in the shops specific for this ! I think it would need to be a handle and not a rope to prevent injury to your hand. I am pretty sure this has been discussed before on the Forum. How are you enjoying SUP?

gumballs
NSW, 408 posts
24 Dec 2010 6:19PM
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Mate I'm loving it.Best fun I've had in years.With the handel I reckon 2 leggie plugs with cord from one to the other and a bit of hose in the middle.Next time I get the chance I'll have a look at a clubbie paddle board and see how their rigged up.



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"Wear a leggie" started by Tryfan