Thanks for this Gents! More of this is needed. That move where he has the fuse in hand and uses the mast base to punch the board forward with is new to me. We get side shore winds like that regularly here, I will give that a try.
I'm vertically challenged. Last couple of shorebreak sessions were only possible through the assistance of someone taller than me. Being short, 95cm mast and shorebreak are potential for a nasty afternoon. ![]()
Agree with utc-4, nice move holding the fuse. Thanks for the video - sometimes it's the small things we learn that make a difference.
Looks like the sea floor shelf drops off really quickly at your beach JJ, and that's the main issue with east coast Florida, you walk out, it gets deep, but within 20 feet it switches back to waist deep for another 30-40 feet and then back to deep, so you have 2 shore breaks to contend with.
When I launched one time using the heavier hover glide foil with the wizard 130 I held the kit/foil mast so long waiting for a break in the shore dump that I ended up with a partial bicep tear
.
Simon's method looks interesting, but man did it look like the foil gets close to his face at times!


Ok, but going out is the easy part. It's coming back in that is the real challenge. ![]()
I reckon coming in is easier holding the gear on the fuse and mast as Simon does to go out.
Ride in on then fall behind the last set wave, drop down and jump off when touch sand, point the board to the beach and let waves break on your back pushing you in.
Easy as long as you have clear wind to fly the sail ![]()