Re: Wakeboard help
Well you are going to want a board about 57 inches long and he will want one about 51 inches long. He is probably big enough for an adult board.
You will want to pull between 17-22mph. It all depends on your comfort level once you master getting up and staying up. I would recommend you start at about 18mph.
You will also want to go out when the water is the calmest, early morn and later in the evening when the wind is low and the boat traffic is low. The more chop there is the more energy it will take to keep control.
You both should practice on skate boards. They have the same fundamentals as wake boarding and it will help you get a head of the learning curve because they turn the same and the stance is similar. If you have a street or drive with a slight downhill. You can cost down using your body weight to lean and turn the board, it is the same on the water.
It will also allow you to practice having soft knees. The wake board is designed to get air born, and if you don?t have soft shock absorbing stance you will get air born and you don?t want that yet. As the board is riding over waves and chop and as you learn to go in and out of the wake, you will want to absorb the shock with your knees as smooth as possible.
If you tense up and lock your knees and the board hits a wave or the wake its going to bunny hop and you will find yourself in the water.
The next import thing is to not hold the rope in front of you as if your where skiing but will want it close to your hip. If you where to stand as if your riding a surf board you would slightly twist your upper half and bring the rope down to about hid level. If that, makes sense.
To help you get up on the board remember, don?t let the boat pull you, forcing you to bend. You will want to create some resistance as if you are playing tug of war with the boat. What I found is easy for me ( I have a bad leg so it?s a little differant) is, once the boat starts to pull I lean back extending my body and using my upper leg strength push against the board. That causes the water in front of the board to build pressure and force the board to plan. I just continue that motion through my body allowing the boat to do most of the work, because I use my weight to keep the rope tight until I am on plan, the same way you would if your where standing on a ledge holding a rope and leaning back keeping your body straight as a board making the rope hold your weight.
Hope that makes sense.
Hears a video of me and some freinds I made laste years as we where learning; It funny
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=29hP6D-NJ1E
Here are some videos to teach you.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qT0O-HM--6M&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0bjXtz2-bHM&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EkQhVeNEd18&feature=related