A soft top is generally wider and broader than its epoxy or fiberglass equivalent. The best indicator to how well a surfboard floats, is the amount of liters a surfboard has. A normal 6’0 PU board might have 30 liters while a 6’0 soft top might have 45 liters of volume. The more volume, the more float and buoyancy. Hence, a common saying in surfing is foam is your friend!
When the waves small – chances are that the guy on the soft top will catch more waves than the guy on the narrow shortboard. More volume allows you to ride longer waves, as it requires less energy to float. In other words, extra volume will allow you to cover flat sections.
The same applies when there is wind. Onshore and cross shore winds create choppy waves. A foamie will allow a surfer to paddle earlier and muscle through bumpy rides.
All in all, a soft top board will allow you to surf more days – as you can still have fun when the conditions aren’t epic. However, when the waves are glassy and hollow – boards with high volume are probably not be the best option. Longboarding in barreling waves is really difficult. To sum up: On your foamie you will have tons of fun in small and fat waves!
If your home spot is a city beach it makes sense to ride a soft top board. I wish that more people would ride one. This will definitely decrease the amount of painful collisions in the water.
We all know this feeling when a 10 foot hard shell SUP enters the crowded lineup. This can’t be good! Or foil boards – even worse. There are already municipalities, like that of Anglet, that have forbidden foil boards in the lineup (source: Surfertoday). Plus: I see more and more people with helmets on. Is that really where we’re heading?
Should we make our heads harder or our boards softer, I ask?
On a summer Saturday chances are that there’ll be loads of people in the lineup. I prefer to ride a foamie. Just as much fun, less hassle.
When I see hand crafted €1000 longboards in the surf shop I always think: Beautiful, but how are you going to get it to the actual beach? We don’t all own beach front properties.
For most surfers, a large part of their surfing life consists of getting to the beach and back. Whether your weekly trip to the sea includes a bike, a van, a tram or a bus – you’re going to ding your beloved board – eventually.
As said, foamies are light weight and can handle dings much better then hard boards.
Soft tops are a good option if you transport your board by bike to the beach regularly. I have to admit I dropped my foam board once. But it only had a few scratches. If I had dropped my epoxy board on the concrete like that, I would have to get it repaired for sure!
High performance surf boards crack easily. A collision with another surfboard could mean expensive repair costs to fix the epoxy or fiberglass coating. And the worst thing is: if you crack the top layer of your board, water can enter the inner part of the board and soak the foam. This can make your surfboard heavier – even after the repair. When the top layer is seriously cracked, you better keep the board out of the water. Imagine pristine blue sets rolling in, and you have to end your session right then and there.
We’ve increasingly seen surf brands work with closed-cell foam instead of open-cell foam. This technology avoids that water enters the foam cells. This saves you from abandoning an epic session, but you’ll still have to get your board to a surfboard repair.
If you’re regularly going on surf trips you also should consider bringing a foamie as your weapon of choice. Every surfer I know has had the unpleasant experience of unpacking their board after a long flight and finding cracks and dings at the rails. Sure, you can turn to your travel insurance for help, but besides the financial side it’s just a bad start of your trip.
On road trips you might want to tie your board on the roof of your car. With the right roof racks and padded board bags you’ll be able to transport your boards easily across the continent.
When strapping your foamie on the roof rack you have to make sure that you apply pressure. However, too much pressure can result in pressure dings on your PU board. Soft tops are more flexible and resistant to pressure marks.
Do soft tops degrade at all? Soft top surf boards wear out, just like any other item that you use regularly. There’s not much you have to do in terms of maintenance – just make sure you get any cuts or cracks repaired. Read about how to repair a soft board here.
The soft top revolution really took off when some high profile professional surfers started riding foamies.
Pro surfers like Jamie O’Brien and Kalani Robb have tons of really fun videos of them surfing ridiculous breaks (I wouldn’t even call them surf spots) on soft tops. The soft top allows them to surf tricky reefs without having to throw away their precious board after each session. Some pro surfers are seriously into foamies, as you can read here.
Now, I’m not saying that when you get yourself on a foamie you can do reef hops like Kalani, but for experienced surfers it is proven that soft tops definitely open up a whole new playground.
I’ve noticed that at my home break at low tide most surfers leave the water. The waves crash on the shallow sand bottom and become tricky and even dangerous to ride. On a soft top I feel confident in riding shallow shore breaks.
I still have an emotional scar of that day I let my best friend ride my new fish board and she managed to get a 10 cm hole in it. That hurt so bad. It also taught me…
Now I know better. If we’re going to surf together, you’re getting my soft top!
A foamie is not only easier to ride for beginners – both kids and grown-ups alike – but is also less risky. A 7’0 or 8’0 foam board can be a great toy for surfers of all abilities and thus makes an essential part of a social surfers’ quiver. Because soft tops have a better resistance to holes and cracks it makes it easier to lend them out. That’s why you see more surf schools switching to soft top quiver. It saves them so much work on ding repairs!
This is the truth: Since I started riding my Olaian 6′ my surfing has gotten more playful. I surfed without a leash (don’t recommend).
I’ve surfed my board backwards (do recommend) and I have swapped my board with friends in the water (do recommend).
I have this new habit of skimboarding the board through the shoreline before I paddle out. Because there’s less harm in the board, I goof around a lot more.
We have a joke among my mates that is: If you ride a foamie you’re allowed to drop in. However I don’t recommend this! Really!
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In terms of lessons or not - I think it depends on how much help the instructor is actually giving. Is s/he just around and perhaps going 'paddle paddle' or actually giving useful tips (most instructors tend to do the former...). Are you totally reliant on the instructor or starting to be independent?
You obviously need, at some stage, to start getting confidence in being out there by yourself and you need to start figuring out how to do things by yourself (and not, for example, rely on an instructor to say 'paddle now' to get your timing right, or give you a push into the wave).
My general feeling is that people should take a few lessons and then aim to spend maybe 20 sessions or so by themselves. If you feel that some more lessons at the end of that will help, then take some more. If you feel after 10 sessions that you are getting nowhere and just cant progress, then get another lesson; in both situations you should try to understand what exactly is not working and get some instruction on more specific skills (eg is it timing, or the pop up, or bottom turns etc)
Your learning curve is steep and progress will be slow. It may be quite a while until you are catching and standing up on 50% of the waves attempted - that is pretty normal. Just stay optimistic and persistent and you will get there
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