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| Insure that you are comfortable with whatever foot you placed forward. |
| Place your arms ON EACH SIDE of your front knee. Your weight should be
about 60% forward on the board. Remember to place more than 1/2 of your
weight on the front foot when getting up. Shift your weight to the back
foot only after you have successfully gotten up. |
| Squat down as much as you can. It is MUCH EASIER to swing to an upright
position when you are close to the board. |
| Keep the board on its side while in the water. Relax and let the boat
cause the board to swing around into the forward position. Do NOT attempt
to stop the board from swinging around, or do not help it swing around
either -- just go with the flow. |
| DO NOT go too fast. Someone said in an earlier post
to "give
him full throttle until he gets up" or something like that. THIS IS
THE SINGLE BIGGEST PROBLEM that people (especially large people) have when
getting up. DO NOT GO TO FAST! If he has a problem getting up, TRY GOING
SLOWER! |
| Try using a shorter rope, attached to a ski pylon if possible. For some
reason I have very good luck getting stubborn new bees up on a VERY short
rope (say 20 feet behind the boat). I tried this because I noticed the
rope flipping up and down a lot with new bees. The short rope eliminated
this. I always wakeboard on a somewhat shorter rope -- makes wake jumping
more fun. |
| GRADUAL! Speed increase. It’s hard for a beginner to keep his balance
on this new "slippery" feeling board. Any sudden movements are
going to contribute to the newbie losing balance. It's good to drag them
a little and let them get the feel of the resistance before starting (hit
it), but even when you hit it, be sure it's very gradual and smooth. |
| A short rope length will help. After there up, it's just as hard to stay
up as it was to get out of the water (at least for the first couple of
rides). The short rope will cut down on the amount of slack. I've been
using about 45-50-length rope. |
| Stay SLOW! After the newbie gets up. Keep the speed under 16mph. This
requires a good driver who knows his boat well enough to get it planed
without going over 16 mph. Don\'t rely on the speedometer. A common speedometer
will have false readings until the boat is planed out. Just get a feel
for keeping the boat slow. |
| After you get used to staying up on the board and getting out of the
water, you\'ll probably want to adjust your speed to somewhere between
14-18mph depending on what type of tricks you're attempting. You'll also
have to adjust your rope length to get the best-formed portion of the wake |
| After you’re up, GO BIG! |
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