Going left - going right should be same for kneelos but....
Moderator: Moderator
Going left - going right should be same for kneelos but....
Anyone else have this issue?
Going left - better top turns -snaps - tail slides - roundhouse cutbacks
Going right - better tube-rider - better off the top - better airs - better close-out reos/floaters
I always put this down to my skateboarding - I skated natural and have always felt I was surfing backhand on lefts, forehand on rights. My turns seem to have a totally different style either way. Maybe its just a natural left/right bias.
I've spoken to other kneelos and they too have different biases.
Interested to know if anyone else has this experience in left/right bias and how they have overcome it if possible.
Cheers
Going left - better top turns -snaps - tail slides - roundhouse cutbacks
Going right - better tube-rider - better off the top - better airs - better close-out reos/floaters
I always put this down to my skateboarding - I skated natural and have always felt I was surfing backhand on lefts, forehand on rights. My turns seem to have a totally different style either way. Maybe its just a natural left/right bias.
I've spoken to other kneelos and they too have different biases.
Interested to know if anyone else has this experience in left/right bias and how they have overcome it if possible.
Cheers
- K-man
- Legend (Contribution King!)
- Posts: 1461
- Joined: Sun Apr 11, 2004 12:35 pm
- Location: north of san francisco
post
I do remember this topic from awhile ago Anyways,My left knee is forward of my right knee...Because the top of my right foot is crossed over the bottom of my left foot centered on the stringer,as versus spread on each side of the stringer.
Da feets don't/won't sit flush on the deck,thats why.
Go left,go right,makes no difference,its all good,just different.,no fret-no sweat.''Sit on the floor and try it''...
Tried flippers drove me crazy,no like!
cheers
Da feets don't/won't sit flush on the deck,thats why.
Go left,go right,makes no difference,its all good,just different.,no fret-no sweat.''Sit on the floor and try it''...

cheers
I mostly knee ride 'goofy-foot'. My right knee is slighly forward of my right knee...when I ride lefts. Going right, I sometimes keep that stance ('backside') or sometime have my left knee slightly forward ('switch stance to regular foot').
I'm a mess...but having fun. I snowboard, stand-up and skate board goofy and this is probably why I prefer lefts and tend to ride them better.
It's interesting to study the KB'er pic's on our site. I've noticed that most of the Aussies have a very perpendicular (to the stringer) and wide stance. They rotate at the waist to turn and face the wave. And of course they rip. I've tried it, but fall into my old habit.
I'm a mess...but having fun. I snowboard, stand-up and skate board goofy and this is probably why I prefer lefts and tend to ride them better.
It's interesting to study the KB'er pic's on our site. I've noticed that most of the Aussies have a very perpendicular (to the stringer) and wide stance. They rotate at the waist to turn and face the wave. And of course they rip. I've tried it, but fall into my old habit.
/Yogi
- Bintang Bob
- Ripper (more than 100 posts)
- Posts: 263
- Joined: Fri Nov 12, 2004 11:54 pm
- Location: Gisborne, New Zealand
I have noticed this for years. People who ride with their back to the wave have great cut backs. People that face the wave, when they ride, tube ride well.
If the outside knee (the one away from the wave) is even half an inch ahead of the inside knee it allows you to open your hips and face the wave. It is much easier to bury the rail on a bottom turn if you are facing the wave. It is easier to lean into a tube if you are facing the wave. Your off the tops will be much better if your back is to the wave.
I ride rights facing the wave, but I ride mushy lefts backside and hollow, fast lefts swithstance or facing the wave. I only have to move my knee about one to two inches to change and can actually do it while riding, although I never notice that I did it.
Most stand ups think kneeboarders all surf the same. They think we all face forward on our boards with our knees exactly side by side.
The kneeriders that I see are so different from each other.
That is the beauty of it.
If the outside knee (the one away from the wave) is even half an inch ahead of the inside knee it allows you to open your hips and face the wave. It is much easier to bury the rail on a bottom turn if you are facing the wave. It is easier to lean into a tube if you are facing the wave. Your off the tops will be much better if your back is to the wave.
I ride rights facing the wave, but I ride mushy lefts backside and hollow, fast lefts swithstance or facing the wave. I only have to move my knee about one to two inches to change and can actually do it while riding, although I never notice that I did it.
Most stand ups think kneeboarders all surf the same. They think we all face forward on our boards with our knees exactly side by side.
The kneeriders that I see are so different from each other.
That is the beauty of it.
Wow thanks a lot
I to have that slight left knee forward stance - I can see when I look at the knee depressions on my boards. Its almost negligible but definitely there.
I must try the "switchknee" stance on both lefts and rights - and see what difference it makes. Its hard to adjust these things especially after 20+ years in the water, but I've fixed tech flaws in the past.
Thanks guys for your comments.
P.S Just a comment on the Aussie knees wide stance. Its what I was told to do as a grommet - wide stance - better balance - more potential energy can be created by winding up the hips through the turns. Also it stops you from riding with that kooky gaylord seagull style - which results from having a narrow base - because then you need to use your arms to balance not unlike a tight-rope walker.
I must try the "switchknee" stance on both lefts and rights - and see what difference it makes. Its hard to adjust these things especially after 20+ years in the water, but I've fixed tech flaws in the past.
Thanks guys for your comments.
P.S Just a comment on the Aussie knees wide stance. Its what I was told to do as a grommet - wide stance - better balance - more potential energy can be created by winding up the hips through the turns. Also it stops you from riding with that kooky gaylord seagull style - which results from having a narrow base - because then you need to use your arms to balance not unlike a tight-rope walker.
-
- Legend (Contribution King!)
- Posts: 309
- Joined: Sun Oct 22, 2006 3:58 pm
- Location: La Jolla, Ca.
-
- Legend (Contribution King!)
- Posts: 1873
- Joined: Mon Apr 07, 2003 9:02 pm
-
- Ripper (more than 100 posts)
- Posts: 190
- Joined: Mon Aug 15, 2005 12:22 am
- Location: West Coast South Oz
left kneeitis
Mark interesting point as I am left handed also and definately prefer going left, although it's not all that important and it helps that 80% of the waves where I am are lefts!!
getting there is often as good as getting there
-
- Ripper (more than 100 posts)
- Posts: 283
- Joined: Tue Jul 19, 2005 5:16 pm
- Location: Escondido Ca.
I don`t understand the goofy foot thing when it comes to KBing. But for me, I have no problem going either way. I don`t mean for that to be a cocky statement. But what I do notice is that when I go left, i`m more aggressive. When I go right, I can do stronger power moves. I have surfed with other KBers and 99 % of the time, they only want to go one way. Thats fine, i`ll go the other... Would it be fair to say that each of us has a strong and a weak side ??
- PaulN
- Ripper (more than 100 posts)
- Posts: 173
- Joined: Wed Aug 30, 2006 10:52 am
- Location: SLC - soon to be Florida.
Either do I. When I surfed standup I pretty much only went left as a goofyfoot. That's one of the reasons I love kneeboarding, double the wave choicetoofast3 wrote:I don`t understand the goofy foot thing when it comes to KBing.

SCRUB IT KOOK!!!