admin wrote:
In my November Boardshorts thread I realized that a number of you are WAY better at cold water riding than I have ever been. The older I get of course the less I wanted to brave the cold but with a slip 5 minutes from the office now our crew has decided they want to brave the water this winter.
We all purchased some O'neill 3/2 suits. I have access to all the O'neill products but even at cost a drysuit is still a few hundred bucks. If the crew decides to ride a bunch I will probably order one but until then I figured a cheaper wetsuit would be fine.
What are your tips?
Cooler with warm water - to warm up hands and feet? Or pour down suit?
One of those surf changing hoodies?
Blankets?
Do you surf off the platform in cold weather or dock start?
Do you ride multiple sets?
This could all change as soon as one of us drops into lake Austin in Jan and realizes how cold lake Austin really gets.
After reading through this thread, I realized you're basically describing most of our season (which is May to October.) Our test drive in January had air of 32 and water of 32. But even in the summer, it is a rare day someone on our boat doesn't use the heater. So yes, a heater is great.
A towel doesn't cut it. Get blankets. Keep the windshield closed. Use the windscreen. When you get out of the water, get dry (take the wetsuit off) and put on dry warm clothes including a shell (i.e. ski coat/rain coat.) Wear a ski hat.
Deck starts/stops for sure. Practice them when its warm so you can do them when it isn't! I do less tricks that I'm likely to fall doing when it is really cold too.
Those showers are really nice if you have one. I think they're aftermarket only in Axis, but you can buy it standard with a malibu. Fill the suit with warm water before starting.
A 3/2 is really a fairly minimal suit. I use a 5/4 and booties when it is really cold. Keep your hands up out of the water while waiting for the boat to turn around.
Don't take kids. Don't take whiners. High tolerance for suffering is a must. Remember that water can only get so cold.