Spinning too far in back rolls

> 10 years ago
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hvyprq
hvyprq
10 posts
10 posts
11 Jan 2009 8:14pm
I've been practicing my back rolls lately. I'm nailing a good portion of them which is all good...

One thing i still struggle with though is over-rotating if i get an unexpected amount of air (eg if it is windy and i start to "float" or i come off some chop). I've nailed a few doubles or triples doing this but not exactly what i had in mind and has ended badly and painfully quite a few times !

So the question is: how do you stop yourself over-spinning when doing a backroll ? If you go into a back roll and find you have too much rotation for your air time is there anyway out or do you just have to hang on for the ride ?

I sometimes have a related issue when doing jumps - i occassionally get some rotation from the wave/chop i come off and start a slow spin - any way to stop this or again do you have to just go with it ?

I have read all the instructionals etc and i've tried extending my legs etc...
daPole
daPole
WA
87 posts
WA, 87 posts
11 Jan 2009 8:33pm
it is all in your head - not literally that is.

Your head initiate and stops the rotation. When suspended in the air when u turn your head your body follows (like doing 360's snowboarding). Spot your landing soon enough to stop over rotating. Don't throw your head rapidly before you take off - that might fix the over rotating problem.

As for the jumps - I'd say it is either you initiate rotation (involuntarily) when popping off or simply starting rotation when you are in the air, with your head. Pay attention to where you look in the air and that will give you some sort of indication.


kiter zac
kiter zac
QLD
295 posts
QLD, 295 posts
11 Jan 2009 9:33pm
try straightening your legs, that may help in slowing the rotation down.
daPole
daPole
WA
87 posts
WA, 87 posts
11 Jan 2009 8:52pm
good point :)
myusernam
myusernam
QLD
6160 posts
QLD, 6160 posts
11 Jan 2009 11:33pm
agree with the head thing but also try extending your legs out straight (think mule kick to borrow an ole windsurfing term) to slow your rotation when going big. Nice also to try and do it as inverted as you can so stick your legs out above your body and wind it right out. enjoy.
SaveTheWhales
SaveTheWhales
WA
1913 posts
WA, 1913 posts
12 Jan 2009 12:28am
Try turning head slower - rather than throwing it round aggressively, if the kite is at 45 & ahead of you - its going to pull you round anyway. Then spot the landing point & push the bar out to let you drop in... worked for me

cheers
echostorm
echostorm
QLD
1245 posts
QLD, 1245 posts
12 Jan 2009 5:23pm
Simple answer (like everyone else has said) just straighten your whole body, or tuck in tighter and pull a double instead [}:)]
sebbu
sebbu
WA
154 posts
WA, 154 posts
12 Jan 2009 4:48pm
Along with the body positioning advice, forward momentum will pull you out of your rotation too, so pulling hard on your front hand when you're about half way to three quarters of the way around will get your forward momentum to stop you at one spin. (the more elaborate implication of this is with F16s - where the horizontal pull of the kite makes in darn near impossible to do a double back roll with kiteloop)
kevinwd1
kevinwd1
QLD
125 posts
QLD, 125 posts
12 Jan 2009 7:57pm
[I sometimes have a related issue when doing jumps - i occassionally get some rotation from the wave/chop i come off and start a slow spin - any way to stop this or again do you have to just go with it ?]


Lean back, put your feet and board above you and look up at the kite after you leave the water. A bit like doing a deadman except you don’t let go of the bar .This solved my problems with any unwanted rotation in jumps. Still can’t land many though.
juggler
juggler
VIC
243 posts
VIC, 243 posts
12 Jan 2009 9:11pm
throw in a kiteloop also, stops the kite falling out of the sky, looks sweet & helps with over rotation
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