mort69 said..
Haha foam ball yeaahhh,colas I get the logic but I'm looking for some hindsight when it goes wrong.I like being attached to my shortboard when eating **** but I get the feeling a large board could be a bit of a hand full when getting dragged down the reef under water.
The issue is also that you do not have both hands free to grab the board.
Seriously, being caught in a dangerous situation is ... much more dangerous with a SUP than a shortboard, so you want to avoid it in the first place. Moreover, the chance of breaking a SUP in half in the impact zone is always there.
For instance, if the tide went up and I have to tackle an Hossegor shorebreak to get in, I wont hesitate to paddle a mile to get out safely.
Of course, once a SUP expert, your small-volume SUP will drag less on wipeouts than a prone longboard :-)