What are the Health Benefits of Surfing
February 07, 2020There are many health benefits, both physically and mentally, that can be gained with surfing. It has great benefits for your body and fitness level but it also helps you maintain a healthy mental state and a positive attitude towards life. Additionally you are enjoying the outdoors, the beach, meeting new people or having fun with your friends. It’s an exciting, fun and challenging sport that will add value to your life.
These are our top health benefits of surfing:
1 CARDIOVASCULAR HEALTH
Regular exercise has been proven to reduce the risk from suffering or dying from heart-related problems. Surfing is an activity that requires you to be physically active, which will increase your heart rate as it tries to supply enough oxygen into your blood to to let your muscles better work in your body. A healthy cardiovascular system allows for easy breathing and gives you the ability to undertake any type of strenuous activities.
2 STRESS RELIEF
There is no better way to relax body and soul than to go for a surf. Surfing gives you the opportunity to push your limits or just relax and have fun in the ocean. The energy you put in and get out of your session is entirely up to you. Surf your brains out and/or sit back, relax and enjoy the scenery.
3 IMPROVED FLEXIBILITY
During your surf session you will twist and turn your body in lots of different position as you get tossed around by the power of the waves. This stretching keeps your body flexible and improves your body’s mobility.
4 MUSCLE TONE
Surfing requires the constant use of your arms as you paddle around. This is also great workout for your chest, back and shoulder muscles. Also surfing helps to built good core muscles and leg strength. When you start to surf regularly you will see your body change.
5 SELF GRATIFICATION
Surfing is not the easiest sport to learn. It takes time, commitment and perseverance in order to progress. But once you commit and overcome this barrier, the rewards are huge. You will enjoy all the physical and mental benefits that surfing has to offer and have proven to yourself that you can achieve goals that at some point seem unattainable.
Surfing provides many health benefits including:
- cardiovascular fitness – from paddling
- shoulder and back strength – these muscles will strengthen from the paddling
- leg and core strength – once you’re standing up on the board, strong legs and a strong core will keep you up.
- The Cal State San Marcos study looks into health benefits of surfing. At Cal State San Marcos they are conducting a first-of-its-kind study to find the health benefits of recreational surfing, and what they've found is it's really good for the heart.
6. Cardiovascular, Systolic & Diastolic, And Heart Health
Paddling out against waves is no easy feat, it requires a tremendous amount of physical fitness. Consistent paddling gets the cardiovascular muscle pumping hard whilst using the muscles in your shoulders, back, arms and buttocks. Its certainly a work out! When you train your body to the point of being out of breathe overtime this lowers your blood pressure & resting heart rate, which decreases your risk of heart attacks, stroke and other diseases whilst keeping you fit and healthy! Surfing is a great way to add a healthy dose of cardio into your life.
7. Shoulder & Back Strength
Functional movements such as the single shoulder dislocate movement that is carried out whilst paddling through waves, strengthens the arms and the shoulders. It is a repetitive movement that contribute to the overall tone and strength of the deltoid, pectoral, and rotator cuff. The supine position used whilst lying face down on the board subtly engages the lumbar muscles which works to strengthen the back as a whole. Having a strong back leads to better stability, flexibility and endurance - essential for surfing.
8. Leg & Core Strength
Leg strength is another benefit of surfing, think of an hour session as the equivalent of a session of squat jumps/burpees. You are constantly changing levels from, chest pressed to the floor, to fully extended whilst in a standing squat. This contributes wildly to leg strengthening exercises, and can match any “big leg day” you had planned for the gym. Abdominal muscles are used to stabilise you in a solid position whilst lying, sitting and standing on the board. Your balance comes entirely from your core, and this part of your body is being worked during all stages of a surf session.
9. Outdoors In Natural Environment
Remember that feeling when you were a child of the wind in your hair as you flew high on the swings, running through puddles in your wellies, and rolling in fallen autumn leaves in the park with your family. Breathing in fresh clean air helps to combat stress, low mood and fatigue.
10. Calorie Burner
According to various government health sources, the exact figure is hard to land on. On average an 180-pound person surfing for 30- 60 minutes can burn as many as 130 to 260 calories. This depends on the intensity of the session. Battling through dumpy sets is much for taxing on the body, that paddling out at ease and catching smooth, clean, green waves. Regardless of the figure the benefits of getting out there, massively outweigh the alternative of sitting on your bum!
11. Tone Overall Body
Your physic stays trim with regular surf training, its a constant resistance training exercise as you use your own body weight. Paddling strength is hard to replicate in a gym or at home, so the best way to tone up your arms, bum, legs, and back muscles is to paddle whenever possible! All the pros train on flat water days by just paddling without waves. Start by doing 20 minutes paddling in one direction and back.
12. Cool Water Good For Body/ Boost Immune System
Regular submergence in cold water has been cited as having an incredible benefit on the body. It promotes a feeling of invigoration due to the release of stress hormones. Cold water pressure is hugely anti-inflammatory and can ease tension, headaches and pain. Hence why we’re always being told to bathe injuries in ice. Cold water is rumored to heighten your body pre-disposed metabolic rate, as the temperature of the water forces the body to heat up at a much faster rate than normal, switching on the fire and burning calories.
Note: (Please be warned of the effects of cold shock - which can be fatal. See link in references.)
13. Vitamin D Dose
The vitamin D you get from being out in the sun is essential for strong bones, as it regulates the amount of calcium and phosphorus in the blood. Being deficient in Vitamin D can lead to low energy, low mood and fatigue. Being out in the fresh air and the natural sunlight regulates your circadian rhythm and releases happy hormones. Delightful!
14. Improved Sleep Quality
Being outside increases melatonin which, hand in hand with your circadian rhythm helps you maintain a healthy sleep pattern, eg, falling asleep faster and promoting a more restful sleep. Physical exercise also helps you sleep due to physical exhaustion, helping you fall asleep faster, for longer, and gets you into a deeper sleep as your body needs to repair the muscles worked from the day before. Being outside, being colder than usual, and facing the elements and being tumbled by waves requires energy, this will make you feel an energized version of depleted by the evening. Enjoy your evening meal and take it slow with a warming cup of tea.
15. Improved Balance
The most appraised benefit of surfing is the quality of your overall body balance. Without balance and agility, you would not be able to remain standing on the surf board. Enhanced balance is a functional movement that is vital for everyday function, ie, bike riding, standing up straight using your core, skateboarding, yoga, standing a particularly wobbly tube!
16. Increased Flexibility
Better levels of flexibility enable for fluid surfing and also aids in the prevention of injuries both on and off the surfboard. You are situated mostly in a straddle position, this transposes into frog pose in ashtanga yoga, which widely opens the hip ball and socket, increasing movement and freedom around the joint. The motion used by your shoulders (over head then down by your side) is what is called “shoulder dislocates” in sports such as gymnastics and Crossfit. This motion helps to lubricate the joint and allow for an easier range of movement if practiced over time. Have you ever noticed your initial overhead paddle strokes of the session are stiffer compared to being on the water for 20 minutes?
17. Encourages To Fuel Body With Correct Nutrition
Here’s a fun fact. Surfing makes you starving. ‘Hank marvin’ kind of starving. Being in the water is calorie burner, especially for long periods of time. Your body has to adapt differently to what it’s used to on land, it has to balance itself constantly to stop you toppling over, it has to maintain your head a level above water for obvious reasons, and be constantly on the look out for threats (big waves, scary sea creatures, other surfers, the location of your board) whilst keeping your body at a constant core temperature that the water will be trying to adapt. All this inner computing requires energy. Energy comes from our food. You’re more than likely going to need the correct amount to fuel your sport. What a great excuse to eat properly! Vegetables like sweet potatoes, mushrooms, broccoli and beans are all full of protein to nourish the fibres of your muscles and give you enough gusto to get through a session. Eat 30 minutes after surfing to avoid feeling sluggish and overly exhausted.
18. Skin & Hair Health
Salt water is a natural exfoliant, it detoxes the face of pollutants gained from products, chemicals, and pollution derived from city dwelling. The salt also acts as an exfoliant to the scalp and hair, effectively naturally cleansing from root to tip. Everyone loves salty beach babe hair! Don’t buy it in a bottle, get in the sea. Seaweed and saltwater are used in most blemish fighting skincare, so going directly to the source gives your face a healthy dose of natural cleansing.
19. Cognitive Function
Learning to read the ocean, having a wider meteorological knowledge breadth, upskilling on tides, rips, and currents widen your scope of knowledge and open your mind to new facts and information. It’s like one big old soaking wet soduko puzzle!
20. Offset Disease
Physical exercise, distinctly an activity as fun as surfing, contributes to the offset of the negative effects of stress, which can lead to low mood, depression and anxiety. Studies have revealed that regular exercise has a more profound effect on the health of the body and the decline in re-production of ‘bad cells’, whilst reduces inflammation, and detoxifying the body.
Emotional Wellbeing
21. Stress & Tension
Riding your body of stress and the negatives effects that correlate couldn’t be more of a priority. Stress and inflammation has been identified as a root and trigger of physical harm within the body. If you persistently feel, overwhelmed, anxious, wound up, suffer with headaches and problems with sleep then there is high chance you are struggling with symptomatic or real stress. Stress can make life feel tough and make day to day task completion a real challenge. It can seep into your home life, work life, and impact important relationships. A combination of exercise, being outdoors amongst nature, doing something fun and challenging releases stress hormones like cortisol, and endorphins the natural painkillers linked to improving mood and easing pain! What’s not to love?
22. Self Gratification & Body Confidence
It takes time, dedication and perseverance in order to advance when surfing. So once you commit and overcome this barrier, the rewards are immense. Proving to yourself that you can achieve your goals than once seemed unattainable give you a sense of enormous wellbeing. Individuals with a fear of water or the ocean are gratified more intensely after learning how to conquer the waves.
23. Stress relief & ‘The Zen Zone’
Stress can derive from all areas in modern life. Work life, home life, relationships, friendships, money, health, politics. Surfing allows an avenue for you to release your stress. You can momentarily forget your problems, become liberated, un-choked from the shackles of society. There is nothing else for you to think about apart from your board, your leash, and the oncoming waves. We coin this “the zen zone”. The Zen Zone is where you forget the presence of time, of others, of mundane problems that seem totally redundant or at least more manageable after a soul searching session in the sea. L - theanine is the chemical released alongside dopamine (the happy hormone habitually produced during exercise) and contributes to those delicious endorphin hits. Being in this “zen zone” and zoning out of life and into the sport inhibits the production of these hormones consequently making you scientifically feel happier!
24. Meeting Like Minded People; Finding your Tribe
“You become like the five people you spend the most time with. Choose carefully.”- Jim Rohn
The importance of finding your tribe is understated in this modern world. We are, more often that not, flung together with people we tend to share little in common with and would never have collided with in the natural world. Circumstance dictates your tribe.
The people around you have a significant impact on the choices you make, the energies you give out and the lenses you see this beautiful world through. Plus it’s easier to find people to go surfing with if they’re already your buddies. Road trips, surf trips, and camping are all better with friends! The community that the sport provokes is astonishing, actions as simple as parking the car, needing spare change, forgetting your towel, asking what size board people are on, whether they have any wax, a broken leash, a lost dog, a car key hub cab security swap. Surfing puts you in positions you wouldn’t be doing any other sport. You have a compulsion to talk about it! If you are starting out you are bound to crash into someone on the water, or drop in on their waves. There you go. Conversation started. No awkward small talk needed. You’ve found your tribe.
25. Purpose & Meaning
Having a reason to wake up. A reason to breathe. A reason to speak. A reason to smile. A reason to put on a cold, wet wetsuit makes life infinitely better. Whilst surfing might not be your life purpose - it’s a damn good start. Having a goal gives you unclouded clarity on what is important, and puts seemingly ‘unbeatable’ problems into perspective. Yielding a consistent drive and passion for something, engages your the inner computer mechanisms in your brain. Having passions and even a sense of purpose will assist you with goal setting, achieving hard tasks, feeling more purposeful and productive - and more creative and awesome. Try it with surfing, make it your challenge to double the amount of times you got in the water last year. Even if last year was only once; this year make it the year of two surfs!
“Seawater is rich in minerals like magnesium, zinc, iron and potassium, which each alone have fantastic benefits,” says Kevin. These minerals are anti-inflammatory, helping to heal and protect the skin barrier.
26. Sea water cleans your skin
The mineral salts team up with the sun to regenerate your skin. As a result, ulcers, lupus, acne, and psoriasis are some of the diseases that can be easily cured with sea water.
27. Sea water strengthens the immune system
The number of red blood cells increases between five to 20 percent after a swim or bath in the sea. The number of white blood cells increases even more. Sea water is a fantastic medicine for people with a weakened immune system, anemia, and high blood sugar levels.
28. Sea water slows down the development of rheumatism
Ocean water combined with exercise is a great medication for bone and muscle pain, arthritis, circulatory, and postsurgical issues.
29. Sea water reduces and eliminates anxiety
Because it contains magnesium, sea water will calm you down. People who live a stressful life are advised to go to the beach, not only for its relaxing atmosphere but also because of the soothing medicinal properties of sea water.
30. Sea water has cicatrization properties
Because it is rich in mineral salts such as sodium and iodine, ocean water has antiseptic and cicatrizing actions on you the skin.
31. Sea water improves breathing
People who suffer from asthma, severe cough, phlegm and other respiratory problems should go to the beach to breathe the breeze and swim in the sea. The salt water helps eliminate toxins and other elements that attack the lungs.
32. Sea water cleans out the large intestine
The ingestion of small amounts of ocean water facilitates the cleansing of the colon, detoxifies the body and renews the body's energies, especially in children.
33. Sea water helps fight liver and kidney problems
Ocean water accelerates the process of cell regeneration, especially those damaged by diseases such as cirrhosis. It also helps eliminate the excess water accumulated in the abdomen that occurs as a consequence of the disease.
34. Sea water prevents insomnia and reduces depressive symptoms
Because it helps normalize blood pressure and treats nervousness, a day at the beach will help you sleep better, and will naturally boost your mood.
Researchers looked at 100 years of studies and found evidence that negative ions could: help regulate sleep patterns and mood. reduce stress. boost immune system function. increase metabolism of carbs and fats. kill or inhibit the growth of harmful bacteria, viruses, and mold species, such as E.