Heat Attainment and Retention in Surfers with and without a Land-Based Warm-Up and Accompanying Passive Heat Retention

Author:

Cook Christian J.12ORCID,Serpell Benjamin G.13,Hanna Lauren J.13,Fox Aaron4,Fourie Phillip J.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Science and Technology, University of New England, Armidale, NSW 2350, Australia

2. Hamlyn Centre, Imperial College, London SW7 2AZ, UK

3. Geelong Cats Football Club, Geelong, VIC 3220, Australia

4. School of Exercise and Nutrition Sciences, Deakin University, Geelong, VIC 3220, Australia

Abstract

Surfing is a growing, high-participation recreational and competitive activity. It is relatively unique, being performed on, in, and through water with a range of temperatures. In other sports, warm-up and heat retention have proved useful at augmenting performance and ameliorating injury risk. Little work has been carried out examining this in surfing. The purpose of this work was to measure thermal profiles in surfers with and without warm-up and passive heat retention, and secondarily to assess any potential influence on free surfing. A repeated measures pre- and post- design was adopted whereby participants surfed in an artificial wave pool following an active warm-up combined with passive heat retention (experimental condition) and after no warm-up (control). Core body temperature was measured both occasions. Our results showed increases in core body temperature were greater for the experimental condition versus control (p = 0.006), and a time effect exists (p < 0.001)—in particular, a warm-up effect in the water itself was shown in both groups, possibly due to further activity (e.g., paddling) and wetsuit properties. Finally, performance trended to being superior following warm-up. We conclude that body warmth in surfers may be facilitated by an active warm-up and passive heat retention. In free surfing, this is associated with a trend towards better performance; it may also reduce injury risk.

Funder

University of New England Academic Pursuit Fund

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference35 articles.

1. Australian Sports Commission (2019). Surfing State of Play Report: Driving Participation & Engagement, Australian Sports Commission.

2. Australian Sports Commission (2022). Ausplay Focus, Australian Sports Commission.

3. A national assessment of the economic wellbeing impacts of recreational surfing in Australia;Manero;Mar. Policy,2024

4. Bardy, E., Mollendorf, J., and Pendergast, D. (2007, January 8–12). Active heating/cooling requirements for divers in water at varying temperatures. Proceedings of the 2007 ASME-JSME Thermal Engineering Summer Heat Transfer Conference, Vancouver, BC, Canada.

5. Hall, J., Lomax, M., Massey, H., and Tipton, M. (July, January 28). Thermal response of triathletes to 14C swim with and without wetsuits. Proceedings of the 15th International Conference on Environmental Ergonomics (ICEE XV), Portsmouth, UK.

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