In wakeboarding, Wake to Wake (W2W) is the gold standard for jumps. It describes a move where you launch off one side of the wake and land completely on the downward slope of the opposite side.
How It Works
When you ride behind a boat, the hull creates two distinct walls of water. To clear the wake “wake to wake,” you must:
- Edge: Cut hard toward the wake to build line tension.
- Pop: Stand tall as you hit the crest of the first wave to launch upward.
- Clear the “Flats”: Fly over the turbulent water in the middle (the “trough”).
- Land: Touch down smoothly on the back of the second wave.
Why It Matters
- Smoothness: Landing on the down-slope of the second wake acts like a shock absorber. It feels much softer than landing in the “flats” (the hard, flat water in the center).
- Style: It shows you have enough speed and control to clear the entire gap.
- Progression: Most advanced tricks, like backrolls or 360s, require a wake-to-wake jump to give the rider enough “air time” to complete the rotation.
Common Mistakes
- Casing the Wake: This happens when you don’t jump far enough and hit the peak of the second wake, which usually leads to a bumpy landing or a fall.
- Landing in the Flats: If you jump too high but not far enough, you land in the middle. This puts a lot of stress on your knees because the water there doesn’t have a slope to redirect your momentum.
