No frog kicking and lots of hand waving.
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Yes. There is a physiological basis for the strain experienced from flutter kicking with flat fins. Something I solved by looking at the natural kick strength of our leg first. Personally, I and most of us move more efficiently flutter kicking. Frog kicking may have taken hold in training through cave diving, but it is as much a fix, compensation for fins that work against your natural kick strength.
Honestly, I don't see anything remotely resembling a proper frog kick in that video - It's mostly pretty rapid flutter kicking. BTW, it appears his fins drop when he stops kicking so I don't see his fins lifting his legs at all?
I had the same “vintage Cousteau” thought - this definitely did not look like a relaxed diver. He looked almost frantic in his motions.The diver look either like a nervous free diver with a scuba equipment or an image coming from the vintage Cousteau stuff. He might not last long with his tank...
I’ve never seen anyone flutter kicking near the bottom and not kicking up sand as the flutter kick sends water down to the bottom unless it is a really low amplitude kick? I’m curious as to how you do this?There are few products in the diving industry that can elicit the variety of emotions that FFs can. One one level they are just another pair of fins, but because of their unusual appearance and mixed reputations people who have never handled a pair approach the subject with a bias. I don't know how to frogkick, and I'm too old to learn, but I can flutter with the best of them in my FFs,
leaving the sand behind unchurned.