nice
30 Days without Surfing from Driftwood Collective on Vimeo.
Monday, November 26, 2012
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
Saturday, July 28, 2012
How to photograph bodysurfing
Exhibit 1: Neck snapping brilliance caught with artful backlighting just prior to impact.
Photo Stolen from Korduroy.tv's Facebook page. whoops.
Labels:
pics
Monday, July 23, 2012
Part time Pros
Killer footage, dangerously stylish budgie smugglers, ESPN style instant replays. Bodysurfing has gone pro...part time.
Labels:
Fred David,
handplanes,
Hawaii,
videos
Friday, June 29, 2012
Tuesday, May 1, 2012
Sunday, April 29, 2012
ATTENTION: Aussie East Coast Bodysurf Competition
What: FLAT ROCK BODY SURFING INVITATIONAL
Where: Newcastle
When: August 11 (back up date Aug 25)
What Time: 7:30am.
Who: The invited few.
The Press Release for the 2012 Competition: all details here.
Press from the 2009 Invitational
Labels:
Australia,
Competition,
videos
Thursday, April 26, 2012
Yes
yes yes... we want it.
Though no complaints here.. with a fine easterly swell and the tides and stars aligned, the local points have been lit up.. I believe I saw one old codger at the Bower on the weekend, sliding locked in the curl for a good 50-100 metre ride, dry hair, and a hand made mega handplane providing a superlative, frictionless slide ...I felt weak and meek as I looked down at the log I'd dragged out with me thinking, "how could I compete with the hordes and their boards in such a competitive lineup?"
.... man up man
....next time nothing but the hand sled.
Monday, April 2, 2012
Bodysurfers can sell out too!
Ahh the 70's..when even bodysurfers could get a gig flogging stuff for a buck...
Bodywhomping goodness, with what looks like Mark Cunningham!?
Are ya Thirsty yet?
Bodywhomping goodness, with what looks like Mark Cunningham!?
Are ya Thirsty yet?
Labels:
Hawaii,
Mark Cunningham,
videos
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
Bloody Paul McCartney and underwater bodysurfing
A killer run of Jack McCoy underwater footage from Teahupo'o. Double the fun if you like Maccas music ..
Wednesday, March 14, 2012
Ancient Nick Carroll Interview
They’re Gnarlier Watermen Than Anyone
A view of bodysurfing from the standup world ...by Michael Zerman - April 21, 2001
Imagine an unbelievably gorgeous Australian beach, encircled by a natural amphitheatre that’s perfect for wave viewing. Picture a lineup of pulsing three meter faces formed by southern hemi swells emanating from the Antarctic shelf. Feel the warmth of a perfect autumn weekend for the opening event of the 2001 professional surfing tour (WCT).
Ah, the Rip Curl Pro at Bells Beach on the south-eastern coast of Australia-- a big wave location with a thirty year history as an international surfing event. We’re talking deuterium here.
Bells Beach at Easter is such an iconic event in the pantheon of standup surfing that it’s the perfect opportunity to pitch the bodysurfing question. So I’d arranged an interview with Nick Carroll , surf journalist and author, about the perceptions of bodysurfing by the mainstream surfing community.
Nick writes for Surfing magazine (USA) and Australian Surfing Life as well as providing features and daily news for the Swell.com website. He has a pretty good handle on the politics of the surf world, being a former competitor and the elder brother (and sometime trainer) of two-time 1980s world surfing champion, Tom Carroll.
ZERMAN: I first asked Nick about his bodysurfing experiences.
CARROLL: Well, I’ve body surfed ever since I was a tiny kid-- it seems almost more of a natural thing to do than to go surfing on a surf board. In the last five or six years I’ve been doing a lot of ocean swimming for training, in bigger surf. After I’d finish my training swim, and the surf’s four or six feet, then I would just hang and body surf for ages-- I’ve really enjoyed getting better at it. It’s such a great skill to have if you are a surfie, something like being a fish. It’s pretty cool.
ZERMAN: Last November tales of bodysurfing under the full moon at Hawaii’s Pipeline were first published online. A month later, with the North Shore competitions in full throttle, you and six times world standup champion, Kelly Slater, bodysurfed Ehukai and Pipeline under the next full moon. What’s the interest ?
CARROLL: It’s fun to surf at night but it’s also a bit dangerous-- harder to orient yourself with your board and you can get hurt with the surfboard flying around. So body surfing is the bitchin’ alternative, especially when you dive down and have a look under the water and the moon’s shining brightly.
ZERMAN: Many Australians live near the coast, learn to swim at the beach and can body surf almost naturally. But they never think of themselves as bodysurfers.
CARROLL: This is interesting. I think it’s one reason why Australians are such a sporty race-- we go down to the beach at an early age and end up doing Nippers (the pre-teenage members of Australia’s volunteer lifesaving clubs). This year at Newport, my home beach in Sydney, there was something like 250 nippers enrolled. A few of my mates and I had our kids at the Nippers and we were just flashing, "this is why Australians have such an extraordinary level of sporting achievements". Even when you are a little kid you go down to the beach and you are fricken doing things, and you are doing them in the water and that naturally leads to an easy relationship with the sea. It’s a huge contrast with the European heritage.
ZERMAN: Some Hawaiian and Californian bodysurfers are much more the big wave types, either bodysurfing the reefs at Pipeline in 15 to 20 foot faces or surfing the Wedge and dropping 20 feet into a sandy bottom. Then there are people who choose to bodysurf in four to six foot conditions or smaller.
CARROLL: Well it’s horses for courses really and it’s where you grow up. In Hawaii there’s a whole incredible mythology about Pipeline and that’s going to dominate your life if you grow up bodysurfing on the North Shore. In California I imagine it’s quite difficult to be a bodysurfer because most beaches don’t have waves that are very good for bodysurfing. So you have a specialized place like the Wedge and they get this whole mythology and it’s the big thing. In Oz, most beaches I surf at have pretty consistent waves that are good for bodysurfing-- they’re sharp edged, quick, peaky and hollow. So it can just be a part of your life and it’s probably not quite as mythological.
ZERMAN: When you’re body surfing as part of your ocean training do you have a sense of the body as a rail, a feeling that’s different from being on a stand up board?
CARROLL: The body is like-- it’s a tool you know, the same as a board, and you have to use different parts of your body. I’ve watched Don King on many surf trips and he’s just an excellent bodysurfer. I notice he’s a very long thin man with long arms and long legs and so he’ll use his body length really well. And then me, I’m kind of shorter and stumpier, so I’ve got to use different areas. I’ve used my stomach wall as a planing surface and I’ve used the latissimus [muscle]…
ZERMAN: Carroll points to the side of his torso…
CARROLL: I use that as a short, but gnarly rail line. I am only at the fringes of bodysurfing as a technique, but I imagine it’s different for every bodysurfer-- as dramatically as it is for different kinds of surf boards.
ZERMAN: You’ve been involved with surfing for more than twenty years as a journalist, editor and writer, and you’ve observed the growth of the championship circuit. Does the board surfing world have a perception about bodysurfing?
CARROLL: I don’t think many of the professional surfers really consider bodysurfing to be a sport in the way that they’re involved in a pro tour. But they also know that they aren’t very good at it. When they see guys who are good, like Mike Stewart (multiple world bodyboarding champion and ten times winner of the Pipeline Bodysurfing Classic) or Mark Cunningham (multiple winner of the Pipeline Bodysurfing Classic), they just get baffled.
I mean, I’m baffled.
In Hawaii this season I went for a surf at Rockpile, and Rockpile is a gnarly wave-- it’s thick, breaks quite a way out to sea and it’s really dangerous inside. So I’m paddling out (on my board), it’s an eight foot day and I’m thinking, "this is great, there’s hardly anyone out there". And I noticed this head bobbing around and I thought, "God is there a photographer out here?" And I paddle closer and it’s Stewart and he’s just out there bodysurfing.
ZERMAN: By himself?
CARROLL: Yes, totally.
So if standup surfers see bodysurfers in any way, it’s like me seeing Mike Stewart. That is, at the peak level they are gnarlier watermen than anyone... really
An article nicked, stolen, thieved etc..apologies to everyone..all rights and kudos to Michael Zerman
Labels:
Big waves,
Hawaii,
History,
Mike Stewart,
Pipeline
Tuesday, March 13, 2012
Immersion
Tim Bonython makes films about surfing and surf stuff. They are good. They are worth watching. His latest is Immersion.
A wee smattering of bodysurfing in the trailer, including some seal like maritime tom foolery underwater dolphin bodysurfing upside down..
The whole thing is worth watching..
Friday, February 17, 2012
Danny Hess making Handplanes Fullstop
Hess shaving wood. I saw a few of these when bumming around the States last year...super light, lithe, proportioned..they look good, and things that look good tend to go good....but they were alot bigger than I expected..I've never used a handplane that big.. must be a pain in the ass to swim with.. I'd probably just mount it on the wall and tell lies about the monster waves I caught with it.
from Mollusk Surf Shop on Vimeo.
from Mollusk Surf Shop on Vimeo.
Saturday, February 4, 2012
The Original Monster - Waimea Shorebreak
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
NEW directions in Higher tech augmented Bodysurfing
From across the ditch, over the hill and the ends of the earth comes new technology for high speed adventures. I need reviews, discussions, slow motion video analysis, design tweeks and full investigations of these new vehicles.
See more high speed ingenuity, and an amazing array of scaled surfing equipment including innovative low tech one and two handed hand planes at SLOP GROVELLER...all rights are theres.
Friday, January 20, 2012
Hold Yer Breath - The 12 second rule
Loving bodysurfing big messy beachbreaks and getting smashed and rolled is part and parcel..
Being comfortable holding my breath whilst under is important for me. It requires two things from you. Practice and peace.
This little rule helps with the second thing....
From" Bali and Indo Surf Stories blog"......Posted on February 28, 2011
(great blog full of seafaring/ surfing stories of adventure)..
The 12 Second Rule (of Wave Hold-downs)
Before reading further, hold your breath for twelve seconds.
Seriously. Twelve seconds.
Easy as a mouthful of black rice pudding, wasn’t it? (If you’re old Bali; if you’re new Bali, make that easy as organic tofu scrambled with sun-dried tomatoes with a side dish of wild brown rice, seasoned with natural sea salt and hand-picked jungle herbs).
One lesser known but quite relevant fact of surfing is that most waves, even ten foot boomers, do not hold you down for longer than twelve seconds, and of those that do, most let you up by fifteen seconds.
I was told this fact some twenty years ago by a heavy water man, an Alaska fisherman, North Shore regular, blue water speargun hunter. We were out at Nusa Dua. This was the wet season that Nusa Dua Did Not Stop, and after days and days of double overhead surf with spring tide currents to match, that afternoon was a pleasant overhead on a calm neap tide. I did not believe Mike when he told me. I said no way. After all, I’d spent not an insignificant fraction of my life during the previous week proving him wrong. Those hold downs were way longer than twelve seconds.
But then I started timing my hold downs, and counting others from cliff tops and channels and boat railings. And sure enough. He was right.... Read more...
all rights are theirs.
Monday, January 16, 2012
The Dunlop Hand Surfa - retro plastic
Labels:
Australia,
equipment,
handplanes,
Sydney
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