Sunday, August 9, 2009
Peru
Had the chance to take a surf trip to Peru recently with 3 other friends.
Although I've actually surfed on a number of vacations to foreign countries,
this was the first true SURF trip I've ever taken. Crazy, huh?
Our group was headed to perfect left-hand pointbreaks and the 'longest
waves in the world'. Stoked!
Only, someone forgot to remind the ocean to send ample swell to
Peru while we were there. :-(
We actually scored super fun, playful waves on the first day of our
trip (it seemed like the swell gods were going to be smiling on us),
but the swell died off each day from then on. Four more days
of small and weak surf followed and things looked bleak surf-wise.
Luckily we were eating epic food the entire time, had unreal weather,
plenty of local brew, great accomodations right on the water,
and unbelievably perfect setups to check out all over the coast,
courtesy of our hilarious and classic guide, "Octopus".
Made the call to take a long drive south to 'one of the longest lefts in
the world', and ended up getting fun (albeit mushy) and long waves
for the last two days of the trip, salvaging what would have been a
pretty surf-starved trip. Yay! Pretty cool to be able to do 4 or 5 or
8 full roundhouse cutbacks on the same wave, then maybe pick
off another wave on your way back out for another 5 or so carves
and a looooong paddle back up the point.
I can't even fathom what some of the waves we saw and surfed would
be like with overhead waves everyday. Perfection, no doubt.
Another trip, perhaps?
Best fish I've ridden...
Got my hands on a Hynson 'Black Knight Quad 2' recently (stoked)
and I think I've decided that this is the best fish I've ever ridden.
I've been on the fish kick for the past few years, rotating between
twin-keels, twinzers, and quads. I've had quite a few that I've
really been stoked on, but this bad boy just flat out works in just
about every condition. Not just a groveler, yet not needing good
waves either (yet outstanding in both settings). Super loose when
you want it to be, more drive than you need to get you down
the line in a hurry, and so incredibly RIPPABLE if you push it hard.
The board is certainly capable of much more than I can give it,
but I'm finding I can surf so much more aggressively on this fish
than any other and am continually amazed at how well it translates
what I dish out into way more than I expect.
Good, good stuff...get one.
Saturday, May 9, 2009
How much foam is 'just right' for you?
Picked up another (yes, I know) board from Jacob Bullock the other day and
took it out for the first time today. When I first had it in my hands, I thought
the rails were WAY too beefy and that the board might possibly feel clunky
because of it. Dims are 6'4" x 21 1/4" x 2 5/8" with the volume completely
pulled out to the rails and a very flat deck. Well, guess what? I was wrong.
The board paddles really, really well, picks up waves with ease, and is
absolutely BUTTER on carves. After one session in fun reef waves, I think
the extra volume actually helped with gliding through the flats and keeping
momentum in soft, mushy waves. Did I mention butter?
I actually remembered a comment Bullock made about seeing me on my fish
the last time we surfed together....that it looked like I might not have enough
volume. Guess he was right. To be continued...
The board in question:
Sunday, April 5, 2009
9'5" Bullock beauty
Jacob Bullock had shaped me a 9'4" classic noserider last year that
I had really been enjoying for what it was...a classic style noserider.
Unreal tip-time, but wasn't the easiest to turn or the most
versatile log in general. I saw this model at his place that he had
shaped for another customer, and knew I had to have one. He calls
this model the 'Bully' since the original was shaped for a big Samoan
friend of his who's a bully...plus the fact that you can take all of the
waves you want with it. I call it 'Butter'.
I've only surfed this a couple of times so far, but from the very first
session, I knew this was what I was after. Catches waves like, well,
a bully, and is soooooooo smooth off the bottom, off the top and on
turns. To top it off, the board noserides at least as good (probably
better) than the original noserider. Best first impression I've ever
had from any longboard...and I've been on some really good ones.
If you're looking for an unbelievable all-around longboard, this is
the one. Already have another friend who ordered one and a bunch
of people asking about it as a possible next order.
Look forward to summer fun on this baby!
New shred sled from Brownfish
A while back, Gary (Brownfish) shaped me a really fun keel fin fish
based off of his beloved Pavel Superbank...but blown up to my size.
I've really enjoyed that board and have had some memorable
waves on it all over the place. Gary is somewhat of a hobbyist shaper
as he has a full-time career, wife and kids, house...the whole bit.
He shapes a few boards for friends and aquaintances and has, in a
very short period, become pretty damn skilled at turning foam
into fun surfing vehicles.
At the last Sacred Craft Surf Expo, I had come across an 'HP Keel'
fish that really interested me. Gary saw a comment I posted
about that board on the erBB and had apparently been throwing
around the idea for something similar (a keel fish meant for steeper,
better waves...a bit more pulled in and with a touch more rocker).
He asked if I was interested in him shaping one for me, making
it very difficult to say no by his generous offer. This board is what
came of that offer. He came up the color idea from some boards
he saw somewhere and I told him to just do what he wanted with
it. Needless to say, I'm rediculously stoked on how it came out and
can't wait to get it in the water at the first chance. To top it off,
Gary insisted that I use the board with the beautiful Marlin Bacon
Fins101 bamboo keels pictured here. I look forward to seeing
what all the fuss is about these fins as well! This one came out at
6'2" x 20.5" x 2 5/8" with full volume through the middle and pretty
foiled out rails, tail, and nose. Shaped, glassed, painted, and polished
by Mr. Brownfish.
Thanks again Gary!
Sunday, March 29, 2009
Anything But 3 Surfboard Gathering '09
Attended another super fun surfboard gathering this morning, the annual 'Anything but 3' event held this year at Oceanside Harbor...
Had a blast this morning. Showed up before dawn to reallyfun peaky surf up and down the beach. Rode a couple of incredibly fun boards as well. First I took out Kaser's Zamora mini-Sim. At 5'7", I didn't think there was any way my 6'3", 200+ lb. frame would catch waves on the thing, butthat board pics up waves like something a foot bigger.Soooo fast right out of the gate, causing me to outrun abunch of waves, but had a blast on it and could see reallydiggin one of those as an alternative shape. Also trieda Pendoflex that was not nearly enough board for me, butseemed like it would have been fun in good waves.Then tried a Zippi twin keel that was 5'9". Again, thoughtthere was no way it would be enough board for me, but aslong as the wave stood up a bit to get into it, that boardkicked serious ass. Fun, loose, and playful in a small package. So many insanely nice boards all over the beach today andgreat people to chat with, made for one hell of a morning.Great to see and surf with many of you again. IMO,this was a much better venue for this type of event since people could spread out to all different peaks and catch10x the waves you could at Crowdiff. Was really bummedI had to leave around 9 to go to a family event in the OC.Stopped by the Fish Joint around 4pm to see some great livemusic, chat with a good group of people, and see some awards given out by the good folks at Ice9.Great day...thanks Shawn, Tony, JP, JJR, and anyone elsethat was involved in putting this together.
Sunday, March 15, 2009
Tried and true, or alternative materials?
It's funny to me how surfers, who most like to think of as open-minded,
free-thinking folk, are often extremely close-minded when it comes
to alternative forms of surfboard construction and production.
What I'm talking about here is the steadfast commitment of some
to the old standard 'poly' surfboards along with their complete
degradation of other techniques such as 'sandwich' construction,
vacuum-bagging, EPS/epoxy, XTR/epoxy, etc.
Don't get me wrong...I've been plently happy with the resin-tinted,
gloss & polish 'poly' boards I've been getting of late and think many
simply prefer the feel of what they've grown up with and are used
to. I just think there are so many cool new forms of technology
in the surfboard industry that haven't quite caught on due to the
reluctance of many to try something new.
I read an article recently where Bill 'Stretch' Reidel (sp?) was quoted
praising Surftech's technology, and it made me think about how much
these 'popouts' are slammed by so-called purists. I've had 2 boards
in Surftech technology, and both were really fun, positive feeling boards.
I owned another board (Cobalt) in a similar technology that was one
of the funnest longboards I've ridden. While I understand (and agree
with) many arguments that surfers should support their local shapers,
I find it pretty ironic that just about every other product most of us
use while surfing is made elsewhere without so much as a whisper of the
contempt shown towards 'popout' surfboards.
I dunno...just something that strikes me as odd.
Needless to say, I'm plently happy with the 'poly' beauties I've been
getting from my local shaper. I think there should be a bit more
open-mindedness towards alternatives at the same time.
Just my $.02.
Friday, February 20, 2009
New Bullock rides
So I picked up these boards from Jacob Bullock yesterday.
Couldn't be more STOKED on the way they both turned out.
The guy will take any design concept and turn it into a
functional piece of surf-stokedom like you wouldn't believe.
The first is 5'10" x 21 1/2" x 2 13/16" and is meant for
crappy, mushy surf.
The second is 6'2" x 20 1/2" x 2 5/8" and is meant for waves
from waist-overhead.
Both are fuggin' rad!
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Jacob Bullock Surfboards
Those of you that know me, know that I've been getting boards from Jacob Bullock (http://bullocksurfboards.com/) for some time now. I think I've had him shape me 6 up to this point, with three more boards currently on the way. Jacob used to work here in Oceanside at OSI glassing, shaping his own boards, doing some 'production' work for a couple different shapers, and polishing many of the beautiful Takayama boards that make their way through the factory. Not long ago, he decided to turn his operation into a one-man show, moving into his private 'lab' in neighboring Fallbrook and putting out incredible boards for a growing number of stoked local (and not so local) folks. Occasionally he sends boards through a couple of local glass shops, but most are designed, shaped, and glassed by him alone, allowing for control over every step of the build process. Needless to say, his boards are insane and I, for one, will continue getting most of my surfboards through Jacob. He's a really good guy, incredibly stoked on building surfboards that work, and has a very bright future ahead of him has a respected board builder. Hit him up if you're in the market for a board, long or short!
Pics of the boards Jacob has shaped me...
Friday, February 6, 2009
Worst....winter....ever?
Since I've lived in San Diego (from 1995 with a 3-year stint in Florida), I cannot remember
a winter surf season that has been as piss poor as this year...so far.
I've spent more time out of the water over the past 2 months than I have over
the past few years combined. That's all about to change though. Why?
Because I have 4...count 'em...FOUR new boards on the way within the next few weeks.
I have my local shaper Jacob Bullock shaping me 2 shorty hybrid sticks AND a new log,
and fellow blogger Brownfish shaping me a new 'HP Fishy' as well.
We're due for a solid month-long run of swell, me thinks!
Thank me later....
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