Thursday, May 18, 2006 

Orlando wave pool

http://orlandowavepool.com/

Nice blog about the ron jon wave pool progress in O.

Tuesday, May 16, 2006 

"We're Freeessssshhhh, Me & Aunt Bettthhhh, ta Defffffff"

 Posted by Picasa

 

Gravity isn't such a bitch.

It never dawned on me to look up my own board on the net until now. duh?

Check it - http://www.gravityboard.com/pages/gstore/boards/hc2.html

We had an unreal session last night. I called out the troops. We had 5 guys and about 12 boards to choose from, all carve boards. Mostly Sector 9s a few Gravityboards and several homemade cruisers. All good stuff. We hit three different neighborhoods starting at 8pm and didn't stop until the cops showed up at 10:15. They were cool though. Next time a day session is in order.

Sunday, May 14, 2006 

Sk8 2 Live 2 Sk8

  Posted by Picasa

Friday, May 12, 2006 

Atlanta Journal Constitution Article 5/12/06

Big dudes on boards after dark
Rides are a hit for grown-ups in Cobb

By CLINT WILLIAMS
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Published on: 05/12/06

You hear them before you see them. A soft sort of rumble just loud enough to rise above the crickets, the buzz of street lights, the white noise of suburbia after sunset. Sometimes you hear a series of sharp, shrill tweets before you see them.

And when you do see them — big guys on very big skateboards — you don't see them for long.


It's a glimpse of sapphire lights and reflective vests. In the time it takes to decipher the sighting, the night riders are gone.

"I thought they were kids when they first came by," said Danny Dickerson, who lives at the base of a steep hill. "Then I looked again and said, 'They're the same age as I am.' "

With an unusually long wheelbase of 3 feet, the boards are built for speed. The guys, not so much. The youngest in the group is 35. The two most breakneck boarders are both 41. They're all married; most have kids.

Two or three nights a week they grab their 44-inch skateboards, called longboards, and go ripping down hills at nearly 40 mph. In the dark.

"We're just a bunch of 30-somethings trying to break the monotony of suburbia," Greg Pangburn said. "It beats 18 holes of golf."

A little over a year ago, chiropractor Tripp Arnold went skateboard shopping for his young son. He ended up with a $200 Fibreflex Pintail for himself.

With that purchase, he stumbled to the cutting edge of skater dude culture.

"Longboarding is definitely on fire right now," said Carleton Curtis, managing editor of TransWorld SKATEboarding magazine. "It is its own thriving subculture." Wink

Longboards "are not for tricking and flipping," said Arnold, 41, who grew up in south Cobb County tricking and flipping on the kind of skateboard most commonly seen gliding on rails, ramps and benches around town.

After he put together his board, Arnold recruited a couple of guys in his neighborhood — Mike Rosamilia, 41, who played football at Georgia Tech in the 1980s, and Ted Scott, 37, who rode rodeo bulls while at South Cobb High School. The three and Pangburn are the core of a loose group of seven or eight boarders who ride mostly in Arnold's neighborhood.

Echo Mill is a west Cobb County subdivision of more than 450 homes starting in the upper $200s, as real estate agents say. It has two swimming pools, two playgrounds, eight lighted tennis courts and a mile of creekside walking trail.

There isn't 100 feet of flat road in the whole place.

"You're never far from the next hill," Arnold said.

The neighborhood, he said, "is the Breckenridge of Georgia," a reference to the famous Colorado ski resort.

The boarders have explored other areas from Vinings to Cartersville, but when it comes to the variety of runs, there's no place like home. The long, gentle slope of Haven Crest Road is perfect for cruising — like a beginner's run marked with a green circle at a ski resort. The steep, sudden, stomach-in-your-throat drop of Harbormist Drive — where gravity and guts net maximum velocity —is a black diamond expert run.

The posted speed limit in the subdivision is 20 mph. These guys never go the speed limit, even when controlling their decent with a series of wide, carving turns.

"It's a lot like snow skiing," Scott said, "except you just don't want to fall. And there are no cars on ski slopes."

The high school skater dudes in the neighborhood wear tight jeans and Vans sneakers, protected only by their adolescent sense of immortality. Arnold and his buddies take grown-up precautions, most suiting up in high-impact plastic armor that includes helmet, gloves, knee pads, elbow pads and, sometimes, gloves.

Even with the protective gear falls are bloody. Everyone can show you scars.

Arnold recalled hitting a pothole one night "and it just snatched my board from underneath me."

Sliding across the asphalt "took a few freckles off," said Arnold, who rode the rest of the night in a blood-soaked T-shirt. He later filled in that pothole, and others, with cement.

Potholes are just one hazard on a long list.

"We've had dogs run out in front of us, raccoons run in front of us," Rosamilia said.

The most serious hazard, of course, is cars. The boarders say they ride after dark after the dinner dishes are done and the kids are in bed because it them an advantage in avoiding collisions. "At night," Arnold said, "we can see cars way before they see us."

Still, the riders take measures to be seen — and heard — by drivers.

"I've got a reflective vest," Pangburn said. "I've got a whistle. I'm Aunt Bea."

Some riders have bright lights mounted on their boards or helmets. Some carry flashlights. Nearly all carry a whistle to warn those downhill of the riders' approach.

The biggest threat of injury, however, may come from the riders' own adrenal glands. High-speed bombing down a long straight hill no longer provides enough of a rush.

"The most fun thing now is carving the cul-de-sacs," Rosamilia said. Speeding toward the bottom of a dead-end road demands acute focus.

"You can't really make a mistake," he said.

When riders make a mistake, they bail out — leaping off the board and sprinting until they can stop.

"If you're going more than 25 miles an hour," Arnold said, "it's hard to stay on your feet."

Then it's about finding a soft spot to tuck and roll. The boarders, happily, ride in a neighborhood of well-tended lawns.

"If you've got to ditch," said Scott, who ran into an empty trash bin his first night out, "landing in this Bermuda grass is like landing in a water bed."

Everyone has ditched. Everyone has crashed. But no one has been seriously injured.

If anyone does break a bone, they shouldn't expect much sympathy from Kristen Rosamila, Mike's wife.

"I told Mike, "If you get hurt, Tripp is taking you to the hospital," Kristen Rosamilia said. "Don't come crying to me."

Still, she said, there is no point in trying to stop the night rides. "They are not your standard, run-of-the-mill 40-year-old guys."

 

Heros

http://www.myspace.com/sk8brd75

Check out this guy's list of heros on his myspace page. I emailed him. Turns out he was the kid that used to live on the street behind my parents back when we had the giant half pipe. Crazy.

Thursday, May 11, 2006 

My Name is Andy

www.mynameisandy.com
I'd love to get this book, Way of the Bird. I hope he gets some cheap prints up sometime... although, I think I could pull most of this stuff off in Photoshop myself. That's pretty low, isn't it.

Wednesday, May 10, 2006 

Surfboard Logo Library A to Z


http://www.surfcrazy.com/stanleys/html/logos.html
Amazing collection of logos. Post your favorites here.

Sunday, May 07, 2006 

Shanker

Try the Shanker. New tip video here.

Tuesday, May 02, 2006 

Tales from the East side

We all had a great time at the contest. Conditions were tough. I heard reports of the seas going 12 feet. But almost all windswell. As you can see from the Strike one photos below the white caps were popping.

All agreed the paddle out was tough but managable. Wave selection was a little more difficult. You basically had to take what came along and what came along wasn't always what you wanted.

Mike ended up getting slotted for the longboard heat the next day. He was first alternate and made it in.

We ended up leaving Sunday and going home. I heard the best waves to be caught were further south where the breaks were more condusive to the swell. Posted by Picasa

 

Strike three

Mike was our last hope. Alas, we all crashed and burned. Posted by Picasa

 

Stike two

I went next and bombed out early. Only caught four waves, one of which was worth a shit. Posted by Picasa

 

Strike one

Lance had the priviledge of going first of the three heats we were all in at the ESA regionals. Posted by Picasa

 

ASP World Tour

ASP World Tour
Florida representing

 

ESA Contest

Well I'm not seeing any familiar names in the list of top six finalists from the contest this weekend. Good on ya anyway for getting that far. How were the waves? At least you got First Peak all to your self right?