Atleast I got wet. Think I got 4 waves in a 3 hour session, the best
being maybe hip high... Atleast the weather and water was nice,
so I surfed bootless for once. The jellyfishes saw their oppertunity.
Nice red rash. Just to put my 1m/5sec swell in perspective,
Stadt(still in Norway) had 4m/12seconds. Sometimes life sucks.
-H
Still, I'd rather carve a larger wave.
-H
Greg
Haavard N. Jakobsen wrote in message ...
before it gets too cold and dark up there, there should be some pretty
solid low pressure systems around Faroes aiming themselves at you
coming soon. You'll be getting some of the real Arctic swell coming to
visit soon as well.
GK
--
Freedom is freedom from the need to be free.
Free your mind and your ass will follow
The kingdom of heaven is within.
Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Share what you know. Learn what you don't.
Well I made a name for myself in surfing in the 70's and in Hawaii, most
people would have heard of me.
Actually I do a bit of windsurfing now and am a writer.
Although I'm planning a comeback.
Right now I'm getting in shape by bodysurfing also.
I did most of my Surfing on the south shore of Oahu.
Mostly windsurfing now.
Gleshna99 <gles...@aol.com> wrote in message news:19990906225905...@ng-fr1.aol.com...
The thing is my spots only catch southern swell(and some western)
I live in the wrong place of Norway too...
Still, the low pressure systems are lineing up nicely and I *will*
get small(sigh) surf for uh, say the next 3 days.
It could be worse
-H
Imagine living where there are no waves.
Barry
http://community.webtv.net/pjbmart/THEBEATENPATH
Will
Mike G
(Sorry I couldn't resist)
: I agree....thats why windsurfing in small waves is so enjoyable.
: the wave can be closed out but really doesnt affect your ride.
: Plus I can go faster on smaller waves than can regular surfers.
All that's why a fair number of "regular" surfers, in other words real
surfers, aren't too impressed with that level of sailboarding, or think
that it has much to do with surfing.
Will
: On the wave going upwind, it sure feels like surfing to me.
Similar perhaps, but different too.
Plus, not having
: to paddle out is a bonus.
Yes, instead of getting some exercise paddling, you get to be part of the
rigging.
Going upwind is similar to surfing in some ways, but different in some
important other ways. Let's face it, the two activities are not the same.
: I have surfed and not windsurfed during the last two sessions, because
: wavesailing can be very hard on the equipment and shoulder area.
Right, this is one of the big differences - sailboarding gear can get
pricey. Also, sailboarding seems to cause more physical problems than
surfing does.
If I were a few decades younger I'd definitely take up sailboarding - the
Bodega Bay are is excellent for it, especially in spring and early summer,
when we have 20 knot plus winds just about every afternoon. But I'd just
as soon not inflict the abuse on these aging joints.
I'm always surprised how few sailboarders get around to trying it on the
ocean. Most seem content to tack back and forth across the flat water of
the harbor. They definitely get up some speed, but it looks pretty
repetitious from my standpoint, especially compared to surfing good, clean
head-high or better waves.
Will
which one of you is Pete?
Yeah especially at Seal Beach and Cabrillo we share the
same waves with the surfers!
Treat others as you would want to be treated!
Gleshna99 wrote in message <19990906225905...@ng-fr1.aol.com>...
>>
>>Well I made a name for myself in surfing in the 70's and in Hawaii, most
>>people would have heard of me.
>
>
Mike G. wrote:
: >>
: >Are you Pete's brother that wiped out at Waikiki wearing a tiki around
: >your neck?
: 1. I don't have a clue as to what this means.
: 2. Yes, I was tandem surfing at Waikiki once and did wipe out more than once.
: I have not seen a Tiki in several decades.
It's ok, Mike, I think I beat you to the reference about the
Brady Bunch episode, but I guess it was buried in a thread
somewhere else. So, at least *I* understand what you mean.
Let's see....I understand what you mean, and Bob doesn't have
a clue. I *guess* that's a good thing. At least from my point of view.
Later,
Steve
--
Signaturely challenged
Sorry I missed that Steve, and thanks for leting me know someone got the
reference.
Mike G.
:>Yes, instead of getting some exercise paddling, you get to be part of the
:>rigging.
: Give me a BREAK! I assume you that sailing out can be very aerobic, at least
: here, where we have short period waves. Come to think of it, it doesn't always
: beat paddling out. I find that wavesailing is as hard on my system as full
: court basketball with young NBA wantabes.
"Assume" me all you want, but you're comparing apples and oranges. I
never said sailboarding isn't aerobic. I just said, as you'll see above,
that you get to be part of the rigging. Surfing's degree of being "hard
on my system" isn't a big part of its appeal for me.
: Well, have you tried it? For me, the only difference between shooting the
: curl, not big, on a right is that I have to hold up the boom and sail. You can
: even walk the nose, parallel stance, slide slip, etc.
Yes, I have tried it, albeit at the beginner level. And, as you
acknowledge above, you have to hold up the boom and sail. In other words,
you're part of the rigging, which I find inhibits hotdogging more than a
little. The amount of time required to set up and put away a sailboard is
another downside, imo.
: Surfing experience is definitely a bonus for wave sailing. However, if I hit
: the beach on a good cool day in the fall with not much light left, it is much
: more convenient to just surf and not worry about rigging up and down.
: I used to think that windsurfing was whimpy. Then I saw a guy do a front flip
: aka loop on tv. That caught my interest. Next, I stopped by the Gorge and had
: my butt kicked for about two hours. I was hooked.
Getting your butt kicked hooked you. OK.
: If I lived in southern California, I would want to windsurf during the blown
: out afternoons.
N. California's NW winds make S. Cal's look like soft breezes. I don't
think sailboarding's wimpy - it's just that, as mentioned before, I'm not
willing to risk the downtime from surfing, diving and other activities I
value more, and find to be less repetitious. Also, if there's a good
swell and I'm already surfed out from dawn patrol, sailboarding's the last
thing I'd want to do in the afternoon. Give me a ride on a mountain bike
to work the legs, or maybe a pool to swim a bit, then a guitar and a beer,
please, thank you.
BTW, I consider a front flip and a loop to be quite different maneuvers.
In my lexicon, a loop is a 360. But then, I'm a surfer. Wouldn't mind
being a sailor too, but I'd like that to be on a boat.
Will
>>Treat others as you would want to be treated!
>
>Say hello to my filter. Waste of time boy.
>
>Bob
Bob just curious how big is that Filter list by now? Must be huge....also seems
like a few made it off considering you are responding to their posts. Any Surf?
-PD
Will Borgeson wrote:
> Right, I'd rather ride a crisp, hollow 3-footer than a slow, mushy wave
> twice the size or more, where you're slapping at it and/or doing the dread
> and hideous Huntington Hop to stay in it.
Amen to that. And BTW there is nothing but *nothing* more dreadful and
hideous than the sight of a longboarder doing that frantic, lame hopping.
When I see folks hopping on longboards I think, "Jeez- all that planing
surface and he STILL can't get any glide going. Someone put that guy out of
his misery quickly!"
Just don't do it, folks. It is a vile and iniquitous practice that is an
affront to the sea gods and to style conscious surfers everywhere. You won't
find it on any page of the Book of Style.
Regards,
Surfer Bob
:>Surfer Bob wrote:
>
> :>And BTW there is nothing but *nothing* more dreadful and
> :>hideous than the sight of a longboarder doing that frantic, lame
hopping.
>
> Second the motion, although I didn't see the earlier post and
> can't tell from the above who wrote it. It looks pretty lame to me on any
> board.
With all due respect, I thought you surfed for function rather than looks.
I'm not saying that the hop is necessarily more functional, but how it looks
should be irrelevant.
> : What? I would think that hopping would slow down a longboard?
>
> Well...all hopping does, as far as I can tell, is create these
> mini-fall lines that allow you to accumulate a minute amount of momentum.
> On a very small board, it may also prevent the thing simply sinking by
> keeping it moving. I suppose it's also "something to do" while the wave
> is mushing. But it seems to work as well, or as badly, on a log as on a
> little stick. Tell us guys, why do you do it?
The place I usually surf often breaks outside, hits a deeper area where it
stops breaking, and then reforms inside. Sometimes the "hop" gets me
through to the inside. Sure, if I was a better surfer, maybe I could get
through that section in a more "stylish" manner. But I'm not, so I don't.
> : If someone needs to hop alot, I would suggest a longer and heavier board
for
> : glide, or just add a sail.
Gonna go that route on my next longboard Bob (no, not a sail, more board
volume).
> How about a better wave?
C'mon Will. Do you think people choose bad waves intentionally?
>Or a better style?
I'm out there for fun and to fulfill my needs. If somebody finds my "style"
to be lacking (which is doubtful since there's usually nobody watching),
they can always look in another direction.
mike
>Or both?
:>And BTW there is nothing but *nothing* more dreadful and
:>hideous than the sight of a longboarder doing that frantic, lame hopping.
Second the motion, although I didn't see the earlier post and
can't tell from the above who wrote it. It looks pretty lame to me on any
board.
: What? I would think that hopping would slow down a longboard?
Well...all hopping does, as far as I can tell, is create these
mini-fall lines that allow you to accumulate a minute amount of momentum.
On a very small board, it may also prevent the thing simply sinking by
keeping it moving. I suppose it's also "something to do" while the wave
is mushing. But it seems to work as well, or as badly, on a log as on a
little stick. Tell us guys, why do you do it?
: If someone needs to hop alot, I would suggest a longer and heavier board for
: glide, or just add a sail.
How about a better wave? Or a better style? Or both?
Will
: With all due respect, I thought you surfed for function rather than looks.
: I'm not saying that the hop is necessarily more functional, but how it looks
: should be irrelevant.
Disagree completely. I surf for fun more than for function or form, but
they matter too. I'd place function over form, but form matters hugely as
well, to me, in surfing. Fortunately, most functional maneuvers are also
fun, and mostly look good to me. Surfing is in many was akin to a dance,
and form or style is of course quite central to dance. For example,
smooth but radical carving, timed functionally for that particular wave,
looks way better to me than a zillion ampy turns executed regardless of
what the wave's doing. Also, if a wave starts to poop out and there's no
tasty section inside of the flat spot, why bother?
: The place I usually surf often breaks outside, hits a deeper area where it
: stops breaking, and then reforms inside. Sometimes the "hop" gets me
: through to the inside. Sure, if I was a better surfer, maybe I could get
: through that section in a more "stylish" manner. But I'm not, so I don't.
No need to put yourself down. What the hop's probably doing for you is
keeping a shortboard from sinking in the flat spot, by keeping it moving.
A higher-volume board might not have the problem. Maybe you could do some
turns instead of the hop, to keep the momentum up. On a longboard, glide
will usually get a surfer through flat spots. But again the inside reform
has to be pretty nice to get me to bother in such a situation. In other
words, mere length of ride doesn't matter that much to me.
: C'mon Will. Do you think people choose bad waves intentionally?
Sorry, I meant a better surf spot, or a better day at that spot. But that
raises an interesting point. I think wave selection is a key factor in
how rides end up, and I think we should all be getting better and better
at choosing good waves.
: I'm out there for fun and to fulfill my needs. If somebody finds my "style"
: to be lacking (which is doubtful since there's usually nobody watching),
: they can always look in another direction.
No need to be defensive. To me the hop feels weird as well as looks lame,
so it's not a habit I want to acquire. YMMV, obviously, so hop away if
that's your choice. I'm just saying there are other ways to get past flat
spots, and that they feel better and look better to me than the hop.
Will
:> Surfing is in many was akin to a dance,
:>and form or style is of course quite central to dance.
: This is single most unmacho thing that I have ever read on this ng.
Yeah well...some of us are secure enough in our masculinity that we can
relate to such concepts as beauty in the motions of surfer and wave
dancing together. And some aren't. Takes all kinds, I guess.
Will
Agreed. Flowing with the wave is similar to flowing with music. Certain
surfers have this fluid grace that is just awesome to watch (like Makani).
sponge (not ashamed to do the sideslip Boogie)
"Found you can dance and still look tough anyway." --Billy Joel
> Gleshna99 <gles...@aol.com> wrote:
>
> :> Surfing is in many was akin to a dance,
> :>and form or style is of course quite central to dance.
>
> : This is single most unmacho thing that I have ever read on this ng.
>
> Yeah well...some of us are secure enough in our masculinity that we can
> relate to such concepts as beauty in the motions of surfer and wave
> dancing together. And some aren't. Takes all kinds, I guess.
Take a look at gymnastics for instance......
;^O
~~~~~m@r|<
Proud Member, The Church of Surfing Since 1983
http://www.monmouth.com/user_pages/sisom
Printed on 100% recycled electrons
Still, I don't dance. But when I teach the kids at the volleyballclub
that it's more like danceing then boxing, they know what I meen.
-H
:>Yeah well...some of us are secure enough in our masculinity that we can
:>relate to such concepts as beauty in the motions of surfer and wave
:>dancing together. And some aren't. Takes all kinds, I guess.
: Well said. Of course, as long as you leave out the music, I think it is
okay. : Bob
Whoa, I'm all relieved here. Not.
"Leave out the music?" What's that about? The rhythm is in the wave,
there's drums in the crunch of whitewash, and you are/you improvise the
melody. The ride is the dance. Just one way of looking at it.
This gender paranoia bit...fear of the feminine side of things...fear also
of music because it's somehow perceived as feminine...is downright weird!
Whether it's Wagner or Sublime or Dick Dale or the Allman Bros, music can
be ballsy as hell, if it wants to be. And, I think music and surfing go
together hand in glove. How many of us don't hear music when we're
waiting for a set? Like, the last tune you heard before you paddled out?
Or simply a favorite tune? Not many, I'll bet.
Will
Uhhmmm, usually I don't. Yesterday I did.
Started singing to myself. Strange...
-H
: Uhhmmm, usually I don't. Yesterday I did.
: Started singing to myself. Strange...
If you don't mind my asking, what song?
Will
: : Uhhmmm, usually I don't [hear music]. Yesterday I did.
: : Started singing to myself. Strange...
: If you don't mind my asking, what song?
How many people do this? My guess is that it may be lots.
I'm not talking about singing at the top of your lungs; I'm
talking more about just so only you can hear it, or maybe
even just sing it in your mind without vocalizing.
I do it all the time. One lyric, which I have mentioned
before, is "Bring it on, bring it on, bring it on." when
I see some good sets on the horizon rolling in.
In a recent surf report, I mentioned being tossed around
in the water like a message in a bottle. That was exactly
my feeling when in the water, so when that thought occurred
to me, I naturally started singing "message in a bottle"
by The Police.
The lyric I used to have in my sig is another one
I often sing while surfing. It is by Midnight Oil and
slightly paraphrased (I think) goes: "...a place where
you forget, you get wet, it's free/ You get high, you're
alive.....Surf's up tonight."
Sometimes the situation dictates the songs I sing, but
other times it's just what is in my head that I had
been listening too recently. All I know, is I *never*
make it through a session without singing (or at least
*thinking*) a few songs. Music and surfing definitely
are closely related; it's just more obvious to some than
others.
: Might I suggest that you musical longboarders consider glassing a CD player
: into your next board. Then you could wear headsets plug into a jack ( this
: might be a problem? ) and listen to tunes as you paddle out and even surf in
: some conditions.
Yeah, there was a dork who used to paddle out with a waterproof "personal
stereo". We called him "Loony Toons."
Frankly, the music in one's own head is a lot more fun, and safer.
I don't ride longboards exclusively, by the way. When it gets big and
crunchy, I switch out to a gunny thruster.
Will
Those mp3 players would be perfect for bringing into the water. No moving
parts, small, good sound. I think you can buy those things for like less
than $100 now. Don't know how to waterproof the player or headphones,
though.
sponge
Just yesterday, kind of dumb, but true:
"When you're happy and you know it, clap your hands"...
:)
Fortunately, it didn't last long (stupid tune), but the sentiment
was there.
Jules
yeah right :)
bob, you would look real swift and nifty in a get-up like that. dont forget
the little propeller on the top.
did your mommy dress you up in shorts, a bow tie and suspenders when you were a
kid?
what?
you say she dressed you like that all the way through high school?
why am i not surprised?
surfgeo
"no soup for me!"
>helmet with a light, CD player, and camera holder might be just the ticket.
>>
>>Bob
>
>bob, you would look real swift and nifty in a get-up like that. dont forget
>the little propeller on the top.
>
>did your mommy dress you up in shorts, a bow tie and suspenders when you
>were a
>kid?
>
>what?
>you say she dressed you like that all the way through high school?
>
>why am i not surprised?
BWAAAAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
-PD
>>BWAAAAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
>
>Looks like another punk to me, SS.
>
>Bob
How much more abuse can u take. SG just chews you up and spits you out and you
just keep coming back for more.
hey SG what's that bait called? BY the way blowboy you need to use a a bigger
piece of bait then that sad little peice you casted out.
NOSURF4U.
-PD
Since I have a short attention span, a horrible memory for song
lyrics, and can't sing for squat, (how many girls have told _you_ to
stop singing,) I find myself just mumbling snippets of songs, usually
old surf songs.
"Let's go surfing now, everybody's learning how, come on a surfari
with meeee be bop a lula catch a wave an you're sittin on top of the
world eeeeooooorrow wipeout! do-do do-do do-do do-do batman! she's the
terror of Colorado Boulevard..."
"Hey, Tom! Shut up! You're scaring away all the waves!"
Tom Keener
keensurf_at_cts_dot_com
: yeah right :)
I see your smiley but sense mockery...ask Surfer Bob or Ric
Harwood...they've seen me catch + make double over + reef on a gunny
funshape tri-fin.
Will
Will Borgeson <szbo...@runner.ucdavis.edu> wrote in message news:7reguu$moo$2...@mark.ucdavis.edu...
>Gleshna99)
Dr. Bob,
if you give me
an idea what
this site is
all about I'd
really like that.
Why won't you
help a brother?
ben blake
i'm in the tube and you are not
http://members.aol.com/whirlawhip/page/index.htm
Back in the 70's my friend Frank used to talk about having
"Storm Troopers" by Ted Nugent stuck in his head..."Get
ready, Get ready, storm troopers coming..." (substitute
'storm troopers' with 'big waves')
I remember an article years ago in a surf rag talking about
the 10 worst songs to have stuck in your head waiting
during a lull... I think #1 was "Ebony and Ivory" with
Paul McCartney and Stevie Wonder...
I flash on music in the water all the time...
I surfed at Secos this morning pre-dawn and couldn't help
but think of Sheryl Crow singing "'Til the sun comes up
over Santa Monica Blvd" as I watched the sun rise over the
Santa Monica Mtns.
~Spindrift
* Sent from RemarQ http://www.remarq.com The Internet's Discussion Network *
The fastest and easiest way to search and participate in Usenet - Free!
whazzamattabob? whip is calling you out on this and you are afraid ?
i didnt know there were mormans in indiana .
way to go bob! thats the way to express yourself! keep opening up like that,
dont bottle it up. i think we can get you over these emotional scars wrought
upon you by those pediphile lifeguards when you were in jr. high. now, take a
deeeeeeeep breath, a nice shot of whiskey, and do it again.
you DO drink whiskey, dontcha bob?
are you leaving us again bob? awwwww....we wuz just startin to have fun with
ya!
so AS is nothing but slow sophomores huh.......hmmmmm....bob, you are just one
of those guys who cant fit in anywhere. you lack the intelligence to even see
how ignorant you really are. its like a one lap race around a track - the gun
goes off, everyone takes off but you. your mind has no idea whats going on and
cant think quick enough to grasp the situation....suddenly, you snap. you look
behind you and see everyone running toward you, you look down and see the
start/finish line, and assume you have won! you trot off the field high-fiving
yourself while everyone else just scratches their heads.
you are seriously lost, my friend.
> >How much more abuse can u take.
>
> This is your contribution to alt.surfing? To attempt to punk up on someone.
> Son, you are a sad case.
Bob bob bobo boob bawb.........
You don't want ME to intervene here do you?
Remember 'BK' (aka: BIGKOOK)?
Do you remember the page I did?
I can fit one to your size if you'd like.
~~~~~m@r|<
Proud Member, The Church of Surfing Since 1983
http://www.monmouth.com/user_pages/sisom
Printed on 100% recycled electrons
> You are one damn, dumb, unself-disciplined, s.o.b., punk,
and you're a "surfer" from Indiana.
> Yankee pretending to
> be a Texan
Alright, that's it w/ yur Yankee bullshit.
Someone born and raised in Texas is a 'Texan',
such as I'm a Jersey boy and you are a kook.
> The only reason I respond to this ShoulderGeo drivel is as a service to other
> alt.surf posters that won't be distracted by the above pathetic sludge
I'm distracted by you not him.
He's trying to contribute and you're
asking retard questions daily.
> while he
> is busy busting his brain cell how to "get even" and save face. Damn
boy, as I
> have said, you should just beat yourself with a bat at home and save everyone
> time here.
>
> Speaking of surfing photos: T-O-N.
> Now this is a call out, an open call out.
Do Y-O-U have have a pic of Y-O-U doing T-O-N?
Now this is a call out, an open call out.
<don't even waist your breath asking me,
I'm not applicable at this point in time>
> Come on Yankee white boy, afraid of a little black lady on a Lake.
I heard you're a fat, white, & 50 something.
But I'll beleive the former.
>So far, the
> answer ........
.......will be when you answer mine! ;-|
>>How much more abuse can u take.
>This is your contribution to alt.surfing?
No just to you...
>To attempt to punk up on someone.
Please explain Lakeboy I don't understand you. Your the one trolling lakeboy
T-O-N
-PD
boy that bob. he is one quick individual. yesiree, very quick with those
stinging barbs.
bob, i am really tired of this. are you senile or something? no bob, i dont
have a picture of me on the nose. happy? does that make me a poser? i do ride
the nose, bob, but have been longboarding only 2 years now. i am sorry that i
am not a celebrity who can afford to have photographers follow me around and
take pictures of me surfing so that i can have pictures of every possible thing
i can do on a wave. i am usually the one taking pictures. i have been surfing
since 1973 bob, and from the moronic drivel that leaks from your orifice i have
vastly more experience riding many more and bigger waves in far more places
than you have. so stop with the ridiculous calling out, bob. is this the
response you wanted? is this what you have been hopelessly trolling me for the
last week on? if so, believe me, this response is far from classifying as
being hooked. its more like you cast so many times you eventually foul-hooked
me in the back and i pulled you into the water and gave you a damn good, long,
hard knuckle noogie on your head, IF you have any hair.
i have surfed with 7 people from this group in the last 2 months, if i were a
poser i think the world would know it by now.
bite me, sincerely bob, i like you better when you were dead. at least you
showed signs of humor then.
"he died surfing some special wave in california and was wiped out into a set
of pilings"
now THAT was funny!
Bawb, are you retarded?
Or how about
"Make a Surf Sacrifice, Throw Yourself off a Cliff"
>Well, I see that SG has a little punk gang now.
Wrong. You called my team out...you will pay!
-PD
Bawb in all realities, a guy who surfs a lake....then weighs in with all his
"LIMITED''
surf experience from California in his teen years, to readily make blanket
statements
about Surf Size in California, and the apparent power of the breaks there is
a KOOK.
Give up the nonsense, as in focusing on your past, or take the conseqeunces.
BTW, BAWBY, I spent my first six years out of H.S. surfing the North Shore
of Oahu, completed
the surfers dream, etc, etc,then moved back to Southern California, but you
dont seeing me going around making Comments and trying to be an Expert
about a place I havent been back to in almost 20 years.....
All the same, I have more experience in Hawaii, than you ever did in
California.
Bawb, you ACT the KOOK and POSER, --and you are paying the PRICE!
>I remember an article years ago in a surf rag talking about
>the 10 worst songs to have stuck in your head waiting
>during a lull... I think #1 was "Ebony and Ivory" with
>Paul McCartney and Stevie Wonder...
>
Incense & Peppermint.
Tom Keener
keensurf_at_cts_dot_com
Tuvan throat singing . . . .
http://www.sciam.com/1999/0999issue/0999levin.html
sun propeller . . . .
http://www.huunhuurtu.com/
Mahahahah! Cool! If I could do this...
http://www.sciam.com/1999/0999issue/IMG/track4.mov ...there is no way I'm
not getting any wave I want. So, I'm practicing..... and there are those
who would say that's how I sound anyways... Love the instruments they play,
including; 'dazhaanning khavy (rattle made from a bull scrotum and sheep
kneebones)'.
Actually, after reading Ralph Leighton's 'Tuva or Bust' concerning the last
few years of Richard Feynmann, I got somewhat interested in Tuvan
throat-singing. Thanks for the links....
Doc....... (unpronounceable sounds.......) .........
>
>
C'mon, SURFTWIT, it's time to 'fess up.
Someone has _got_ to be paying you to continually
make such a complete and utter fool of yourself.
I mean, I didn't use to pay much attention to Bob.
But when pitted against your idiocy, he suddenly
looked like a champion. Maybe he's the one paying
you. It's inconceivable that someone could be as
truly moronic as you present yourself to be in this ng.
SURFGEO - the guy who revealed Bob's genius.
SURFGEO wrote:
> <snipped>
> bob, you are just one
> of those guys who cant fit in anywhere. you lack the intelligence to even see
> how ignorant you really are. its like a one lap race around a track - the gun
> goes off, everyone takes off but you. your mind has no idea whats going on and
> cant think quick enough to grasp the situation....suddenly, you snap. you look
> behind you and see everyone running toward you, you look down and see the
> start/finish line, and assume you have won! you trot off the field high-fiving
> yourself while everyone else just scratches their heads.
>
> you are seriously lost, my friend.
>
Doc <jfm...@sod.the.spam.capecod.net> wrote in message news:4XWC3.6568$N77.5...@typ11.nn.bcandid.com...
>
<SNIP>>
-H
-H
-H
> > Tuvan throat singing . . . .
> > http://www.sciam.com/1999/0999issue/0999levin.html
> > sun propeller . . . .
> > http://www.huunhuurtu.com/
Saw Huun Huur Tu live last year. Killer! Download one of the audio
clips. Guess what: No synths!
--
Ghengis Khan
Freedom is freedom from the need to be free.
Free your mind and your ass will follow
The kingdom of heaven is within.
+-:-)
Running to the nose is also a cool way to catch a wave you almost missed.
Then, if you're good, you can turn from the nose, then ease back into the
sweet spot for max trim.
For a long time, I really admired the surfing of Terry Jones, a Ventura CA
surfer who rode for Tom Hale and worked in his shop. Terry had a way of
dancing up and down the board so gracefully...always in trim...cross steps
up and back. Won quite a few contests, although his style was very
soulful. When in the shop, he was usually to be found playing some tasty
music on guitar. Wonder what ever happened to him.
Will
> >I remember an article years ago in a surf rag talking about
> >the 10 worst songs to have stuck in your head waiting
> >during a lull... I think #1 was "Ebony and Ivory" with
> >Paul McCartney and Stevie Wonder...
> >
> Incense & Peppermint.
>
100 Bottles of Beer on the Wall.
I had to start over after every wave. :(
-Foon
OOnee <oo...@home.com> wrote in message news:MiVC3.2837$tJ1....@news.rdc2.occa.home.com...
> Tom Keener <keen...@cts.com_but_not_this_part> wrote in message news:37dbac9b....@nntp.cts.com...
> > On Sat, 11 Sep 1999 21:18:52 +1700, Spindrift
> > <rflNO...@jetlink.net> wrote:
> >
> > >I remember an article years ago in a surf rag talking about
> > >the 10 worst songs to have stuck in your head waiting
> > >during a lull... I think #1 was "Ebony and Ivory" with
> > >Paul McCartney and Stevie Wonder...
> > >
> > Incense & Peppermint.
> >
> > Tom Keener
> > keensurf_at_cts_dot_com