Monday, February 8, 2010
Into the pipeline
The Triple Crown of Surfing
Super Surfer Girl Steph Gilmore
Sunday, February 7, 2010
Wanna Surf in Ghana
Surfing Fiercely
Due to massive numbers and the huge success at last seasons’ NSW Jim Beam Surftag Series, NSW will now be split into two regions, NSW North and NSW South.
The new event - NSW North, will involve Boardriding Clubs from the Central Coast, Newcastle and the Mid North Coast and scheduled to be held in January at Newcastle.
The NSW North qualifier will be fought out by 2005 Jim Beam Surftag National Champions Umina, Macmasters, Avoca, Nth Shelley, Wamberall, Norah Head, Catherine Hill Bay, Merewether, Boomerang and Saltwater as well as attracting new clubs Port MacQuarie, Blacksmiths and Tea Tree.Umina Boardriding Club Stalwart Drew Courtney, currently in Europe competing on ASP World Tour events is looking forward to the new seasons Jim Beam Surftag saying “We all love getting back to our local Boardriders club to team up and put back into the club – it’s where all Australian competitive surfers begin their careers and it always feels good to give back to the club in these team events that are full of passion, I can’t wait!”
The Jim Beam Surftag National Series is a tag team surfing competition contested by boardriding clubs from all over Australia. The series in 2009 expanded to 7 events with the introduction of the Jim Beam Women's Surftag that was won by North Narrabeen (NSW). The North Narrabeen girls continued the clubs Surftag dominance with the mens team winning the 2008 Jim Beam Surftag National title and the junior mens team claiming the 2008 O'Neill Gromtag title.
North Narrabeen went into the 2009 Final as the team to beat and narrowly missed out on a hat trick of National Titles when south coast club Werri Beach Boardriders (NSW) surprised all and held off a strong finishing NN. Dee Why (NSW) in their first year at the finals finished in third position with powerhouse club Snapper Rocks (QLD) fourth. WCT stars Joel Parkinson and Josh Kerr surfed for Snapper with Kerr scoring a perfect 10 point ride in the final.
The Werri Beach team of Todd Prestage, Ryan Bailey, Tully Robinson, Matt Jones, Rhys Bombaci and Dave Hunt (Manager) won $12,000 cash and a vmoto scooter for the south coast club with Bombaci also winning the O'Neill Surfer of the Series ($500) and the vmoto highest score in the final ($3,000 vmoto scooter).
The Jim Beam Surftag National Series provides a national competition for boardriding clubs to compete against each other and to determine Australia's No.1 Club. The Jim Beam Surftag is Australia's largest team surfing competition and offers a prize pool of over $100,000 in cash and prizes.
kite Surfing With Naked Lady
Draping himself with naked ladies is all in a day's work for Virgin founder Richard Branson. For a photoshoot on Necker Island, his private paradise in -- where else? -- the British Virgin Islands, Branson posed kite surfing while draped with model Denni Parkinson. What's amazing is that he still seems to be focused on the surfing bit.
In another photo in the series, Branson appears in a white buttondown in the forest while Parkinson stands behind him au naturale. She also happens to be the photographer's girlfriend, according to the Daily Mail, but the British tabs aren't giving Richard a free pass on this, even though he claims his children were watching from the shore. In the same week, Branson also reportedly clashed with Virgin-sponsored Formula 1 driver Jenson Button over his paying too much attention to Button's girlfriend, Japanese-Argentine underwear model Jessica Michibata. No wonder Branson's next trip was to a surprise birthday party for his dad in Scotland -- nothing untoward-looking about that.
We were unable to figure out exactly why Branson is posing with a naked girl, but the lesson here is clear: Do your nudist outdoor activities with your significant other, not away from him or her. Branson oughta British Naturism, a club for people who like being outdoors in the altogether with activities like a paddleboat trip in Norfolk, a July 4 fun run and of course several beach days. Imagine a crowd of seacombers wearing a Virgin towel and a smile...
Kite Surfing 2010
Come 2010, not only will you be able to stay at Virgin Group head honcho Richard Branson's private Swiss ski lodge, but you'll also be able to go kite surfing alongside his silver foxness at the British Virgin Islands KiteJam.
New rules for surfing schools
The main issue up for grabs at a volusia County meeting tonight in Daytona Beach: Should Volusia County start licensing surf schools?
Surfing outings
Brett Simpson Speaks 2010
Simpson has been a standout in several international events on The Grind this year and is in excellent position to potentially qualify for the prestigious ASP World Tour. The progressive regular-footer is looking forward to being a part of the new face of the ASP Dream Tour set in place for 2010.
“I think the 32-man format awesome for the sport,” Simpson said. “This is the kind of progression we needed to build or sport and take it to the next level! I already think it’s a pretty prestigious class of guys, but by the middle of next year there will likely only be 32 guys and that’s a huge honor if you’re a part of that.”
Simpson is also looking forward to the simplification of the one-world rating slated to take place for next season, making it perfectly clear as to where each surfer sits on a global scale.
“The one-world rating is huge for us surfers too,” Simpson said. “Somebody will ask me what I’m rated, and I don’t even know what to tell them because I’m sixth on the ‘QS but there are still 45 guys ahead of me on the World Tour, so now it will be a much more clear answer.”
The Orange County local, who won the richest ASP WQS prize purse in surfing history when he claimed the Hurley U.S. Open this year, is also out to claim his piece of the financial boost set in place for next year’s ASP World Tour as well as the top level ASP WQS events.
“I’m always motivated and hungry, but the increased prize purse definitely helps us surfers out a lot,” Simpson said. “The more money we can make just helps us in the future. It’s an awesome bonus and great that the sponsors and ASP are really backing the surfers.”
Simpson will be out to solidify his spot on the ASP World Tour at the upcoming ASP WQS 6-Star O’Neill Cold Water Classic which will run from October 25 through 31, 2009.
For Simpson’s profile log on to www.aspnorthamerica.org
American Surfers Qualified for 2010
HUNTINGTON BEACH, California (Sunday, December 20, 2009) – Now that the dust has settled after the dramatic finish to the 2009 Association of Surfing Professionals (ASP) World Tour season, 10 Mainland American surfers have secured the right to surf amongst the top 45 for the 2010 ASP Dream Tour.
The 2010 ASP World Tour season, which will undergo a significant facelift, will see six veteran surfers lead the four fresh faces to qualify via the ASP WQS towards the ultimate goal of the ASP World Title.
Kelly Slater (Cocoa Beach, FL), 37, former nine-time ASP World Champion, was the top rated American to requalify for next year’s quest for surfing’s throne after a near-immaculate performance at the Billabong Pipe Masters where he finished runner-up behind Australian talent Taj Burrow (AUS), 31. Despite leading America’s strong force of competitors into the 2010 season, the iconic-veteran was cautious in announcing his commitment to the ASP World Tour for next year.
“I don’t know if I’m going to do the tour full-time next year,” Slater said. “I’m sort of feeling it out. I’ve just competed for so many years, doing the same thing and going to the same places, it’s a little monotonous. When you find some meaning in it and it’s bigger than just going and surfing, then it becomes more exciting, but, unfortunately, this year I had a pretty lackluster year in a lot of ways, both personally and competitively and it probably showed in my surfing.”
C.J. Hobgood (Melbourne, FL), 30, who was the 2001 ASP World Champion, finished his year No. 7 amongst the elite and capitalized on his impressive barrel-riding skills at Pipeline to finish his year off with a fifth at the Billabong Pro while posting one of the event’s perfect 10-point rides for a massive forehand barrel.
Also wrapping up their year within the crucial top-27 on the ASP World Tour were Bobby Martinez (Santa Barbara, CA), 27, who claimed a crucial win at this year’s Billabong Pro Tahiti and finished the year ASP World No. 8, Damien Hobgood (Satellite Beach, FL), 30, who posted his best result of the season with a runner-up finish at the Billabong Pro Jeffreys Bay, finished the year No. 9, while California sensation Dane Reynolds (Ventura, CA), 24, finished the year rated 10th.
In addition to the top 10, Taylor Knox (Carlsbad, CA), 38, who just completed his 16th season amongst the world’s finest surfing talent, wrapped up his season rated 12th, guaranteeing the veteran competitor an amazing 17th season on the ASP World Tour.
Learn 2 Surf Adventure
ASP Junior News Surfer
JAN JUC, Victoria/Australia (Wednesday, January 6, 2010) - Felicity Palmeteer (Hillaries Beach/Perth/West Australia) made the ideal start to her 2010 surfing season by winning the ASP Quiksilver Jetty Surf Pro Junior in uneven 1m (2 to 3 feet) surf at Jan Juc Beach on Victoria’s Surfcoast.
Seventeen-year-old Palmeteer defeated Sarah Mason (Cabarita Beach/NSW) in a closely-fought Final with scores based on each surfer’s top two scoring rides of Palmeteer on 11.00 to Mason’s 10.35.
Palmeteer set herself an early season goal of trying to make the Top 5 on the ASP Austalasia Pro Junior ratings for the year, but after today’s win, has already adjusted her ambitions.
“It’s the greatest start to the year for me and now I’ll really aim to win the series or at least make the Top 2 for the season and try and qualify for the ASP World Junior Championships," Palmateer said. "Even though I won an ASP Pro Junior last year in Perth, I have always felt that win had a lot to do with being on my home beaches, but now I’ve won here I’m starting to believe more in myself and I feel I’m ready to really challenge for the entire season. It feels good!”
Palmeteer set up today’s win early in the Final when she scored the Final’s highest-scoring ride of a 7.25 out of a possible 10 for a series of smooth and well-timed backhand bottom-to-top turns.
In crumbly and fairly weak waves, it was a decisive and excellent score.
Sarah Mason’s performance at this event was also her greatest competitive achievement to date.
The 14-year-old signalled her potential early in the event when she defeated the number 1 seed Tyler Wright and she showed that was no fluke but going all the way to today’s final and scoring numerous impressive excellent wave scores along the way.
“I feel good about making the final – There’s no pressure as I’m competing to simply gain the experience at this level but after today I feel confident that I can do well at this level and I plan to do all the Pro Junior events on the Australasian Series this year.”
“The final was hard," Mason said. "Felicity scored that good wave early and I really couldn’t find a wave that had enough potential to match it.”
Equal third in today’s event were Dimity Stoyle (Sunshine Coast/Qld) who was defeated by Mason in the Semifinals and Philippa Anderson (Newle) who went down to Palmeteer in a close Semifinal.
ASP Pro Junior Rounds 3 and 4 of the men’s division were also completed today, with the biggest upset being the elimination of top seed Dean Bowen.
Bowen’s powerful backhand style struggled in today’s conditions which appeared to favour lighter weight surfers.
While Bowen exited the event, fellow South Coast NSW surfers Sam Wrench, Ty Watson and Jordi Watson were all super impressive and advanced to the final 16 surfers remaining in the event.
Others to impress today included Garrett Parkes (Byron Bay), Perth Standlick (Bondi), Billy Keane (Coffs Harbour), Chris Salisbury (Newport Beach) and Davey Cathels (Narrabeen).
Billy Keane looms as the dark horse in the event.
He has scored multiple excellent rides during this event utilizing what appears to be a well-honed aerial attack. His final ride today, scoring an excellent 8.33, was due to a successfully-d air reverse.
“I enjoy aerial surfing and I’m always prepared to go for the move knowing I have a good chance of success and knowing the move will score big – I’ve been working hard on these moves and I hope the training pays off” said Keane.
Tomorrow will be the final day of the Quiksilver Jetty Surf Pro Junior and jan Juc Beach is again the likely venue.
With just 16 surfers remaining in the event organizers will be starting early aiming to complete the final around mid day.
Quiksilver Jetty Surf Pro Junior
The 2010 Association of Surfing Professionals Australasia (ASP Australasia) season began with a reduced day of competition in winter like conditions at Jan Juc Beach in Victoria as six round one of the Quiksilver Jetty Surf Pro Junior were completed before organizers called off the day when strong onshore winds destroyed what were good early wave conditions.
Despite the freezing unseasonal winds, swells increased throughout the morning with New Zealand surfer Alex Dive clearly very comfortable scoring the mornings top scoring ride of an 8.5 out of a possible 10 which also saw him take the highest two wave combined heat tally of the day posting 15.94 in his easy win over Oscar Scanes (mid-north coast NSW) who also advanced to round two placing second in the four surfer opening round heats.
“That was a good heat to start the year” said Dive after his heat win … I’m used to the cold conditions coming from New Zealand and the waves are quite powerful which suits me – It looks like getting bigger in the coming days and hopefully we’ll surf great waves at Bells from now on.”
Local surfer Harrison Mann, just 15 years of age and surfing well above his league taking on Australasia’s very best 20 year and under surfers showed he’ll be hard to beat in his familiar local waters by easily winning his opening heat where he defeated highly rated Sydney surfer Steve Ahrens along with USA surfer Luke Davis who was eliminated from the event in third place.
“It’s great to get through the opening round and I’m really looking forward to competing against the higher seeded surfers – they are the best Pro Juniors in Australia and the experience will be good for me whether I get through my heat or not – I’m confident I can mix it with them, especially with good surf at Bells likely!”
Only six round one heats were completed today and organizers plan to start early tomorrow, most likely at Bells Beach to complete round one then move into round one of the Pro Junior Women’s.
Healing in the surf Beach
NARRAGANSETT — A bunch of athletic-looking people from the other side of the country showed up here yesterday to take a bunch of kids with autism surfing.
Parents said the effect was remarkable, even magical.
Kerry Schemck watched her son, Kameron, come in headfirst, lying down on a surfboard, with an enormous smile on his face.
Kameron’s 10, and his mother said he usually doesn’t like people to touch him.
The next time Kameron came in, there was a surfer-instructor on the board, too. The surfer stood up and hauled Kameron up by his arms until he was standing, too. His smile was at least as big as before.
About 100 people on shore, many of them parents, applauded as each child swooshed in.
The surfer-instructors yesterday were from Surfers Healing, a donor-supported foundation in San Juan Capistrano, Calif. It got its start when Isaiah Paskowitz, the son of the founders, Israel and Danielle Paskowitz, was diagnosed with autism. Israel Paskowitz, a former competitive surfer, discovered that the ocean relieved the sensory overload children with autism experience. So he took his son surfing. It has a profound impact on both of them.
Surfers Healing now holds “camps” on both coasts.
“If we can, we let go and they’re standing on their own,” said one of the surfer-instructors, Kamakani Froiseth, a lifeguard from Makaha Beach, Hawaii. He said that some kids are “kicking and screaming” to start with but, “You take them in the water, and their mood just swings, from hating it to loving it.”
Autism often involves impairment of the ability to form normal social relationships and to communicate with others, and leads to repetitive activities with a narrow focus. Autism has a broad range of effects, which can vary from minor to profound.
It translates into experiences like that of the DiSimone family. Their son, Anthony, spoke until he was 3.
“Then he gradually stopped speaking,” said his father, Richard DiSimone. He said the experience was heartbreaking.
Anthony is now a slim 10-year-old. He does not speak, and his parents say that he is in constant motion. That means keeping an eye on him and not relaxing. He pauses for a moment to shake hands, and is off again, down the beach.
For yesterday, his parents bought him a wetsuit for insulation. He got some surfing in, and his mother, Maria DiSimone, said early in the afternoon that he had been in the water for four hours and didn’t want to come out.
Paskowitz said he had to cut short a camp at Montauk, on Long Island, the day before because conditions were terrible: lots of wind, big waves and currents. On a danger scale of 10, he said, Montauk was an 8.
Yesterday at the Narragansett Town Beach, the waves were a bit over a foot high –– just enough to ride standing up on a surf board, and no bigger. The beach slopes gently, with no drop-off and no currents. There was a light wind.
Paskowitz said the conditions were perfect. He put the danger level at zero.
His advice for parents who want to replicate the “surfing camp” yesterday is, unfortunately, “Don’t do it,” because, “the danger factor is just so high.”
Paskowitz and the seven other surfers he brought with him made it look easy, smoothly giving the kids a good time in ideal conditions. He said, though, that the surfers have had years of experience and have dealt with 60-foot waves.
Even with all that, they focused a lot of manpower on the kids’ surfing runs –– one instructor on the board with the child, and two or three more on the receiving end, to catch the child and the board, separately or together. The absolute ratio of skilled surfers teaching children with autism has to be a minimum of one to one and often more, he said.
The DiSimones, who discovered Surfers Healing on television, have gone to three of the camps during the last five years, two in New Jersey and one in North Carolina.
She said the parents’ goal is to have Surfers Healing hold a camp in Rhode Island every year.
Dustin Ray Surfing-Cayucos
Read my (Mike Baird's) tutorial on how to take good surf photos.
Dustin Ray "D-Ray" - Surfer at the Cayucos Pier, Cayucos, CA, 01-02-2007 - taken from the pier with a tripod, Canon 5D w/ 300 mm f/2.8 IS lens (EF300mm f/2.8L IS USM). This shot shows the local AZHIAZIAM azhiaziam.com/ brand -Photo by Mike Baird BairdPhotos.com 1/1600 f/3.2. This photo is used, by permission, by Chris Woodford at www.explainthatstuff.com/surfingscience.html under the Creative Commons license
surfmorrobay.com
Surfers and friends of surfers – please add a Note (see ADD NOTE button above) annotation to this photo and or add a comment below indicating the identity of the individual(s) in this image.
surfing-cayucos
Dustin Ray "D-Ray" - Surfer at the Cayucos Pier, Cayucos, CA, 01-02-2007 - taken from the pier, some hand held, some with a tripod, Canon 5D w/ 300 mm IS lens - This shot shows the local AZHIAZIAM azhiaziam.com/ brand -Photo by Mike Baird BairdPhotos.com 1/1600 f/5
Surfers and friends of surfers – please add a Note (see ADD NOTE button above) annotation to this photo and or add a comment below indicating the identity of the individual(s) in this image.
The Matador Team - You can view the article here
(http://matadorgoods.com/5-best-surf-films-of-all-time/)
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Surfer Catches a Wave
Every year, a total of 44 men and 16 women compete for the highly prestigious title of 'best championship surfer' at the Quiksilver Pro Gold Coasts.
The competition - which also doubles up as the start of the annual ASP World Tour -
usually occurs at Snapper Rocks Beach, in Collangata, at the southern end of Queensland's Gold Coast. It has been known, however, to relocate to other nearby locations should the waves not reach the desired height and strength.
Fans can expect the odd lay-day (no competition) during the waiting period, but waves in Australia are typically healthy throughout February and March, with soaring temperatures and impressive swells, so there's always plenty of top-class surfing action.
Seed Eliminated at Jetty Surf Pro Junior
Young 14-year-old Sarah Mason provided a gigantic upset on Day 2 of the Quiksilver Jetty Surf Pro Junior, which ran in good quality clean 1 metre surf at Jan Juc beach on Victoria's Surfcoast.
The diminutive, former-Kiwi surfer, who has now been based in Australia for five years, took an exciting Round 2 heat win in the ASP Pro Junior Women's division, defeating and eliminating the event's No. 1 seed Tyler Wright.
Sixteen-year-old Wright probably has the greatest junior surfing record in Australian surfing, which includes multiple Australian and World Titles along with an ASP World Tour victory at the sport's highest level, but she struggled in today's conditions while Mason capitalised by finding better waves to secure a close heat win.
"I never think about who I'm surfing against in my heats, I simply go out and surf my best and try and win," said Mason after her win today. "Tyler's a great surfer and now I've won the heat it gives me confidence to go a lot further and aim high at this event."
West Australian surfer Laura Macaulay placed second behind Mason to advance today with Wright close behind in third place but unfortunately eliminated.
Sarah Mason's older sister Arini also impressively won her Round 2 heat along with Philippa Anderson and Ellie-Jean Coffey, who both took strong heat wins.
Ellie-Jean Coffey, just 15 years of age, highlighted the depth of young talent coming through the ASP Australasian Pro Junior ranks.
"I have just returned from a High Performance training camp with Surfing Australia and I'm feeling really good about my surfing - even though there's a lot of girls older than me in the Pro Juniors I now have the confidence to really surf against them and know that I can beat them," said Coffey, who has spent a lot of time over the past two years transient along the northern NSW coastline developing her surfing talents.
Chris Salisbury and Jerome Forrest were the outstanding performers as Round 1 of the ASP Pro Junior Men's was also finalised today.
Salisbury utilized his smooth and powerful backhand surfing to post the days highest wave score of 8.75 out on his way to a comfortable heat win.
"I'm taking the ASP Australasian Pro Junior circuit very seriously this season - It's my last year on the circuit and I definitely want to finish the year in the top five on the ratings and qualify for the ASP World Junior Championships," said Salisbury.
Jerome Forrest scored two excellent waves of an 8.45 and an 8 to register the highest heat tally of the day of 16.45.
Victorian surfers had mixed results on day two - Caiden Fowler and Tom Allan both progressed to round two while Georgia Fish and Nikki Van Dijk were surprise eliminations in closely contested round two heats in the Pro Junior women's.
Tomorrow will most likely see the top seeds including Dean Bowen, Garrett Parkes, Davey Cathels and Chris Friend surfing in round two and surf conditions are expected to remain very similar to today's good conditions.
Saturday, February 6, 2010
Bondi Surfer 2010
Surf school
Sunshine Coast school kids may appear to be having the time of their lives when they surf at pristine beaches as part of their curriculum but parents and teachers say the pupils are still learning.
A recent letter to the editor criticising the Caloundra Surfabout competition for primary school students prompted a wave of support for the event from parents and teachers.
In a letter from J Goldston published in the Daily, the writer claimed students would be “laughing their heads off, getting out of school and the old three Rs”.
Jim Beam Surftag Series 2010
Due to massive numbers and the huge success at last seasons’ NSW Jim Beam Surftag Series, NSW will now be split into two regions, NSW North and NSW Sout
The new event - NSW North, will involve Boardriding Clubs from the Central Coast, Newcastle and the Mid North Coast and scheduled to be held in January at Newcastle.The NSW North qualifier will be fought out by 2005 Jim Beam Surftag National Champions Umina, Macmasters, Avoca, Nth Shelley, Wamberall, Norah Head, Catherine Hill Bay,
Brett Simpson Speaks about New Face of ASP for 2010
Simpson has been a standout in several international events on The Grind this year and is in excellent position to potentially qualify for the prestigious ASP World Tour. The progressive regular-footer is looking forward to being a part of the new face of the ASP Dream Tour set in place for 2010.
“I think the 32-man format awesome for the sport,” Simpson said. “This is the kind of progression we needed to build or sport and take it to the next level! I already think it’s a pretty prestigious class of guys, but by the middle of next year there will likely only be 32 guys and that’s a huge honor if you’re a part of that.”
Simpson is also looking forward to the simplification of the one-world rating slated to take place for next season, making it perfectly clear as to where each surfer sits on a global scale.
“The one-world rating is huge for us surfers too,” Simpson said. “Somebody will ask me what I’m rated, and I don’t even know what to tell them because I’m sixth on the ‘QS but there are still 45 guys ahead of me on the World Tour, so now it will be a much more clear answer.”
The Orange County local, who won the richest ASP WQS prize purse in surfing history when he claimed the Hurley U.S. Open this year, is also out to claim his piece of the financial boost set in place for next year’s ASP World Tour as well as the top level ASP WQS events.
“I’m always motivated and hungry, but the increased prize purse definitely helps us surfers out a lot,” Simpson said. “The more money we can make just helps us in the future. It’s an awesome bonus and great that the sponsors and ASP are really backing the surfers.”
Simpson will be out to solidify his spot on the ASP World Tour at the upcoming ASP WQS 6-Star O’Neill Cold Water Classic which will run from October 25 through 31, 2009.
ASP One Ranking System Unveiled for 2010 and Beyond
COOLANGATTA, Queensland/Australia (Tuesday, December 29, 2009) – Beginning in 2010, ASP International will activate a One Ranking structure for the men’s ASP Dream Tour and the ASP World Qualifying Series (WQS).
The concept of the ASP One Ranking structure is to make both the ASP-sanctioned World Tour and Qualifying Series events contribute to a surfer’s year-end rating. The ASP One Ranking structure will be the primary means for determining if a surfer is eligible to compete in ASP World Tour events and the highly-rated ASP Qualifying events.
Surfers will start to accumulate their respective ASP One Ranking points from the start of the 2010 season. However, the first season will be a bridge year to allow ASP to ensure that points are correct across all events and the changeover times onto the ASP World Tour are finalized.
Below is a brief summary of the ASP One Ranking System and how the crowning of the ASP World Champion will work. We have begun with 2011, as it is the first full year season of operation.
ASP One Rankings from 2011:
· A surfer’s ASP ranking is determined by their best eight results from 2010. These results can come from any ASP event.
· As a surfer progresses through the 2011 ASP World Tour, they to replace and results, but always counting their best eight results from the past 12 months. Essentially, a surfer’s ranking constantly changes throughout their career (subsequent years will work in a similar fashion).
· EXAMPLE: if a surfer is counting a result from the 2010 Quiksilver Pro Gold Coast, once the 2011 Quiksilver Pro Gold Coast comes around, they need to that result and pick up their next best. That next best result can (but does not have to) come from the 2011 Quiksilver Pro Gold Coast if they perform better than the previous year or from their 9th best result of the past 12 months.
· The ASP One Ranking structure will determine which surfers qualify for the 32-man ASP World Tour events at pre-determined changeover points throughout the year. The ASP is currently considering that the changeovers will occur approximately every three events or three months. However, 2010 will be used to better analyze the results of the ASP One Ranking tem before finalizing.
· The changeover points for each season will be announced as soon as the following year’s schedule is finalized.
· A surfer cannot count the same event twice in their top eight results should that event change dates to fall twice in 12 months.
The ASP World Champion will be determined by counting only results from ASP World Tour events. Each year, a new ASP World Title race will start and surfers can only win by counting their best eight results from ASP World Tour events. The rationale behind this is to ensure that the surfers competing for the prestigious ASP World Title are all competing at a level playing field and not chasing points in ASP Qualifying events at the end of the season,
ASP Bridge Year in 2010:
The ASP Top 45 (the Top 27 from the 2009 ASP World Tour, the Top 15 from the 2009 ASP WQS and three wildcards) will commence 2010 as they have in the past, with the first ASP World Tour event at the Quiksilver Pro Gold Coast.
After the fifth ASP World Tour event (the Billabong Pro Teahupoo), the field will be reduced to the Top 32 from the 45 who qualified for the start of the 2010 season. After the final ASP World Tour event of 2010 (the Billabong Pipe Masters), the ASP will determine the Top 32 surfers for the 2011 ASP World Tour. ASP International has built in a safety net to guarantee the number of surfers that comprise the 2011 ASP Top 32 – 22 from the ASP World Tour events and 10 from the ASP One Rankings events.
For more information, log onto
Surfers and Kayakers.
Yesterday the Olympic torch was carried on surf board up in Tofino, BC for the first time ever by Raph Bruhwiler. It’s also been carried on a mountain bike, skateboard, canoe, wheelchair and a float plane. It was also recently carried by van when police had to get around some protesters doing what they do best, protesting stuff.
Keep an eye on day 11 of the relay (November 9, 2009) when the torch passes through Iqaluit, Nunavut. There it will be paddled in a traditional skin-on-frame kayak along the shoreline by Kyle St. Laurent, a long-time member and assistant coach with the Nunavut Speed Skating Association
Surfing Championships
The 2010 Quiksilver ISA World Junior Surfing Championship will see the world’s best under 18-year-old surfers battling it out for world titles in the biggest event of the junior surfing year. The spectacle at Piha is an Olympic-type event staged with competitors from around the world competing both individually and for their countries in front of large crowds.
“We’re really happy to announce that New Zealand will be the 2010 location for the Quiksilver ISA World Junior Surfing Championship. It is an amazing location with perfect waves and a great surfing culture. It’s really important to note that this is the first time after more than 25 years that the ISA holds an event of this magnitude in the Australasia zone,” says the ISA President, Fernando Aguerre.
2010 slayshTank Surf Trip: Destination Pororoca, Brazil and the Longest Wave in the World
Surf Destinations for 2010
IT’S HARD TO BE a serious surfer without also being a serious traveler. As fun as it is to surf your local beach, it’s the chance that perfect waves are just around the next corner — or around the world — that keeps us on the road.
[Editor's note: Once you're finished checking out the spots below, make sure to visit Matador's surfing resources page].
Peniche, Portugal
Each year Rip Curl holds its premier WCT surf contest, The Search, at a different break around the world. Past locations have included Bali, Mexico, and Chile. In 2009 it was Peniche, a quaint fishing town about 1.5 hours north of Lisbon.
If the experience of past destinations are anything to go by, Peniche is likely to see an influx of traveling surfers keen to score the same waves they watched the world’s best compete in.
Peniche once had the distinction of being one of the smelliest surfing spots in the world due to local fish processing plants. Thankfully the factories have been cleaned up, but the world-class waves remain, the result of an undersea ledge that consistently produces hollow waves in clean swells.
SURF’S UP” Folly Beach
SURF’S UP” Folly Beach 2010
SURFER'S BEACH, PUERTO
The Squids, is a specialty division for the supercharge kids of 12 and under, for this once a year event. Cristian Rivera claimed the victory with a Santa Cruz skate, custom Volcom trophy and heap of other goods. Brian Laide took second with Quincy Davis in third and Jose Claudio in forth.
In the Grom final, Andrew Doheny wasted no time in the opening minutes by hooking up on a surfer’s beach gem. He took it to pieces and posted a score of an 8.0 and never looked back. Andrew was all smiles after earning himself the win, a Zoo York deck and grip of other prizes. Nick Rupp put in a good run and earned himself a solid second with Jose Tovares, Erick Torres, Jorge Rivera and Hector Santa Maria rounding out the final
Thursday, February 4, 2010
Panama surfing destinations
Bocas del Toro is an outdoor lover’s paradise with unspoiled coral reefs, deep-sea fishing, boating, kayaking, snorkeling, surfing and white sandy deserted beaches and coves. The local people of the province are made up of mainly indigenous tribes and descendants of slaves from Jamaica, which contributes to Bocas’ diverse and lively culture. Read the rest of this entry »
The Bocas del Toro Archipelago Surfing
The rainy season in Bocas takes place from December through January and then again June through August, however this season rarely produces enough rain to ruin a vacation. The dry season runs from February through May and during this period it is not uncommon to miss the raindrops all together. However, since we are in the tropics, short storms can come and go at any time. The great part about this tropical positioning though, is that we enjoy warm temperatures and light ocean breezes all year round. Read the rest of this entry »
“Surfing the Breaks in Panama’s
After flying into Panama City’s Tocumen International Airport (PTY); you can take a taxi to Albrook airport (the national airport) which is a 40 minute taxi ride. Then you catch your sixty minute or so connecting flight from Albrook airport -AKA- Marcos Gelabert Regional Airport (MPMG) to Bocas Del Toro (BOC). Or you can plan your flights to have an overnight stay in Panama City before your Bocas flight, and check out the night life in a remarkable tropical city of nearly a million people. Read the rest of this entry »
Surfers in Bocas del Toro, Panama”
Traveling to Bocas, as the locals call it, can either be as comparatively simply as taking a 60 minute flight from Panama City, Panama; or as possibly adventurous as traveling for a long number of hours by bus. Either way you will find your destination to be unlike any other. The rain forest ecology of the islands is immediately apparent, and sudden rain showers seem to warm everything up…most of the time. Unless you’re in a boat, traveling fast while it’s storming and the faster the driver runs the boat, the harder the rain smacks you; then it’s cold. Read the rest of this entry »
“Surf Class Schoo Or Tour– Bocas del Toro
If you already are a surfer – do you want to become better, faster? You could float a few sets with local surf trainers to learn the patterns of the Caribbean waves, or you could chose to go a surf camp or maybe you will be coming to Panama with a surf tour. Most Panama surf tours include a private guide who is an experienced, bilingual local surfer who knows where to take you for an amazing Panamanian surf trip. But you may not want that much attention. Read the rest of this entry
“Come Surf Panama’s Un-Crowded, Warm Waves in a Tropical Paradise!”- Bocas del Toro
“The surf in Panama is year-round, with the most consistent conditions occurring on the Pacific coast between March through November, and on the Atlantic Coast November through April. But what makes a trip to Panama an especially fine wintertime option is the prevailing wind: blowing out of the north during the dry season between December and April, this means clean offshores on the Pacific side.”
With ocean on both the West and East side of Panama, one should not discount the tropical setting and experience offered on the Caribbean Coast. Just a short flight from Panama City gets you into the Bocas Del Toro region. Stated one expert. “The Caribbean coast (Bocas del Toro and Isla Grande) receives strong swell from November through April, plus June and July, due to wind and cold fronts to the north. August is generally smaller, but there is still some surf in Bocas. September and October are normally flat on the Caribbean coast, but sometimes they get some swell during those months with the hurricanes in the Caribbean pushing swells in.”
Check out all the info, read traveler reviews and sign up for what you want and start surfing Panama! Airfare, trinkets for your little sister and side trips are up to you. Until next time….
Surfing in Panama
Santa Catalina can be reached from the small town of Sona, which has an ATM, grocery store and essentials. It takes about one hour to travel down the paved road to the coast. The road ends in Playa Santa Catalina, which is little more than a fishing village with some surf camps, low cost basic hotels and a few eating establishments, as shown on the map below