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ScottMac wrote:kid, you're so right it'scary.
I keep in contact and still surf with ocean7847. Anybody remember him?
A guy in his early 20's who went out of his way to give kneeboarding a
try. He made one post that a bunch of the old time hardliner christian guys
on this site took offense to and caught so much grief he said Eff it! He went back to being a standup.
The amount of new kneeboarders taking up this sport is nonexistant. The
contest thing ain't bringing them in. Hell, I don't even like surfing with
kneelos these days anymore.
Scotty, yeah, I remember that thread (around February of 2007). It started out pretty edgy then calmed down.A guy in his early 20's who went out of his way to give kneeboarding a
try. He made one post that a bunch of the old time hardliner christian guys
on this site took offense to and caught so much grief he said Eff it! He went back to being a standup.
How did we lose our way?
They've been replaced, in these forums, by a bunch pessimistic, cynical, aging Knostalgia Kneelos whoripped the gnarliest breaks in town, rode the coolest equipment, held the break down with an iron fist, and scared the crap out of us as kids.
don't even like surfing with
kneelos these days anymore.
Hmm ... Cappy that's a worrying trend. When I were a kid I took guidance from Timothy Leary and co. who advised us to beware of smiling men with bad reputations and trust no-one over the age of thirty.CaptKneemo wrote:"some" of these kids dig the old dudes in the water and are easily talked into riding kneeboards, paipos, alaias and such ...
The other great inspirations of my youth were the fact that Jimi Hendrix was a left-handed three-finger guitarist and that my mate's older brother surfed a well known north coast point break at eight foot plus while out of his gourd on goldtops. Just like Captain Goodvibes, but with more hair.No short-haired, yellow-bellied, son-of-tricky dickie's gonna mother hubbard soft soap me with just a pocket of soap
budgie wrote:Have been pondering the surfcraft and it evolution.
Looked at some old late 70s and early 80s twinfin kneeboards for sale the other day and it got me thinking about the evolutionary deadend streets and the golden paths most followed in designs.
We even go back and try some of these EVOLUTIONARY DEADENDS and they work, they function and they show us something from our past and some of us even steal snipets of some design feature and bring the past into the present or into the future by incorporating some design fluck or some aspect that challenges us today.
Some examples:
George Greenoughs spoon design has seen a Retro resurgence and I am yet to have ridden a proper spoon, has a go of a sort of spoon 30+ years ago.
Friar Tuck early 80s wide nosed squared tailed fourfins which Dave Parkes shredded on and I am yet to ride one.
I see the big boards (long 6ft+ and 3 inch thick) becoming those of an experimental evolutionary deadend.
And I have riden them and they work well, but I see future problems with them. I ride 5ft 8in x 24 in wide x as thin as I can get, to emulate pro style footboards
However there is an extremely strong passion for these boards at the moment and I was wondering what others thoughts are, especially of the shapers who frequent this great forum.