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In conjunction with our annual Surfboards Issue (On newsstands Nov. 18), we will be posting one interview per day with a craftsman who contributed to the issue. This time: New Smyrna’s Mark Wooster.

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In conjunction with our annual Surfboards Issue (On newsstands Nov. 18), we will be posting one interview per day with a craftsman who contributed to the issue. This time: M10’s Geoff Rashe – based in Santa Cruz.

NOAA makes its decision on the Monterey Bay Marine Sanctuary; Maverick’s will remain a “seasonal” PWC zone

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The Rip Curl Pro Search 'Somewhere In Indonesia' stayed true to the event's DNA: the World's best surfers in the World's best waves.

Nat Young takes 1st place at the 2008 Rip Curl Grom Search Nationals in Salt Creek California. Nationals went down in pumping grom head high surf on November 2, 2008. Watch all the highlights from the surfing competition.

The Vans Triple Crown of Surfing is responsible for making or breaking professional surfing careers. 2008 Will be no different

NSSA NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS: Heavy Weather on Day One at Lowers

By DHB

Rounds: Explorer Juniors Rounds 1 and 2, Explorer Menehuene Round 1, Explorer Girls Quarter Finals

Conditions: 3-5 foot with sporadic lulls and bigger sets rolling through out the back. Shifting wind.

Nature’s Call:
a) hot, sunny and glassy
b) rain, thunder, and blown out
c) howling, cold offshore winds
d) all of the above

The answer is d, all of the above—whoever said the SAT’s are the only thing that’s tricky?

The portable generators are purring, the extra porta-potties are up and waiting, the camera men are poised, and the crowds are—well, it’s Lowers, they’re always there, but this time they’re all on the beach.

From the competitors to the fans, everyone looked ready for the first day of Nationals at Trestles on Tuesday, June 27th. Sure, there was thunder, rain, heat, cold, and so much wind that they had to tie down the judges’ scaffolding with ropes to keep it from blowing over, but there was also surf; and this year’s crop of surfers held nothing back once they stepped in the water.

“I’ve been calling the level of surfing since Nationals last year,” said director Janice Aragon, looking tired but happy at the day’s end. “We didn’t have too many graduates so I knew the bar was going to be higher, and it’s pretty obvious after some of the surfing today that it was.”

Just watching round 2 of the Explorer Juniors was enough proof to realize that these young surfers haven’t just raised the bar for their age group, they’ve ripped the thing off its hinges and chucked it into the air. Maui’s Kai Barger worked his backside on the rights in his heat, pulling off nearly a dozen top to bottom turns and arcing carves per-a-wave, earning him one the highest scoring heats for the day. Indeed he had one of the most powerful surfing style’s out there.


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“I’ll tell ya, the Hawaiians are blowing up,” Janice pointed out. “They have style, they’re radical, they’re focused, and they come here to get the gold which shows in their surfing.”

And then there was Heat 4 in Round 2 where Casey Brown and Clay Marzo battled it out for first, with Brown posting a 9 and Clay posting a 10—via his signature tail-whip. Following a flat heat 9, heat 10 opened with a set and the waves continued to come through. Brown went right, holding nothing back in his turns and Clay answered him by dropping in on a left and doing what he does best despite his injured foot.

“I got staff infection surfing in Indo,” Clay said, limping out of the water after his heat. “The bandage came off when I was surfing, but I’m just glad I pulled off some waves.”

Round 1 of the Expolrer Menehuene went down today, too, with the usual suspects—Ezekiel Lau, Kolohe Andino, and Evan Geiselman standing out above the pack

“I was fired up in my heat because Ezekiel got a 9.5 in his before mine and I wanted to beat that,” said Kolohe Andino.


 



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