Everybody wants to
- krusher74
- Big Wave Charger
- Posts: 842
- Joined: Wed Nov 07, 2012 3:53 pm
- City: easkey
- State or Province: co sligo
- Country: Ireland
- Interests: Surfing, vintage cars and motorbikes
- Location: Easky, Co sligo , ireland
- Contact:
Re: Everybody wants to
They are the best selling board in the world! "the magic" of them is that the are the cheapest board you can buy coming straight out of china. They unfortunately fill the needs of the average cheap kook starting out in the sport. They are the plastic bag/single use water bottle of the surf industry. They also sell out of costco and had at one time a free replacement scheme and at one time jamie obrien was taking them to pipe snapping them and going back to costco for another.
http://www.sdfsurfboards.co.uk/ built my paipo!
-
- Big Wave Charger
- Posts: 254
- Joined: Tue Nov 29, 2011 3:58 pm
- City: Camarillo
- State or Province: California
- Country: USA
Re: Everybody wants to
That pretty much sums up everything I detest about society at large...and given they are the best selling boards in the world and I see as many of them with surfers as I do other boards (completely supplanting bodyboards in SoCal)...do the math. Getting hard not to detest "surfing". I don't know what things are like in other surfing countries any more, but in Southern California there are just so many people on boards now it really isn't funny. You see these Costco boards on cars, the side of the road as people get ready, and in the water nearly everywhere. I was stuck in northbound traffic for about 40 minutes from Santa Monica to Malibu that August 24 Hurricane Marie swell 3-4 years ago, right next to a car with a girl who had a Wavestorm on top...like it was the south swell of a generation and she was going to paddle that pig out somewhere, Stupid, and scary, and stupid.They are the best selling board in the world! "the magic" of them is that the are the cheapest board you can buy coming straight out of china. They unfortunately fill the needs of the average cheap kook starting out in the sport. They are the plastic bag/single use water bottle of the surf industry. They also sell out of costco and had at one time a free replacement scheme and at one time jamie obrien was taking them to pipe snapping them and going back to costco for another.
And worse, up my way at least, Zuma to say Rincon with side trips "further north", for the past three or four years I've seen Wavestorms show up with solid recreational surfers, people who can actually surf on short or long boards. They get a Wavestorm for the ubiquitous friends or family who want to "surf", and sometimes the crowd situation is so nuts they just take their thrasher Wavestorm out so they can still get wet and ride a few without the struggle and worry of their more performance-oriented surfcraft. You can almost see a "progression"...pretty soon rather than have a "good" board that needs babysitting they just bring the Wavestorm when the surf is junk. I suspect a lot of new surfers see no reason to progress off a Wavestorm; surfing isn't as big a thing to them as it was to many from earlier times.
I think these boards might literally be changing the surfing culture, if not now, in the coming years. Somebody around here, maybe Jon from Cornwall who has been quiet for a long time, or maybe Eff, mentioned "lowering the bar", and I think Wavestorms are doing just that for standup surfing. Sort of like those "governors" that limit top speed in race cars. If it cools the insane competitiveness in the troubled waters that might actually be a good thing, but like any tool, it depends on who uses it...
- Uncle Grumpy
- Big Wave Charger
- Posts: 450
- Joined: Mon Sep 19, 2011 12:57 pm
- City: San Clemente
- State or Province: California
- Country: USA
- Interests: Surfing, Surfboards, Surf History, Fishing, Boats, Dogs, Books
- Contact:
Re: Everybody wants to
In 2016 alone, Costco sold 100,000 of those abominations.
Paipo surfer in repose,
Nose on the nose,
No grunting he-man pose.
See how fast he goes!
What is it he knows?
Nose on the nose,
No grunting he-man pose.
See how fast he goes!
What is it he knows?
- nomastomas
- Big Wave Charger
- Posts: 597
- Joined: Thu Nov 17, 2011 2:30 am
- City: Ojai
- State or Province: CA
- Country: USA
- Interests: Surfing, cycling and fishing
- Location: Ojai, CA
- Contact:
Re: Everybody wants to
Just curious Uncle G...do you feel the same way about the the foam paipo a.k.a. Morey Boogie Board?
"This is a paipo site...isn't it?"
www.tp4surf.com
www.tp4surf.com
- krusher74
- Big Wave Charger
- Posts: 842
- Joined: Wed Nov 07, 2012 3:53 pm
- City: easkey
- State or Province: co sligo
- Country: Ireland
- Interests: Surfing, vintage cars and motorbikes
- Location: Easky, Co sligo , ireland
- Contact:
Re: Everybody wants to
The boogie/bodyboard industry have their own wave storm, its the sub $50 bought by the inlanders one week a year beach holiday for the the kids.nomastomas wrote:Just curious Uncle G...do you feel the same way about the the foam paipo a.k.a. Morey Boogie Board?
Here are 600 snapped one left on just a few southern English beaches this summer
http://www.sdfsurfboards.co.uk/ built my paipo!
-
- Big Wave Charger
- Posts: 384
- Joined: Sat Sep 17, 2011 9:58 am
- City: Paonia
- State or Province: Colorado
- Country: USA
- Location: Paonia, Colorado
- Contact:
Re: Everybody wants to
That certainly highlights the enviro disaster that is surfing except for wood boards and body surfing... Three toots for roots!krusher74 wrote:The boogie/bodyboard industry have their own wave storm, its the sub $50 bought by the inlanders one week a year beach holiday for the the kids.
Here are 600 snapped one left on just a few southern English beaches this summer
- Uncle Grumpy
- Big Wave Charger
- Posts: 450
- Joined: Mon Sep 19, 2011 12:57 pm
- City: San Clemente
- State or Province: California
- Country: USA
- Interests: Surfing, Surfboards, Surf History, Fishing, Boats, Dogs, Books
- Contact:
Re: Everybody wants to
No.nomastomas wrote:Just curious Uncle G...do you feel the same way about the the foam paipo a.k.a. Morey Boogie Board?
Only those shitty ones made from really cheap EPS like the ones Krusher mentioned.
FWIW I love Tom Morey and his creations..
Paipo surfer in repose,
Nose on the nose,
No grunting he-man pose.
See how fast he goes!
What is it he knows?
Nose on the nose,
No grunting he-man pose.
See how fast he goes!
What is it he knows?
-
- Big Wave Charger
- Posts: 384
- Joined: Sat Sep 17, 2011 9:58 am
- City: Paonia
- State or Province: Colorado
- Country: USA
- Location: Paonia, Colorado
- Contact:
Re: Everybody wants to
To amend my post above, I think Morey's creation of the bb is one of the most brilliant ideas in surfing and have greatly enjoyed riding them. Materials is the problem. Once they die, and everything dies, what happens to it. Also, what resources are used to create it in the first place. We now have so many people on the planet, and we 1st worlders are sucking up resources and spewing waste at such a ferocious rate, that those issues need to be front and center always.
- rodndtube
- Big Wave Charger
- Posts: 1158
- Joined: Thu Aug 18, 2011 10:34 pm
- City: Arbutus Land
- State or Province: Maryland
- Country: USA
- Interests: Waveriding, travel and the Paipo Research Project
- Location: Maryland, USA & Where the Waves Are Breaking
- Contact:
Re: Everybody wants to
My boards never die. I still have my original paipo board from 50 years ago, created from a broken Holmsey Sidewinder during a ride on a 4 ft wave at Bridges, Aguadilla, Puerto Rico. I've sold a couple of my former boards over the years, one is with a third owner and continues to live on and ridden regularly.
rodNDtube
"Prone to ride"
I love my papa li`ili`i
"The sea doth wash away all human ills."
-- Euripides.
"Prone to ride"
I love my papa li`ili`i
"The sea doth wash away all human ills."
-- Euripides.
- krusher74
- Big Wave Charger
- Posts: 842
- Joined: Wed Nov 07, 2012 3:53 pm
- City: easkey
- State or Province: co sligo
- Country: Ireland
- Interests: Surfing, vintage cars and motorbikes
- Location: Easky, Co sligo , ireland
- Contact:
Re: Everybody wants to
The problem is we want what we don't needGeoffreyLevens wrote:To amend my post above, I think Morey's creation of the bb is one of the most brilliant ideas in surfing and have greatly enjoyed riding them. Materials is the problem. Once they die, and everything dies, what happens to it. Also, what resources are used to create it in the first place. We now have so many people on the planet, and we 1st worlders are sucking up resources and spewing waste at such a ferocious rate, that those issues need to be front and center always.
i'n 5 years i think i have nailed down my paipo design to something i think i could ride for the rest of my days, as I feel the weakest link now is my skill, the board will do what ever I want with out and fight back. So I think now if i constructed one from light enough paulowina (and dont get fat) i could probably see out my surfing days on it.
http://www.sdfsurfboards.co.uk/ built my paipo!
-
- Big Wave Charger
- Posts: 384
- Joined: Sat Sep 17, 2011 9:58 am
- City: Paonia
- State or Province: Colorado
- Country: USA
- Location: Paonia, Colorado
- Contact:
Re: Everybody wants to
Easy on the junk food and beers and plenty of water time and you'll stay plenty leankrusher74 wrote:i'n 5 years i think i have nailed down my paipo design to something i think i could ride for the rest of my days, as I feel the weakest link now is my skill, the board will do what ever I want with out and fight back. So I think now if i constructed one from light enough paulowina (and dont get fat) i could probably see out my surfing days on it.
-
- Big Wave Charger
- Posts: 254
- Joined: Tue Nov 29, 2011 3:58 pm
- City: Camarillo
- State or Province: California
- Country: USA
Re: Everybody wants to
It's funny how things go as years turn to decades. Technology (including design) changes, improves. Knowledge and understanding and experience improve things. Society makes inroads...travel becomes easier, new places open up, then new places fill. Old places go from full to forking insanity. If you spend enough time in an activity, eventually it becomes as much mental as physical. People come and go. Designs come and go and come again. Everything is a double-edged sword. There should come a time of reckoning, where we find ourselves examining just what the hell we're doing here, if it's still worth the sacrifices, if it's worth what we have sacrificed...and why we're doing it still right now. Things happen in life, it may not always be about fitness or commitment...i'n 5 years i think i have nailed down my paipo design to something i think i could ride for the rest of my days, as I feel the weakest link now is my skill, the board will do what ever I want with out and fight back. So I think now if i constructed one from light enough paulowina (and dont get fat) i could probably see out my surfing days on it.
Don't forget to Feed Your Head...
-
- Big Wave Charger
- Posts: 384
- Joined: Sat Sep 17, 2011 9:58 am
- City: Paonia
- State or Province: Colorado
- Country: USA
- Location: Paonia, Colorado
- Contact:
Re: Everybody wants to
That for sure inclose 2nd place. But top of the list....feed your heart!Nels wrote:Don't forget to Feed Your Head...
- nomastomas
- Big Wave Charger
- Posts: 597
- Joined: Thu Nov 17, 2011 2:30 am
- City: Ojai
- State or Province: CA
- Country: USA
- Interests: Surfing, cycling and fishing
- Location: Ojai, CA
- Contact:
Re: Everybody wants to
For me, the one constant in life is the feeling that comes from being in the ocean. Everything else, family, friends, jobs, hobbies, interests, likes, dislikes, bikes, surfboards, is transitory. The feeling that comes from being in the ocean never changes. That feeling is purely right-brain, non-verbal and impossible to articulate. It re-charges my soul, no matter rough or gentle, or how warm or cold. And, having waves to ride is just the frosting on the cake. So, while I may passionately debate the virtues of this or that design, this or that material or construction technique, or complain about the wave size or the crowd size, I think that these things are secondary to the act of just being in the ocean.Nels wrote:It's funny how things go as years turn to decades. Technology (including design) changes, improves. Knowledge and understanding and experience improve things. Society makes inroads...travel becomes easier, new places open up, then new places fill. Old places go from full to forking insanity. If you spend enough time in an activity, eventually it becomes as much mental as physical. People come and go. Designs come and go and come again. Everything is a double-edged sword. There should come a time of reckoning, where we find ourselves examining just what the hell we're doing here, if it's still worth the sacrifices, if it's worth what we have sacrificed...and why we're doing it still right now. Things happen in life, it may not always be about fitness or commitment...i'n 5 years i think i have nailed down my paipo design to something i think i could ride for the rest of my days, as I feel the weakest link now is my skill, the board will do what ever I want with out and fight back. So I think now if i constructed one from light enough paulowina (and dont get fat) i could probably see out my surfing days on it.
Don't forget to Feed Your Head...
"This is a paipo site...isn't it?"
www.tp4surf.com
www.tp4surf.com
-
- Big Wave Charger
- Posts: 107
- Joined: Fri Aug 19, 2011 2:48 pm
- City: Santa Cruz
- State or Province: CA
- Country: USA
- Location: Santa Cruz
Re: Everybody wants to
yupFor me, the one constant in life is the feeling that comes from being in the ocean. Everything else, family, friends, jobs, hobbies, interests, likes, dislikes, bikes, surfboards, is transitory. The feeling that comes from being in the ocean never changes. That feeling is purely right-brain, non-verbal and impossible to articulate. It re-charges my soul, no matter rough or gentle, or how warm or cold. And, having waves to ride is just the frosting on the cake. So, while I may passionately debate the virtues of this or that design, this or that material or construction technique, or complain about the wave size or the crowd size, I think that these things are secondary to the act of just being in the ocean.
-
- Big Wave Charger
- Posts: 111
- Joined: Thu Jul 31, 2014 5:33 pm
- City: Florence
- State or Province: Tuscany
- Country: Italy
- Interests: A True Passion for Paipo & Kneeboards
- Location: Italy
Re: Everybody wants to
Yup the above sound like wise words from Confucius
Osoo I see the light -- toooo
Fully agree with very well worded frases
Osoo I see the light -- toooo
Fully agree with very well worded frases
its all about the ride
-
- Big Wave Charger
- Posts: 254
- Joined: Tue Nov 29, 2011 3:58 pm
- City: Camarillo
- State or Province: California
- Country: USA
Re: Everybody wants to
It's all pretty much transitory, I suppose. I would order that list like so: the people (family and friends) and the ocean. If I were to nitpick myself at this stage I might say People and Nature. Or People and Water? Not People In Water though, all you guys excepted. When I'm not in the ocean I'm thinking about it, never more so than when I'm around fresh water or desert dryness, both of which I enjoy, maybe some kind of yin/yang thing. When I find myself stuck in those horrible dry situations like work or a doctor's office - both of which I try to avoid like the plague - then my animal-brain reverts to the thought that as long as there is decent water out there for somebody to enjoy, I'm good.For me, the one constant in life is the feeling that comes from being in the ocean. Everything else, family, friends, jobs, hobbies, interests, likes, dislikes, bikes, surfboards, is transitory.
Breaking it down to the essentials now eliminates almost all the toys for me. A good wetsuit and a decent pair of fins are the essentials, everything else is gravy. Barring that or tolerable conditions to go out in, I need to at least breathe it in.
-
- Big Wave Charger
- Posts: 254
- Joined: Tue Nov 29, 2011 3:58 pm
- City: Camarillo
- State or Province: California
- Country: USA
Re: Everybody wants to
Almost ready to test this monster. It comes chest-high on me. Should be interesting to paddle out. So here's the latest...
Took the advice and cut out deck skin from the donor part of the board. Tried to use a putty knife to separate it but that didn't work. In the end I used the piece of bottom skin as a template and cut it with a box cutter, and to my surprise it peeled right up slick as snot.
Used epoxy resin to reattach the loose bottom skin. Took overnight to adhere but seems solid.
Three piece skin on the cut, precision weight system to hold it down.
After final trim of the excess skin on the back.
Took the advice and cut out deck skin from the donor part of the board. Tried to use a putty knife to separate it but that didn't work. In the end I used the piece of bottom skin as a template and cut it with a box cutter, and to my surprise it peeled right up slick as snot.
Used epoxy resin to reattach the loose bottom skin. Took overnight to adhere but seems solid.
Three piece skin on the cut, precision weight system to hold it down.
After final trim of the excess skin on the back.
-
- Big Wave Charger
- Posts: 384
- Joined: Sat Sep 17, 2011 9:58 am
- City: Paonia
- State or Province: Colorado
- Country: USA
- Location: Paonia, Colorado
- Contact:
Re: Everybody wants to
That's my kind of precision weight system! Works great.
Those are some mighty boxy rails on that beast. Interesting to see how it rides. I suspect fins on it will be mandatory.
Those are some mighty boxy rails on that beast. Interesting to see how it rides. I suspect fins on it will be mandatory.
-
- Big Wave Charger
- Posts: 254
- Joined: Tue Nov 29, 2011 3:58 pm
- City: Camarillo
- State or Province: California
- Country: USA
Re: Everybody wants to
Last bit...skin condition just as it was when I fetched it up out of the trash can at Zuma (the circles come from the cans weighing it down when I resined it on though).
Deck-down view...notice the various curves all over the board. You can't even see the weird dents on the bottom skin. One of the rails practically curves in and out. I laugh when I think about reading that various pro surfers can feel thickness variations of less than a quarter of an inch. In the Wavestorm world and especially in the Wavestorm Frankenstein world I suspect anything goes. And probably not well...
Deck-down view...notice the various curves all over the board. You can't even see the weird dents on the bottom skin. One of the rails practically curves in and out. I laugh when I think about reading that various pro surfers can feel thickness variations of less than a quarter of an inch. In the Wavestorm world and especially in the Wavestorm Frankenstein world I suspect anything goes. And probably not well...
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 168 guests