Random surf clips
Insane, on so many levels.
https://eos.surf/video/entry/1974-smirnoff/
That last wave. Fark!!!!
Epic BD. You summed it up perfectly. That’s truly hardcore….
bluediamond wrote:Insane, on so many levels.
https://eos.surf/video/entry/1974-smirnoff/
That last wave. Fark!!!!
Thanks for that link BD it’s a bloody ripper mate .
Bugger. Won’t load on my phone. Endless loading symbol
seeds wrote:Bugger. Won’t load on my phone. Endless loading symbol
Yeah it’s a big file with various clips and photos from that era and some modern day eddy events , my phone didn’t load at first until signal was stronger.
Sweet as fellas.
Some great footage of Sunset too...seeing how hard and fast those singlys come off the bottom there...whoosh!! A little different off the top though.
How’s Marti’s drop at 4.30
seeds wrote:How’s Marti’s drop at 4.30
Steep and deep, in perfect control the whole ride , Nate Florence has a vid out on this session but 1/2 of it is getting there from Hawaii.
Yuri wrote:A very rare wave in Itapoa, Santa Catarina.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LFuWNuiuHCM&feature=youtu.be
Thats's awesome!
Mario Estevam Malschitzky wrote:Yuri wrote:A very rare wave in Itapoa, Santa Catarina.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LFuWNuiuHCM&feature=youtu.be
Thats's awesome!
Thank you, Mario! See this videos
River surfing in Munich, Germany. Very Fun to watch!
This vid starts to heat up about the 10 minute mark
Good clip, i always wondered how camel rode a boogie, looks like he rides one well..got to visit SA one day
Yawn.
Just another F grade faux pro blowing up spots so he can possibly avoid paying for a few bits of surf product.
Always the way that you’ll be surfing some low key spots and the really good guys don’t film or try and sell the spots out for a cheap surfboard. It’s always the wannabe pretenders who know their surfing abilities aren’t enough to generate any attention and so they need a lesser known quality wave as bait to get views and clicks. Camel wasn’t there with his camera I imagine.
Great clip by Ollie. He's a bloody legend and top bloke. Reminds me of most of the crew i grew up surfing with in SA. Larrikins that charge.
One of the hardest chargers coming out of WA right now. Have watched him packing bombs at The Right on macking days and he literally tries to do double arm drags into the face of 20footers to slow down to get pitted. Make no mistake, that place can kill you in an instant. Bloody legend and way underrated.
Sounds like a good bloke. You should have a word with him about leaving his camera at home when he travels.
And his phone.
Haha. Is that you Blowin? I thought you got banned from this site or something?
Just an anonymous voice on the internet mate. Is it the voice of an antiquated throwback who’s living under a dying code or the voice of integrity which states that a surfer’s true love of uncrowded quality waves should be prioritised over a cheap board and a like on social media? Maybe even the voice of respect for the fellow surfers who might want to enjoy empty waves just like the fellow with the camera did until he decided to broadcast them into cyber space and kickstart the end of the good times for everyone.
Don’t destroy what you came to enjoy cobber. This is as true for selling out the few remaining quiet spots out there as it is for not throwing rubbish on the beach.
DudeSweetDudeSweet wrote:Always the way that you’ll be surfing some low key spots and the really good guys don’t film or try and sell the spots out for a cheap surfboard. It’s always the wannabe pretenders who know their surfing abilities aren’t enough to generate any attention and so they need a lesser known quality wave as bait to get views and clicks. Camel wasn’t there with his camera I imagine.
You mean like Laurie Towner, Torren Martyn, etc? they’re pretty good.
.
I get what you’re saying, but my point is it’s not always the wannabe pretenders like you said who film in these traditionally low key, off limits to camera areas.
Off the top of my head I can think of the two I mentioned plus Noa Deane, Creed, Craig Ando, and Harry Bryant who have all released clips sort of recently from South Oz.
I’m with you I’d much prefer if certain spots were still off limits to photos.
And you’re gunna have to do better than that to name people I haven’t heard of, I’m a surf mag addict from way back hahaha
Edit. By the time I’d typed my reply you had added to yours… oh well you get my point
Haha ffs now you deleted it all together. Waste of time
hahaha!!
goofyfoot wrote:Haha ffs now you deleted it all together. Waste of time
Yeah, sorry mate. I didn’t really care to go any further. I’ve always been of the school that you leave a break the same way you found it. Bit of a sore point lately as there’s a highly fancied , though mellow crew who’ve recently been regularly posting up at some of the spots around here to make a movie. They come here cause they can get work done without crowds …..just means more crowds!
.
Just out of interest who did expose the right to the masses?
Probs not somewhere you’d have to worry about getting crowded. Have to have a screw loose to surf that when it’s huge
Edit.. you’ve got me again! You arsehole!
Got my reasons Goofy . Nothing to do with you mate. Again…apologies.
Good reasons too dude, ive seen plenty of uncrowded waves on south coast NSW get packed after they appeared on bodyboarding videos. Even waves that you have to walk for an hour to get to.
Well, I'm not sure Ollie could have put any more zoomed out landscape shots and landmarks into one film.
I remember Peter Kirkhouse used to shoot low key spots and have the lead up road shots be completely different areas.
Grom dominating.
David Scard had never surfed out at Cloudbreak before when he arrived for the session of his life. He had spent many long seasons at G-Land, so the goofy-footer knew his way around hollow lefts, but on this day Cloudbreak was 15-20 foot.
Underfoot was a 7’2 Allan Byrne Pelagic Series board, with quite a story behind it. Scardy had taken it out at solid G-land but found that the board was a little unwieldy. “It just didn’t feel right, it was weighed down and I couldn’t pump the thing in the barrel,” remembers Scardy.
The board was then handed over to one of Scardy’s Javanese friends, with a request to rub it back with wet and dry, to maybe take a little weight off it. Jibut, the Javanese friend, did more than give it a rub. He took the sander to it and sanded to bottom, the deck and the rails. Everything except the channels had been sanded.
“It felt like a completely different board and I knew it was going to go amazing now,” said Scardy, adding “but it was going to break on the very first wipeout I took.”
Then Scardy arrived at the newly opened Cloudbreak with a bunch of mates for a 15 – 20 foot session with a superlight shooter. While on the board, Scardy found himself lined up for a big one.
“I took off further up the reef,” said Scardy, “and as I cleared the spray, it looked like it was going to close out, so I started to drive the 7’2 as hard as I have ever driven in my life, and not for a second did I think about the board, it put me where I wanted to be and held it’s line through the best wave of my life!”
Awesome story and clip, thanks for posting GS
Been a while since I’ve liked a clip. This one was enjoyable for me.
Good clip there Seeds, I remember seeing those rock formations in the old Tension videos.
Gab's practicing at g land.
Chojnaki
Don't think there's a forum thread for random surf clips to share...so here goes.