Wednesday, May 14, 2008

8 Days in the OBX recap


So I've been putting this off primarily because I'm swamped with work and moving preparations. I was in the OBX from May 2nd through May 10th. I've been to the OBX at least 10 times, but I've never been blessed with such awesome wind for such a sustained period. It blew 20+ on 7 out of the 8 days I was there. I had 2 sessions with planing almost every day. It was incredible. I was staying in a BABA house which was really cool and laid back. I hung out with a few people that work in the windsurfing "biz", namely Josh Sampeiro, Andy McKinney, and Stu Proctor. Sailing around better sailors really makes a huge difference. I listen to any and all tips given to me by better windsurfers. A lot are given with the preface of "I'm no expert", but actually, it usually IS coming from an expert windsurfer. Thanks to those dudes for the advice! Here are a few pics I snapped on Friday. The conditions that day were SSW sustaining around 30 and gusting over 40. I was hanging on for dear life when I got out. As a photographer, I'm horrible and impatient, and I haven't spent any (necessary) time fixing the horizons or colors with photoshop...

Some guy disintegrating in a high-speed crash.

Standing on the beach was painful! Incredible sand-blasting feel...

The waves were junky, but that didn't stop local hero Andy from carving some pretty sweet lines on them. You gotta admit those orange RRD boards are beauties.


Stu in the background as a gust rips the water off the wave peak.

I took this shot for perspective. While 3-4 foot surf looks small when you're up on the dune seeing guys bump through it... when you actually sit right in front of the shorebreak, it can be pretty intimidating...

Andy, beginning rotation on a forward. He must have thrown 15 forwards in the 30 minutes I was out there, plus a couple backloop attempts. Awesome to see someone charging hard.

Stu, launching off a wave...


Stu was working on his ocean loops. He pulls the flatwater loop with ease, but I think they're more difficult in steep bumps because you have to rotate further?

Andy gets intimate with a closing wave.

Stu rips through a bottom turn.

Andy gets big air and delays the forward.

Olaf gets ready to charge

That's all for now - thanks for reading!

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Finally a break...

I arrived in the OBX on Friday and have sailed in 20+ mph winds each day that I've been here. I'm tired. My hands and feet are gnarly with cuts and bruises. It's actually pretty nice to have a little break on this light wind day. Who knows, I might sail tonight... we'll see.

It's been great though because I've gotten to hang out with some really good windsurfers. I'm staying in Avon with Josh Sampiero, editor of windsurfing magazine. He's a really cool, talented guy and he's always there to give a helping hand to other sailors. Yesterday he got me to give the ocean a shot. I got pretty close to getting past the sets out into the ocean but got hit in the face each time. Good to know that even if I can stay dry(ish) on jibes, I still won't have to abandon the satisfaction of being humiliated in some aspect of the sport.

I also met Bill Bell from OBX Beach Life and Andy from LostInHatteras. Both were really cool guys in real life, too, not suprisingly. I feel so damn linked in to the east coast windsurf blogging community now. It's like an elite community of badass windsurfers. Then me, easily the worst windsurfer ever to grab the boom.

Monday, May 5, 2008

Andy Brandt Klinik

Last weekend I participated in my first ever ABK clinic and to be honest, I went in as a skeptic. I've learned how to waterstart/footstraps/plane with decent speed and even stay dry on some jibes without any formal instruction in my *cough* several years of sailing. In the past couple years I've stagnated at a sailor, but I would mainly attribute that to little time on the water and getting a bit too satisfied just tacking my way through life when I actually got out.

But I decided that this year was going to be different. I'm finished with my plateau and I'm going to get to that elusive "next level". I started a blog to document my trials and tribulations, opening myself to the sharp-tongued criticism of anonymous internet meanies. This year, I'm going to raise myself up to the level of mediocrity if it kills me. So I shelled out enough cash to buy a sail and took the class. We got really lucky with the wind (peaked at 20-25 every day) so I would have just paid for the wind if that's how it worked. So here's what I think about ABK:

Andy is really friggin' good at what he does. And he works his ass off. He's got the people thing down. He remembers names. He gives criticism without sounding like a jerk. The lectures were, surprisingly, not boring and sucky (and I've got serious ADD). Understanding the concepts behind the jibe actually made a big difference for me. Having someone on the water as you went through jibe attempts at first seemed like information overload, but it actually made a big difference in the end.

I actually planed out of a couple in the end, my carve and entry work a lot better now and I'm staying dry quite a bit. Overall, I think the camp was a huge success for me(granted we got really lucky with consistent wind... I might have killed someone if we had spent any more time doing lightwind freestyle). I would recommend ABK to anyone. I think it easily saved me a year in my jibing learning curve.

Also, on the last day I got to see Andy and Matt Case doing a freestyle session right next to the beach at the Hatteras Island Sail Shop. Loops, Spock 540s, willy skippers, and many more aerials I didn't recognize. It was pretty awesome to see and it definitely inspires me to suck less, which is always good.

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

This made me laugh...

The Office Windsurfer Blues

Today it's blowing 25 out of the NW, and it's sunny with blue skies and little puffy clouds here and there.

I've got 30 emails in my inbox that need replies, 10 quotes to complete, a stack of expense reports to do and a phone that is ringing every few minutes with another detail for me to attend to. Granted I work from home, so it could be a lot worse... and I live >30 minutes from a spot that's even a little sailable for this direction. Oh well... I'll be in the OBX Friday morning for a week. Hope I don't get skunked, or I'll be forced to burn down the building...

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Brief "Wind"fest recap

I like to look at the windsurfing year as a predetermined number of sailable and unsailable that you could potentially windsurf. The wind gods have their annual meeting and Parcheesi tournament shortly after Christmas and they sit down with the list of everyone who is going to windsurf and assign a ratio to those people of the number of planing days they'll be awarded, in terms of a ratio. So they pull my file and determine that I'm going to get about a 2/7 chance of planing every time I could windsurf. Since the ratio is fixed before the year starts, I'm not too upset when I drive 6 hours down to Avon to watch my reflection on the sound. It just means I'm going to get some REAL wind on another day.

To the point: Windfest 2008 in Hatteras wasn't real windy this year. I had one good morning of 7.5 sailing, and other than that... it was a great weekend of beer-drinking and general good-weather revelry. Here are some unorganized bullet point observations:

1. Today is James Douglass' birthday. Everyone run over to his blog and wish him happy birthday. While everyone else was complaining about the lack of wind, James brought real live human females along and taught them how to windsurf. (!!!)

2. I met Mac, the Water Turtle, super nice guy... and coincidentally we work for the same company. I heard the Peconic Puffin was there at the same time, but his publicist didn't think hanging out with the other bloggers would be beneficial for his image. He'll be known as "Hollywood Puffin" from here on for the purposes of this blog...

3. The surf was 8-10 feet easily by the lighthouse. Pretty awesome out there. I brought my body board but chickened out of swimming out and enjoyed watching the local badasses show us how it's done.

4. Paul Richardson is a cool dude despite the fact that a 12 year-old girl can out-drink him.

5. WET is probably one of the coolest and most cohesive windsurfing clubs I've been around, and I've been around quite a few.

6. Stand-Up-Paddle boarding is actually really cool. A super nice guy let me take his out when the wind was calm and the water was super clear. It was a great workout, and overall a great experience. I've been looking at it skeptically from the outside for about a year, and now that I've tried it I "get it".

7. Despite my efforts, I didn't get to demo a single board. I found that pretty disappointing.

Sunday, April 6, 2008

Formula Sailing is Hard


Yesterday I went to an informal windsurfing event thrown by BABA known as "the Burnt Weenie Boogie" or some such. It was such an awesome day... actually in the 60s and sunny in the afternoon. Definitely a nice change of pace. I put together a 10.9m^2 formula sail and took the formula board out for a tuning session. It was an asskicking... so much so that I skipped today (windier than yesterday) out of sheer wimpiness and exhaustion. James and Farrah gave me some really great tuning tips, and the going definitely got easier as the day went on and I figured out where the harness lines belong...

Here are the lessons I learned:

1. BABA throws a good party. Nice folks with great senses of humor. It's a like a family reunion without the awkwardness of anyone being related to you.
2. James is a super-nice dude. He's just as funny in person and the windsurfing community is lucky to have him. If he decided to start kiting, it would likely break the sailboard industry's back and cause widespread bankruptcy. If he decided to start riding jetskis, an asteroid would hit the earth and we'd all be toast.
3. Farrah Hall is fast. Really fast.
4. My harness lines need to be shortened and I really need to set up an adjustable outhaul.
5. A smoker's lung looks like a coffee filter.
6. I'm out of shape.
7. Windsurfing is a fun. Windsurfing with friends is beyond fun.