Ask Carroll
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Re: Ask Carroll
Fong can start wearing a hula skirt to surf in. They are as expandable as the rope on the top. Hope this helps.
Put your big boy pants on
I mean, tastebuds? WGAF?
I mean, tastebuds? WGAF?
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Re: Ask Carroll
I'd like to see that, and a coconut bra for the manboobs.Beanpole wrote:Fong can start wearing a hula skirt to surf in. They are as expandable as the rope on the top. Hope this helps.
Re: Ask Carroll
Hang on are we talking about surfieC again now?mentone mansions wrote: I'd like to see that, and a coconut bra for the manboobs.
Drailed wrote:
#goteamiggy
Re: Ask Carroll
Tied to his nut sack >><< so as not to hurt his back, knee, or shoulder ...Matticus Finch wrote:I can't really help you with any tips fongss, it just comes naturally to me but I would be keen to hear about the boards these guys are on if you ever get a chance to check em out.
For now perhaps you could just wear one of those weighted diving belts.
Yes, fong, what ARE the boards like?
Re: Ask Carroll
I reckon more power in the waves, more power/weight in the surfer is beneficial, all other things being equal. I'm a fairly weighty individual at 115kg and suck when it is tiny. Bigger the waves better I get, at least that is what I tell myself.
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Re: Ask Carroll
sadly fong is gibbering
fat guys like who, Manoa? Poto? Kevin Bourez? Simon the bodyboarder superman?
not that there aren't fat guys who rip, in Tahiti and here too
fat guys like who, Manoa? Poto? Kevin Bourez? Simon the bodyboarder superman?
not that there aren't fat guys who rip, in Tahiti and here too
Re: Ask Carroll
New RS fatty list up soon
Last edited by andy2476 on Tue Oct 14, 2014 6:45 am, edited 1 time in total.
Drailed wrote:
#goteamiggy
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Re: Ask Carroll
Hi matticus
funny you should mention my apparent patience in this thread in an earlier post. It's about at breaking point right now actually. But not due to your request so let's just deal with that now.
first up, get a good pair of goggles. Rebel Sport sell good Speedo goggles for about $30. They'll last you a long time if you don't abuse them, and you need 'em in a chlorinated pool.
I'd just start out by swimming ten 100s. Swim 75 freestyle and the other 25m on your back, either backstroke or just kicking with arms extended beyond your head. Have a short rest after each 100m.
At the end of the ten 100s, have a short rest, then see how far you can swim underwater before coming up for air. If you make 25m the first time you do it, great! Don't try to go any further than that for a while.
Don't worry about technique, but do see if you can focus on your breathing. Amazingly people forget to breathe while they swim and it's a principal reason why they tire quickly. Oh and don't do any breaststroke.
Just do that for a few weeks and if it's going well I'll try to give you some more things to work on.
funny you should mention my apparent patience in this thread in an earlier post. It's about at breaking point right now actually. But not due to your request so let's just deal with that now.
first up, get a good pair of goggles. Rebel Sport sell good Speedo goggles for about $30. They'll last you a long time if you don't abuse them, and you need 'em in a chlorinated pool.
I'd just start out by swimming ten 100s. Swim 75 freestyle and the other 25m on your back, either backstroke or just kicking with arms extended beyond your head. Have a short rest after each 100m.
At the end of the ten 100s, have a short rest, then see how far you can swim underwater before coming up for air. If you make 25m the first time you do it, great! Don't try to go any further than that for a while.
Don't worry about technique, but do see if you can focus on your breathing. Amazingly people forget to breathe while they swim and it's a principal reason why they tire quickly. Oh and don't do any breaststroke.
Just do that for a few weeks and if it's going well I'll try to give you some more things to work on.
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Re: Ask Carroll
Oh ... so is this the beginning of that meltdown Shearer inferred would happen to a long time RSer just prior to xmas ... hold on to your hats gentlemen.Nick Carroll wrote: funny you should mention my apparent patience in this thread in an earlier post. It's about at breaking point right now actually. But not due to your request so let's just deal with that now.
Moving on ...
Nick
I was watching a doco the other day. In it Mark Mathews was presented with a couple of big wave awards. The first was 5K from memory, the second 20K ... anyway you graced the stage on both these occasions. During the first presentation your attire was board shorts and a t-shirt. It was the second presentation that really caught my eye ... you appeared in what seemed to be a white t-shirt and some trousers ... they were both wrinkled to buggery (it really stood out) ... whats the story.
The moving finger writes and having writ moves on ... now all thy piety nor wit shall lure it back to cancel even half a line ... nor all thy tears wash out a single word of it.
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Re: Ask Carroll
Ah I am a fan of single concave in any smaller board, it feels like a more direct source of lift than the double.Legion wrote:Nick, I value your input on this thread and other media. Not one for sycophancy so I'll leave it at that.
In the interests of diverting towards more relevant surf-related material - bottom contours. What do you like? I've been on pure single concave for a few years and love them however most people I know have (sometimes deep) single-to-double or just double. Advantages/disadvantages on a 18 1/2" wide shortboard with skinny pro-style square or squash tail?
A few years ago the single concave was still a bit mistrusted by a lot of surfers, I think because they seemed tricky to place correctly at the time and would have ugly side effects if placed too far up or back or too deep or whatever. A double was a more forgiving alternative and with its implied vee seemed to fit a lot of outlines and rockers more naturally.
Today it's a different story, we just did another board test and I was struck by how much high performance design has moved in the past year - I think because so many shapers have finally got the machine software figured out and have used it to gain control over shorter packages and single concave placement. Result, beautifully accurate boards in the 5'6" to 5'10" range almost all equipped with great single concave bottoms, a lot of lift but in sync with the board's natural turning potential.
That seems the go now, a bit shorter, slightly more width in the nose more than the tail, clean bottoms with single concaves and a tiny vee behind the back fin (sometimes), a range of tails including a softened diamond thing that feels great in such boards.
Anyway yeah single concave, hurray.
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Re: Ask Carroll
I can't remember any of what you are talking about here womble. You must have mistaken me for someone else.Womble wrote: Nick
I was watching a doco the other day. In it Mark Mathews was presented with a couple of big wave awards. The first was 5K from memory, the second 20K ... anyway you graced the stage on both these occasions. During the first presentation your attire was board shorts and a t-shirt. It was the second presentation that really caught my eye ... you appeared in what seemed to be a white t-shirt and some trousers ... they were both wrinkled to buggery (it really stood out) ... whats the story.
Re: Ask Carroll
Well that explains the dishevelled look then.Nick Carroll wrote: I can't remember any of what you are talking about here womble.
It was this
Fighting Fear
And you are definitely there ... on that stage.
The moving finger writes and having writ moves on ... now all thy piety nor wit shall lure it back to cancel even half a line ... nor all thy tears wash out a single word of it.
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Re: Ask Carroll
well those big wave award presso nights usually leave one rather dishevelled.
Re: Ask Carroll
Maybe different years for the Big Wave Awards hence different dress. I got NFI haven't seen doco DVD.
"I'm just a surfer who wanted to build something that would allow me to surf longer"
Jack O'Neill
Jack O'Neill
Re: Ask Carroll
Hey ... don't get me wrong here ... there is absolutely nothing wrong with being dishevelled ... its been my goto look for years. I'll take an educated guess that the lord of outer Byron ... our very own Merks has the look down pat ... and I can assure you all that Mr Shearer is the Pierre Cardin of said look ... from street urchin to sea urchin ... they all follow Stiv the spiv.
The moving finger writes and having writ moves on ... now all thy piety nor wit shall lure it back to cancel even half a line ... nor all thy tears wash out a single word of it.
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Re: Ask Carroll
Whenever I ask my wife if my work clothes look creased in the morning she says No they're fine. This is usually wrong.
Put your big boy pants on
I mean, tastebuds? WGAF?
I mean, tastebuds? WGAF?
Re: Ask Carroll
Because she doesn't want to do the ironing
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