giovedì 4 novembre 2010

GOS PRO WAVES - FRONTSIDE BOTTOM TURN and OFF THE LIP






GOS PRO WAVES


But, apart from having fun watching some good surfing, how can we improve Our Surfing by watching pros? GOS knows how: we’ll teach you the best possible way to study pros surfing technique and analyze their surfing or yours. The best way to improve your surfing skills is to watch your surfing, understand what you’re doing wrong and learn from your mistakes! You can send us your videos and we’ll analyze them together! We’ll explore your strengths and weaknesses together, but we’ll also teach you how to analyze and learn by watching the pros – or you  – surfing… have fun with GOS and don’t forget to check out our GOS website for more pro waves!!!!       

Trick tips: FRONTSIDE BOTTOM TURN AND OFF THE LIP

Today we’re going to try to analyze some basic surfing maneuvers together.  We’re going to learn with the pros! We’ll watch a video, Mick Fanning versus Dane Reynolds (you can view the whole video on: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=42yAIWPNCfU), and we’ll try to explain the maneuvers Mick Fanning executes step by step.  Watch the video first, then read our comments while watching it again, pause it to really understand every move he makes. What we want to do is explain every single move he makes, and provide you with the exact timing, so you can easily check it out and learn how to improve your surfing skills! To achieve the best possible results, we suggest you watch the video, read our comments, and try to really understand what we’re telling you. Then  sit comfortably on a chair, close your eyes and picture it in your mind, try to repeat these moves in your mind and the next time you go surfing, try to concentrate on what you learned with GOS and do exactly what you did in your mind. One more thing: just enjoy your surfing!  



We’ll start with the frontside BOTTOM TURN and OFF THE LIP

The BOTTOM TURN involves riding to the bottom of the wave and curving; it’s the most important maneuver in surfing because it allows you to gain speed at the bottom of the wave to ride back up the face of the wave and hit the lip. 

The OFF THE LIP is a great maneuver which involves riding vertically up the face of the wave, hitting the lip, turning and releasing your fins, then re-entering. 
 
(0:30) when Mick Fanning takes off, he rides down to the bottom of the wave, leans forward toward the nose of the board and keeps his knees bent;  


(0:31) his right hand is almost touching the water, as if to use it as a pivot to hang on to and he’s looking at the section he wants to hit;  


(0:32) at this point his body is leaning forward on the inside rail of the board, knees still bent, he’s ready to extend his legs; he’s pushing down on his toes to tilt the board onto the rail;


(0:33) his right leg is pushing on the tail – explosive power – he’s rotating his left shoulder and arm towards right, he’s extending his legs and releasing power, his torso is still leaning forward toward the nose of the board while his head is turned toward the lip, as he’s looking at the section he wants to hit ; his board is not tilted on its rail but is now flat on the face of the wave as he’s starting to head upwards;


(0:34) his front foot helps the board go upwards vertically while he turns his head back down and he’s now looking at the bottom of the wave - always look to where you want to go and anticipate your next move -  he keeps his left arm down and raises his right arm to facilitate torso rotation later on; his knees are bent for balance - a low center of gravity provides better balance;


(0:35) the board comes over the lip, his torso and legs are totally bent forward on the board and the power is once again released on his back foot, on the tail of the board; the board turns, its nose is facing the bottom of the wave;  


(0:36) now he’s extending his legs again and pushing on the board to descend;


(0:37) he leans forward again, toward the nose of the board, he’s looking at the lip, ready to hit it again.

Now that we’ve watched and analyzed this video together step-by-step, we can say that the BOTTOM TURN is the most important maneuver in surfing and that it’s essential for any other maneuver.
If you want to get more RADICAL in your surfing, you have to learn to turn at the bottom of the wave.  

Green Ocean Surfing
The first totally free interactive online surfing course
www.greenoceansurfing.com



mercoledì 3 novembre 2010

Andy Irons: the bad guy?





Andy Irons: the bad guy?  

Apart from what goes on behind the scenes and all the gossip that will be spread about his death, we searched the Internet for the many interviews and articles about him, to try to understand if he was really an ice-cold, arrogant competitive animal as he was depicted.




Three-times world champion Andy Irons died on November 2, 2010, at 32, from complications of an unknown illness, presumably dengue fever.
Irons passed away during a layover en route to Kauai, Hawaii, after withdrawing from a competition in Puerto Rico, the Association of Surfing Professionals said.

He began his professional career in 1998 and won three straight world titles from 2002 to 2004 and is the only surfer to win at every location on the elite tour, where he collected 20 victories. He last competed in September in Tahiti.

On September 3, 2010, in TEAHUPOO, Andy Irons won the Billabong Pro Tahiti, besting C.J. Hobgood in an explosive final clash in three-to-four foot (1.5 meter) waves at Teahupoo. The Hawaiian was emotional when regarding his first win in over three years (won Rip Curl Pro Search Chile 2007). “I did it!” Irons exclaimed. “I surf because I have to put my jersey on some time. I took a lot of losses, but I put in the hard work too. I dedicate this win 100% to my wife, Lyndie, she is everything to me and without her, I’d be nothing. I really, really like competing because I love to win and I feel on top of the world today. I surf because I love to win. I love this feeling.”
Irons opened up with a massive, freefall wipeout before utilizing his unparalleled backhand tube-riding skills to net a 14.67 out of a possible 20 and collect the win.
“He (Hobgood) paddled me inside and caught the first wave,” Irons said. “The next wave was better and I just fell out of the sky. I thought my board was going to break. It has two buckles on it already. I just went after it out there. C.J. is so dangerous here. I knew he would be getting tens or twos, and I was lucky it was twos today.”
Mark Occhilupo, the 1999 world surfing champion, said that Irons had struggled with dengue fever since first contracting the viral disease in Bali, Indonesia. “When he gets run down it comes back,” Occhilupo said in a televised interview with Australia’s Fox Sports News. “Somehow he tried to get home and he didn’t make it. Words can’t explain it. He was such a vibrant and lovely person to be around.”

Here’s part of an interview of Andy Irons with Surf Transworld magazine (2004) after he won his third world title. You can tell, from his words, that he was probably misunderstood and his reputation as a fierce competitor was affected by the media’s attitude towards him.  

Q: “How has surfing for a living affected how you feel about it?” A: Surfing for a living is the one thing I knew could keep me surfing. Even if I wasn’t a pro surfer, I was always going to be surfing–even if I was working a job, I’d make sure it was around surfing. Getting paid to go surfing is just icing on the cake.
Q: “A few days ago you surfed against Layne Beachley (six-time women’s world champ who was given a wild card to surf in a four-star WQS event) at Newcastle”. A:(Andy laughs.) Oh, f–k yeah. That was weird.
Q: “How was that?” A: Nightmare. From where I’m at right now, that was one of the lamest things I’ve had to do. And the media over here (in Australia) is so hyped up on it, and they made me look like such the jerk.
Q: “Really?” A: Yeah, full media entrapment bullshit. I was doing this press conference for them, and there was this female reporter asking me why do I think men get paid more money, and why are the men so much more marketable than the women. So I just answered the questions the best I could, and they put it on the front page of the newspapers–”Sexist”–and they made me look like a full dick. It was so lame. Down on the beach, some people were just trippin’ on me. They made me look really bad, and it made me never want to do an interview again.
 
(you can view the whole interview on: http://surf.transworld.net/1000002602/features/the-dynasty-the-andy-irons-interview/)

Here’s part of another interview of Andy Irons with Surfermag.
Q: “Do you feel like the world champ yet?” A: It's weird. I do but I don't. Even now. When I think of world champions I think of the guys you just mentioned and I don't feel like I fit that mold, so it's really hard to feel like I'm wearing the shoes.  
Q: “But obviously you're having a bit of a problem playing the bad guy, which begs the question. Why not just play along with that role until you're no longer perceived as that guy?” A: Well at first I was playing into it. I was fine being the nemesis you know, being the up and coming kid, and I liked feeding into it. I deliberately said a few stupid things like, "Kelly's time is over." But it's funny because I totally underestimated the kind of stink those kinds of comments can create. The drama became way too much for me. After a while it didn't feel like playing around.  Q: “So lets be clear, you don't think he's (Kelly Slater) washed up?” A: [Laughs] I know he's kicking ass. (…)  
Q: “There definitely seems to have been a movement to portray you as the bad boy in black opposite Kelly the superhero in white. (…) But you just see it for what it is, right? Just media hype?” A: I try, but like I said it's hard when you become the focus of all this negative energy, and people are saying things about you that aren't true. There are still times when I feel pretty insecure about things and want to turn away from all the microphones because I feel like people are thinking, "Awe, this kid doesn't deserve it." You know, Kelly's perfect in every way and I'm this guy with all these flaws. It's hard. It can be overwhelming. You read a Sports Illustrated article that calls you out and insults your family and it's like, man, is the whole world conspiring against me? I know they're not, but it feels that way after you win a title and every single article you read is about the guy who lost.

(you can view the whole interview on: http://surfermag.com/magazine/archivedissues/bgissaiintrvu/index2.html)

We would like to remember Andy while, as a surfer and a man, he shows his commitment to environmental protection at a Surfrider Foundation meeting in Ostia.




By: Green Ocean Surfing - www.greenoceansurfing.com

Sources:
http://surf.transworld.net/1000113942/features/andy-irons-wins-the-2010-billabong-pro-tahiti/
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-11-03/three-time-world-surfing-champion-andy-irons-dies-at-age-32-tour-says.html


martedì 2 novembre 2010

Glossary of surfing




Glossary of surfing

A
Aerial: A trick where the board takes off from the lip of a wave and after traveling lands back on the face of the wave and continuing…
A-Frame: When a wave breaks and creates an A effect with both a right and left wave breaking at the same time.
Aloha: In the Hawaiian language it means affection, love, peace, compassion and mercy. It also has come to be used as an English greeting to say hello, also used by surfers.
A.S.P.: ASP stands for Association of Professional Surfing, established in 1982.

B
Back side: Refers to the position in which you are facing the wave. Surfing backside means that the posterior portion of your body is facing the wave face.
Beach break:  Waves breaking on a sand bottom beach.
Beach Boys: A popular American rock band (formed by Brian Wilson) from Southern California, reflecting a youth surfing culture and who promoted surfing worldwide.
Backdoor:  Name of the right breaking wave at Pipeline, on the North Shore of Oahu, HAWAII; basically it’s the reference for all the right waves in the world and it’s called “backdoor” because you enter the TUBE from the back, i.e. from behind the peak.
Baja: Mexican surf spot that is very popular among southern Californian surfers and others.  
Biarritz: French town on the Atlantic Ocean, where many Italian and European surfers go during their summer holidays.  
Big Wednesday: A cult movie (1978) directed by John Milius, that made surfing popular worldwide.  
Body Board: A short, soft foam board used for bodyboarding. It’s ideal for all ages, and it’s great fun.
Bottom: The bottom part of a surfboard, the bottom part of a wave.  

C
Channel: A trench between sand banks or reefs. Often associated with a strong current. Channels are also the design feature of a surfboard to guide water along its underside.
Cheyne Horan: An Australian pro surfer, a legend, who won second place at the ASP in 1978, 1979, 1981 and 1982.  
Classic: Perfect surfing conditions.
Close out: When a wave does not break in any direction but just breaks all at once and doesn't allow for anywhere to surf.
Coral reef: A mound or ridge of living coral and other organisms that create the peeling effect on such waves.
Carroll Tom: An Australian surfer, two times world champion, who was popular in the ‘80s for his surfing skills and for riding big Hawaiian waves, especially Pipeline.  
Curren Tom: A Californian surfer, 3 times world title holder. He’s still considered one of the best surfers in the history of surfing.
Cut back: An S maneuver to turn back into the breaking portion of the wave to gain speed for other maneuvers.

D
Delaminations: They are basically an air bubble or soft spot that appears under the board's surface. They are usually caused by a small hold in the outer glass that allows water to seep into the blank underneath. Can spell doom for the board if left untreated. 
Deep inside: Riding deep inside tubes.
Deck: Top part of a surfboard.
Drop in: Dropping in is a crime in the surf world. A drop-in is where a surfer catches a wave without having priority, i.e. there is already a surfer on the wave.
Duke dive: A method for getting through a broken or large wave without being washed towards the shore. Basically, pushing the surfboard and one's body under the wave, like ducks do when they dive. 

E
Endless Summer: A movie directed by Bruce Brown (1964), in which two California surfers follow summer around the world, looking for perfect waves. 

F
Fin: Fins are found at the bottom of a surfboard to make it stable. 
Flat: When there are no waves whatsoever.
Floater: Modern frontside or backside maneuver that involves "floating" over the broken part of a wave and re-entering the more ridable crest.
Freeth George: An Irish - Hawaiian surfer (1883 - 1919) who is often credited as being the father of modern surfing.  
Frontside: Surfing 'frontside' means that the anterior portion of your body is facing the wave face.

G
Glass: Glassing is the process of pulling fiberglass cloth over a surfboard.
Glassy: A very favorable, windless surf condition in which the texture of the ocean surface is ultra-smooth, like glass.
Gnarly: Heavy, intense waves or situations.
Goofy foot: When a surfer rides with their right foot forward.
Grab rail: When a surfer grabs the outside portion of the surfboard rail while performing a maneuver or commonly seen while surfing backside in a barrel.
Green room: The inside of a tube.
Grommet: Young surfer. Sometimes shortened to “grom”. Can also refer to children in general, not just those who surf.
Gun: A long narrow board designed for surfing big waves.

H
Hang five: A longboarding trick in which the toes of one foot are curled around the nose of the surfboard.
Hang loose: A Hawaiian term; "Hang Loose” or "Shocka" is used as a non verbal expression or greeting to tell the recipient that everything will be OK, Relax. 
Hang ten: An advanced longboarding trick in which the toes of both feet are curled around nose of the surfboard.
Haole: Hawaiian term whose original meaning was "foreigner".
Hawaii: It’s basically surf heaven. The Hawaiian Islands (Hawaiian: Mokupuni o Hawai‘i) are an archipelago of eight major islands: Oahu , Maui , Kauai ,Big Island, Molokai, Lanai. Captain James Cook visited the islands in 1778 and named them the "Sandwich Islands"; in 1959 they became the 50th state of the United States of America.
Head high: A term used to describe wave size. Roughly 6-8 feet.
Heat: During a surf competition two or more surfers compete in each “heat”.
Hossegor: A French town north of Biarritz; one of the best beach breaks in the world, it has legendary, perfect tubes. Many surf brands, such as Rip Curl and Billabong Europe are headquartered in Hossegor. 

I
Impact zone: The zone in the surfing lineup where the set waves break and make it difficult to paddle. This isn't the best place to hang out!
Inside: The inside section to where waves are breaking, this is closest to the beach with surfable waves.
I.S.A.: International Surfing Association. It’s an international organization that has been running biennial competitions for professional surfers since several decades.  

J
J-Bay: Jeffrey 's Bay shortened; it’s a South African surf break of the highest caliber. It's one of the world's most famous, high quality right handers.

K
Kahanamoku Duke: (1890 – 1968) a Hawaiian swimmer and surfer, credited with spreading the sport of surfing in California at the beginning of the century and in Australia in 1915. He won a gold medal in the 1912 Olympics in Stockholm and in Belgium in 1920.

L
Lacanau: A small French town near Bordeaux on the Atlantic Ocean. It’s renown because it was the first European town that hosted the ASP Championship.   
Late take off: Taking off in the non-critical part of the wave and catching the broken part of the wave.
Leash: The cord, consisting of rubber and rope, that connects the board to the surfer.
Line up: This is where the waves consistently break and where most of the surfers sit and wait for the set waves to come in.
Lip: The breaking crest at the very top of the wave that has not fully broken yet.
Local: Locals who regularly surf a specific surf spot.
Localism: Term given to hostility displayed by local surfers to surfers visiting what the locals consider to be their break. The hostility can range from verbal abuse in the line up to physical violence.
Longboard: A longer surfboard (9 ft/2.7 m or more); longboards have been used since the 1940s. Sometimes the term is incorrectly used for boards of 8 feet or more.
Lopez Gerry: A Hawaiian surfer, also called Mr. Pipeline, who became popular for his appearance in the movie “Big Wednesday” and for his legendary house, which was right in front of the spot. 

M
Mavericks : This is a famous big wave spot off the California coast.
Morey Boogie: The original bodyboard invented by Tom Morey in the ‘70s.
MundaKa: Considered by many the best surf spot in Europe. It’s located near Bilbao and has long, perfect left-hand barrels.  

N
Natural foot : When a surfer rides with their left foot forward (also see Regular Foot).
Noll Greg: Nicknamed "Da Bull" in reference to his physique and way of "charging" down the face of a wave, he is an American pioneer of big wave surfing and is also acknowledged as a prominent longboard shaper. Noll became known for his exploits in large Hawaiian surf on the North Shore of Oahu. He first gained a reputation in November 1957 after surfing Waimea Bay.
North Shore: the north shore of Oahu, Hawaiian Islands; it’s full of perfect surf spots and produces some of the biggest waves on the planet.
Nose: The front of the board.

O
Off the lip: A re-entry. Turning the board quickly off the top of the wave to come back down into the face of the wave.
Offshore: This is when the wind at a surf break is blowing off the shore ; It makes for ideal surfing conditions.
Onshore: This is when the wind is blowing towards the land, spoiling the waves. Always remember; offshore good, onshore bad!
Overhead: A term used to describe wave size. Roughly 8-10 feet.

P
Pintail: A very narrow, nearly pointed, tail. Pintails are used almost exclusively on big wave gun surfboards.
Pipeline: Pipeline is a world famous surf spot on the North Shore of Oahu so known because it lays down tubed waves like pipe being laid down. A very dangerous spot.
Point Break: A cult movie (‘90s).
Potter Martin: A British surfer (born in 1965). He was World champ in 1989 and was popular in the ‘80s for his radical surfing moves.
Pope’s living room: The inside of a tube. The same as green room.

Q
-

R
Rail: The edge of a surfboard.
Reef break: When set waves come toward the beach and break further out as a result of a reef under the water. Most reef breaks are a combination of rock and reefs that create the peeling effect on these such waves.
Reentry: Turning on the lip of the wave to come back down into the face of the wave.
Regular foot: When a surfer rides with their left foot forward.
Richards Mark: Australian surfer, 4-time world champion (1979 – 1982); a legend…
Right: When a wave breaks from left to right from the surfer's point of view.
Rocker: The longways curvature of the underside of a board. More rocker means a more curved board, less means a flatter board. Generally a flatter board goes faster, but some curve is needed to stop the nose digging into the water, or to "fit" the curve of the wave.
Roundhouse cutback: A complete 180-degree directional change in which the surfer turns from the shoulder all the way back into the curl or whitewater of the breaking wave, before completing the ride. A very advanced maneuver, which is difficult to complete if enough speed isn't carried throughout the entire 180-degree turn. A roundhouse cutback is usually complemented by a foam bounce recovery off the approaching whitewater.
Round tail: Round tail of a surfboard.  

S
Secret spot: A surf spot that’s kept secret. 
Section: A segment of a total wave.
Session: The time you spend surfing.
Set: A group of waves, usually large, that come in from the "outside." Surfers usually paddle towards the outside (towards the horizon) when they spot a good set.
Shaka brah: It’s a common greeting gesture. It is often associated with Hawaii. It consists of extending the thumb and smallest finger while keeping the three middle fingers curled, and raising the hand as in salutation with the back of the hand facing the person that is being greeted; it means hi, how’s it going, etc.
Shaper: The person who shapes a surfboard.
Shore break: Waves that break very close to the shore or on the shore.
Shorty: A summer wetsuit with short sleeves and pants. 
Shoulder: The end section of the wave that has yet to break or be ridden.
Skimboard: A small, flat, wooden or fiberglass board used to glide across the water's surface.
Slash: An extreme maneuver that entails executing a radical cutback.
Slater Kelly: A pro surfer, born in Florida, 9-time world champion (a record!!) and the youngest to win the title. He’s one of the most talented surfers in the world.  
Spot: Where the best waves break.
Snaking or to Snake a Wave: To “steal” a wave. The surfer closest to the breaking portion of the wave gets to surf that specific wave. Taking off in front of that surfer is referred to as snaking and shouldn't be done.
Sponger: A body boarder, soft board or body surfer.
Stick: Another term for a surfboard.
Stoked: To be very happy and excited. Surfers are usually very stoked after a good wave or an awesome session of surfing.
Stringer: This is the bit of wood that runs up through the length of your surfboard.
Swell: Swell or groundswell refers to solid, real waves.

T
Take off: The point when you drop into the wave and are about to start your ride.
Tomson Shaun: South African surfer who won the world title in 1977 and revolutionized the way of riding inside tubes in the ‘70s.   
Tube: The tube of the wave where it pitches outward and creates a spherical tube in the wave where you can get covered by the wave.

U
Ulluwatu: It’s one of a large number of quality Indonesian surf breaks.

V
-

W
Waimea Bay: A legendary bay on the North Shore of Oahu, which produces some of the biggest waves on the planet.
Wax: It’s used to prevent your feet from slipping off your board.
Wetsuit: A neoprene (rubber) garment used for surfing in winter or when it is cold. Originally invented by Jack O'Neill, founder of a famous surfing brand, O'Neill wetsuits.
Whitewater: The white foam part of the wave that occurs after the wave has broken.
Wipeout : Falling off your board is referred to as a wipe-out.

X
-

Y
Young Nat: An Australian surfer whose nickname was "The Animal" due to his aggressive attitude; he was world surfing champion in 1966.

Z



lunedì 1 novembre 2010

Preyed predators





Man eaters…

I read an interesting article on sharks in the newspaper today (Corriere della Sera, October 12, 2010); it talks about an initiative, the European Shark Week, which aims to impose more stringent controls over fishing and strengthen the EU ban on “finning”, the wasteful practice of slicing off a shark's fins and discarding the carcass at sea.  Shark Alliance (http://www.sharkalliance.org/), a coalition of more than 100 conservation, scientific and recreational organizations, is marking the start of the fourth annual European Shark Week by calling on Members of the European Parliament to take action.  
The current EU finning regulation is one of the weakest in the world. The simplest, most effective way to implement a finning ban is to require that sharks are landed whole with their fins naturally attached.
«The growing interest in the European Shark Week provides a great opportunity to raise public awareness of the issue and testify to the widespread concern for the future of sharks”, said Serena Maso, national coordinator of Shark Alliance. “This year, EU citizens call on Members of the European Parliament to address the problem and take action to prevent finning, which, moreover, is a wasteful practice ».  

On the web you can support several organizations that deal with the issue; BITE-BACK (http://www.bite-back.com/) is one of them. Bite-Back is a UK shark and marine conservation organization with a mission to halt the trade and consumption of vulnerable fish species, promote sustainable fishing, protect ocean habitats and inspire worldwide respect for the marine environment. It aims to promote, together with restaurants, fishmongers and supermarkets, protection of sharks by reducing consumer demand for its meat and fins.  Since it was formed in 2002, Bite-Back has promoted several campaigns to empower the public to become more resolute in its commitment to conserving the oceans. Founder and campaign director, Graham Buckingham, says: "Bite-Back presents an exciting development in the way we can all contribute to protecting threatened fish species by choosing what we buy, from where and how we can support the marine environment by reducing domestic pollution."
The shark slaughter figures are astounding: currently 100 million sharks are slaughtered each year; by 2017, it is anticipated that 20 species of shark could be commercially extinct. The figures are even more alarming if we think that, since sharks are at the top of the marine food chain, they play a key role in the marine ecosystem. In a little over 50 years the slaughter of sharks has risen by 400% to approximately 800,000 metric tons per year.

Another organization that deals with shark protection and conservation is “Protect The Sharks Foundation”; it’s a Dutch non-governmental, non-profit organization that focuses on promoting education and information, producing and publishing educational material online and in magazines. Their website (http://www.protect-the-sharks.org) is very interesting  and provides a lot of information on the issue; the “GIMME A HUG” project is absolutely amazing. The initial idea is that sharks are fascinating and clearly unappreciated and there is still a lot we don’t know about them; Protect The Sharks Foundation embraced the cause and made a short documentary (13:30 minutes) in which these amazing animals show a totally different behavior than most people would expect. Only few people know about the tonic immobility phenomenon, or apparent death, which is a defense mechanism used by many animals.  Michael Rutzen, a well-known shark expert, also called Sharkman, has demonstrated and filmed the tonic immobility reflex of these frightening creatures several times. However, when you watch this video, just about any word can come to your mind, apart from the word “frightening”. Search “tonic immobility” andsharkman” on YouTube: it will open up a whole new world to you. We are only providing one of his videos, but you can find many more on the web. There’s a new world behind every - even the smallest – thing; you just have to look for it. Awareness and knowledge free us and make us stronger.     



By: Green Ocean Surfing
www.greenoceansurfing.com


WATER MEMORY





Water memory
As human beings and surfers, water can’t leave us feeling indifferent. Water is the basis of life, it’s the essence of all life forms on Earth and other planets.   
Water as a molecule has its own specific geometric shape, a tetrahedron; it creates very different structures depending on a multitude of factors.   

Just think of snow crystals, if you look at them under the microscope no two are exactly alike, they all have their specific geometric identity; even if you melt them separately and then freeze them again, you’ll get the same geometric shape as before. We can therefore deduce that each water molecule has its own identity.       

Several studies show that water holds memories of all the elements it experiences.  This is the concept on which, for instance, homeopathy is based: when water comes into contact with an element, even for a very limited amount of time (homeopathy often talks about infinitesimal amounts), it will hold geometric memories of this element’s structure and deliver its benefits to the person who drinks it.        

A Japanese expert, Dr. Masaru Emoto, over the past ten years has traveled around the world and held many conferences and seminars on water memory, at which he explains his method for studying and conducting experiments on water memory. He claims he can prove that by exposing water to external stimuli, such as words or pictures, and then freezing it (at a temperature of -5°C, i.e. ice crystals), it shows different geometric designs, depending on the type of information which it was exposed to. When exposed to positive words, such as “love” or “peace” or “Mother Teresa of Calcutta” water molecules show geometrically perfect shapes, such as crystals or flowers. When exposed to negative words, such as “evil” or “Adolph Hitler”, the same water molecules supposedly show a "definite distortion" and are "randomly formed".       
Clearly, it’s not the word in itself, but the state of mind of the person that says or writes it, that matters.  

I love you


A few years ago, a French biologist, Dr. Jacques Benveniste, Head of the Digital Biology Laboratory in Clamart (F), claimed - and his claims were supported by his findings - that “water retains memory”.  

Dr. Benveniste discovered the phenomenon in question in 1984, while working on hypersensitive (allergic) systems; by chance he brought to light the so-called “high dilution phenomena”, which involves diluting a substance in water to a degree where the final solution contains only water molecules. He observed that this highly diluted solution initiated a reaction, as if the initial molecules were still present in the water: water kept a trace of the molecules present at the beginning of the dilutions. International scientific reaction was obviously immediate and undoubtedly a match for the implications of this discovery: incredulity, even rumors of fraud.

Dr. Benveniste was - and is - totally right; the reason’s very simple and clear. You can even do it at home: put some water in a pot and boil it; then place the pot in the freezer together with another pot full of cold water; you’ll see that hot water FREEZES FASTER than cold water!     

Why is that? It’s easy: the structures bonding water molecules with hydrogen bonds undergo a series of changes when they change from one state of matter to another, of which they keep a trace due to a phenomenon called “hysteresis” *. In other words, water remembers (and memorizes) the energetic and entropic* path it undergoes during the heating and then freezing processes and retraces it back faster. It “remembers” the whole “path” and traces it back. Try it at home! It works!            
Note:
* hysteresis = a phenomenon that occurs in magnetic and ferromagnetic materials, as well as in the elastic, electric, and magnetic behavior of materials, in which a lag occurs between the application and the removal of a force or field and its subsequent effect.
* entropy = a measure of the disorder or randomness of molecules due to a change in temperature.

Dr. Masaru Emoto is the author of “Messages from water”; after Dr. Lee H. Lorenzen Jr., a biochemist nutritionist and water researcher, introduced him to the issue, he started working on water crystals and demonstrated some interesting findings. He exposed distilled water to external stimuli, such as music, written sentences or essential oils, then crystallized it in the freezer (at a temperature of -5° C.) and then took pictures of it under the microscope… the pictures are really incredible and clearly show how water molecules react to external stimuli.        
If you crystallize spring or tap water of different cities, you get different results: ranging from chaos to melodies.  

In some civilizations, during certain merry occasions, such as weddings or baptisms, a large bowl full of water is placed in the middle of the party. At the end of the party, all the guests drink some of that water to take the joyful occasion with them.     
You can find rituals like this all over the world. Notwithstanding what scientists say, according to popular wisdom, water can retain the memory of its surroundings and various cultures benefit from this belief.     

Just think that every living thing is made of water, including the human body; water is the basis of life, and this is true for all life forms. Just think of how our negative thoughts affect us and how pollution affects the oceans…     

Certainly nothing we just said can be considered scientific, but we can use it as a starting point to reflect on or dream about the issue. Nothing and nobody can prevent you from thinking with your head, and most of all, nothing and nobody can prevent you from dreaming. The idea that water retains memories is clearly disarming and disturbing at the same time, if you think of the evil on which water has been flowing for many centuries, but it’s also an interesting idea that carries a message of hope for the future.           
The pros and cons of knowledge.

Sources:


by: Green Ocean Surfing


domenica 31 ottobre 2010

Green Ocean Surfing - About us






We often approach surfing the wrong way: what you see… is not necessarily what matters…

“nice board”, or “these boardshorts match my lycra” or even worse “surfing makes me look cool!”.

But in the end what matters is that you surf, and once you’ve tried surfing you’ll never quit. Once you catch your first wave, you’re hooked !

What we would like to do is to bring surfing back to its true essence, help surfers respect the ocean, the environment and other surfers who share our passion and experience. If surfers know more about the environment they’ll respect it more and they’ll make sure others respect it too. Learn how to surf in the best possible way, advance and teach others, the world will be a better place…

In the end it’s just a man and a wave, and whatever stands in between them is man-made. We, as surfers and human beings, are responsible if something comes between us and nature: 99% of the stuff we use is among the most polluting (such as neoprene, resin, surf wax, etc.). GREENOCEANSURFING doesn’t want to radically change a worldwide business, we want to raise awareness of the issue. Knowledge is the best weapon in the fight against pollution.
We, as consumers, can make the surf industry become more environmentally aware by choosing the right products. And, as surfers, we can and MUST do all we can, to prove we deserve the gift we’ve been given: riding waves. If we knew the extent of the environmental damage caused by making a surfboard and the environmental impact of producing a wetsuit, we would probably change the way we see ourselves in the surfing equation, and understand that things have to change and that we MUST take action now! Tomorrow’s already too late!!! We can grow together as surfers and as an integral part of this wonderful planet…
Mother nature has had enough! How about you?





Green Ocean Surfing
The first totally free interactive online surfing course
http://www.greenoceansurfing.com/

Andrea Bonfili _ Surf Coach
Fabio Fontana _ Web Master
Bruno Pepe _ GOSpublisher