jueves, 28 de octubre de 2010

Un fantástico día

It seems inevitable that every stand up paddler eventually makes plans to get a GoPro or like camera mounted on at least one board. Even before GoPro introduced an affordable surfboard mounted camera to the market, stand up paddlers were rigging up cameras with suction cups, duct tape, and nuts and bolts from the hardware store in an attempt to capture stand up paddle moments on video. GoPro style SUP videos are found all over YouTube, blogs, and websites. It's an interesting phenomenon and I've got a theory why: stand up paddle superheroes. 

I'm not talking about capes and masks, although Ikaika Kalama wore them well at a recent contest, I'm talking about the average stand up paddler so stoked on the sport that it's only natural to want to capture it on video and share it with others. And, it's reciprocal stoke because stand up paddlers are equally as thrilled to see some really good stand up paddle videos and mind surf waves from around the world as they are to share their own.

Now, what's this superhero business all about? I've had a theory for some time now that I've discussed with several other sup surfers who have all agreed with the idea, and that is that every stand up paddler is secretly their own stand up paddle superhero. Now, lets have a look into the lives of two of our heroes…

With stick in hand and camera mounted on his board, our hero, Boatdock Paddle Man, ventures out into the harbor in the calm of the morning to be confronted unexpectedly by Mr. Strongcurrent. Mr. Strongcurrent is the evil undercurrent that sucks unsuspecting boaters and paddlers out to open waters even when there's no wind at all. With prowess and planning, our hero puts technique and strength together to paddle from the boat ramp to the snack bar on the other side of the marina for a cinnamon and sugar churro and a Diet Coke without falling in, not even once. He celebrates in the shade at a little table near the boat dock under a red, white and blue umbrella. Victory!

Qué es el Stand Up Paddle?

Stand up paddle surfing (SUP), or in the Hawaiian language Hoe he'e nalu, is an emerging global sport with a Hawaiian heritage. The sport is an ancient form of surfing, and reemerged as a way for surfing instructors to manage their large groups of students, as standing on the board gave them a higher viewpoint, increasing visibility of what was going on around them - such as incoming swell. To begin with, this started with using a one-bladed paddle, whilst standing on a normal length surfboard. The popularity of the modern sport of SUP has its origination in the Hawaiian Islands. In the early 1960s, the Beach Boys of Waikiki would stand on their long boards, and paddle out with outrigger paddles to take pictures of the tourists learning to surf. This is where the term "Beach Boy Surfing", another name for Stand Up Paddle Surfing, originates.