Monday, May 5, 2008

Buckroe Beach





The conditions were perfect, 20 -25 mph winds, straight up the beach, sunny and warm!
The only limiter for the "race" was the lack of distance we would be able to paddle and then get back to the start. We took the 2.5 miles for what it was; an opportunity to go really fast and have fun. There wasn't any opportunity to hang out at the start as you started getting pushed as soon as you got out in it. Every paddler for him/herself and see you at the finish!
Kevin Kahikina and Bill Graf brought their own boards but left them on the beach to try out the Jimmys. Safe to say they were very happy with the decision. The last I saw of them was their elbows and back sides. My wife Anne paddled her 10' JL Surf specific SUP and stayed right with them. It was smokin' fast and every ripple was a potential ride. The next time we get conditions like that we will paddle till we can't and figure out the way back home later.
The (un)official results for the first ever Stand-Up-Paddle-Eastcoast-Racing series race goes like this:
  • Bill Graf 12'6" JL
  • Kevin Kahikina 12'6" JL
  • Craig Vaughn 12'6" JL
  • Anne Gassett 10'0" JL
  • Bill Gassett 12'6" JL
  • Frankie Dole 12'6" JL

While we SUPER paddlers were out exploiting the wind. The ECORA OC-1/2 outrigger paddlers were slogging it out for more than an hour of racing. Freda Rosso, the race organizer from MAPA took pity and shortened the upwind finish and I know the seated paddlers were grateful. After the outrigger paddlers finished their death march race a few brave, arm weary souls picked up the long SUP paddles and took a quick 1 mile spin down the beach. I believe they had fun...mission accomplished. Freedom Surf and Revision Eyewear hooked up the winners with killer schwag. Bill came in one outfit and left in another! In fact everyone that paddled got schwagged and that will be the goal for the rest of the season, you paddle, you get schwagged. More fun, get it? We all busted a move for Mama Rosa's Pizza joint where the food and beer was sweet. Many mahalos to Freda and the rest of the MAPA crew for their Aloha and organizing the race.

Next event will be at the East Coast hub of Aloha, Kent Island Outrigger Canoe Club Maryland, where we will crank it up a notch. Don't think for a second that we are going to end this season with out a little pain. But fun will be the focus. Pain with out it, isn't...fun.

Aloha,

Dukey

Sunday, April 27, 2008

Here we go!






Aloha,

MAPA hosted the 5th annual Paddle for the Lynnhaven River yesterday.
Beautiful weather and happy paddlers set this up to be an excellent way to welcome the opening of paddling season here in Virginia Beach.
Race proceeds went 100% to help keep the Lynnhaven River moving towards a healthy recovery.
Hats off to the MAPA crew for being ecologically active and putting this race on.
They have taken on the responsibility for the other local fun-fund raiser, The Paddle for the Bay in July, as well.

This is the first time since I started paddling at the Lynnhaven River event that I wasn’t hanging out with my more reclined paddling ohana…today I stood up!
Two paddlers SUP’d the flat-water and light winds out on a shorter 3mile course. After the gang got back from the 7 mile race we had a fun SUP demo session with the new SUP race quiver on the Lynnhaven. You can check out my neanderthal kin evolving into the higher SUP lifeforms on the MAPA/Shutterfly link.
It’s official; now that we have been stoked with boards and paddles by Freedom Surf of Virginia Beach, the beginning of the ECORA sanctioned Stand-Up-Paddle Eastcoast-Racing series will kick off next weekend at the Buckroe Beach OC-1/OC-2 race.
Unless you have something to race on already, we will be competing on a level playing field with regards to equipment.
The Jimmy Lewis 12’6” Distance boards go very well and I can’t wait till we are all working the bumps in a full on effort.
The S.U.P.E.R. series will run in conjunction with our OC-1/2 races, with points, trophies and eventual series champions for the men and women.
Throughout the race season we will have schwag and prizes provided to all SUP racers by Freedom Surf, O’Neill, DaKine and Revision eyewear.
The concept is to introduce, in a racing format, the ancient form of Hawaiian stand-up paddle surfing to the east coast outrigger community.
We will figure out each event’s course the day of racing and exploit the wind and wave as much as possible to keep this fun.
As the season progresses we will ramp up the distance and eventually have a single day championship.
Look for weekly updates on the ECORA website and the S.U.P.E.R. website.

A Hui Ho,
Dukey

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

OBX Weekend

My wife wanted to spend her 40th Birthday down in the Outer Banks of North Carolina, kiteboarding, paddling and partying.

We reached out to Trip Forman of REAL for help and he linked us up with a rental agency for a place to stay and stoked my wife out with her first kiteboarding lesson.
The "Tri-cities" area, Rodanthe, Waves and Salvo, of the Outer Banks (OBX) is world renowned for great kiteboarding and REAL has a world class facility with an amazing staff.
What an outstanding way to break from the winter blues. We caught the back end of a nice swell and there were some good waves out in the Atlantic. When the swell died off we had a couple of really fun downwind SUP paddles on the bay side. Anne dug the little blue 10' Jimmy Lewis SUP Surf and the gang at REAL made me a deal I couldn't refuse. (I WILL be "borrowing" that gift when the conditions are right!)
My only regret was that we couldn't take pictures of everything we experienced while we played.
We are back home in Virginia and we got word that the fleet of 12'6" JL Distance boards arrived the day after we left the OBX. The SUPER Series will be kicking off the first weekend in May with the Buckroe Beach ECORA race and I can't wait. This weekend will offer an opportunity to try out the new rides at a fund raiser for a local tributary sustainment paddle. The Lynnhaven River Challenge is all about bringing awareness to the plight of our local waterways and we will have the JL Distance boards there for demos.
Stand-by for the first performance reports...
Aloha,

DRD

Sunday, March 30, 2008

Pre-season Training on the North Shore...Oahu!






















Spring Break on the North Shore of Oahu was unbelievable!
We were on the water every day SUP surfing or paddling beautiful down-winders.

This was a classic "dream trip", made that way by the truly gracious Aloha of some amazing people. First, our friends on the North Shore: Jen, Petey and Thatcher for stoking us out with the post-card location and access to some incredible paddling.

Blane Chambers and Austin Yonehiro, the heart and soul of Paddle Surf Hawaii, gave me a great deal on a demo PSH custom board to use during our stay. I bought a fresh Kialoa Pu'u from them as well and I was blown away with the paddle. The Pu'u will be my race/every day blade from here on out this season. Super clean catch and release, the light weight, the shaft/handle shape is perfect and the face size felt great in all conditions. What ever concerns I had on the smaller blade, vanished out on the water. I was able to accelerate on to waves and small wind bumps and I felt strong at the end of a good down wind effort.

Last and definitely not least on the mahalo list, is Gordon Saker who designs boards and has them made by Casey. Where Blane is cutting edge and pushing the performance envelope, the Gordon/Casey is definitely more of a traditional surf board in shape and construction.

Just to be able to paddle two distinctly different SUPs in varying conditions was such an honor and an eye opener. Both platforms are beautiful and I miss them already. If I could, I would try to own one of each. The 10'x 28 1/4"x 4 1/4", thruster fin, PSH was way too small for me, by the dimensions, and in reality I could paddle it into bigger waves than I have ever been on. I was able to paddle confidently in all but the gnarliest trade winds, and it didn't matter what you were on at that point. I paddled into a small line-up of guys at Sunset (right/out-side) and the friendly guy was the only other SUP surfer on a PSH. He tipped me on the reef/do's & dont's, then split off for home. A Hui Ho and Mahalo.

Blane knows his trade and I will have to try to get a PSH into my quiver.

The Gordon/Casey is shaped like a thick, single fin, gun at 11'6" x 28" x ?". I surfed a clean, 3 foot Hawaiian (head-high+ by east coast measure) at Freddies, just off to the left at V-land and it was a magical day. As fast as I could drop in and turn back out to catch the next set, all alone for two hours...I was tore-up from the floor-up! This board was versatile in the down wind runs as well. Thanks again G-man, enjoy the Stellas.

I can't/won't begin to critique the boards as I am the epitome of a neophyte to the SUP scene. Suffice to say that every minute I spent moving across the Pacific on these fantastic watercraft was epiphanic!

I "surfed" Sunset, V-land, Freddies, Haleiwa, Chuns and Kawela Bay. We cruised some sedate early morning paddles on still waters and we had a couple of epic down wind runs from V-land to Log Cabins (approx 3-4 miles). Oh yeah, throw in a 20 mile, Hawaii Kai, down wind, one-man outrigger relay race the day after we landed, as a warm up event!

We landed back at the "Beach" here in Virginia today to 45 degrees and rain.
I already broke the promise to myself to go out no-matter-what and get some miles in.
My only goal for the remainder of the day is to survive until 8-9PM and then dream about the warm waters of the North Shore.

Aloha,
Dukey Pau!

Saturday, March 15, 2008

We Have Gear!!!







In order to start up a successful SUP series we need gear…everything from paddles to boards and a trailer to tow the boards to the races.
The plan was to make the inject of SUP Racing into the ECORA sanctioned events as easy and stress free as possible for the individual race organizers.
A “plug & play” concept was proposed at the ECORA yearly meeting and received well by the east coast outrigger club representatives.
Show up with boards and paddles, send the opposite gender out on the SUPs when the men’s/women's OC-1/2 race kicked off and flip-flop the racers when they head out on their canoes for the next race. Keep track of the times to ease the logistical burden and make sure we have trophies for the win/place/show SUP competitors. Easy day.
Oh yeah: keep the distances shorter for the first few races and guarantee only down-wind runs! Cake.

Without going into a long dissertation on the trials and tribs of finding a board sponsor, we got very lucky and completely stoked out by a local board shop and board distributor. Freedom Surf Shop in Virginia Beach, Virginia is owned/operated by Dave Shotton and they sell Jimmy Lewis Stand-ups which are distributed by Real Kiteboarding, down in Buxton North Carolina (THE Outer Banks), Trip Forman proprietor.

Jimmy is well known in the kiteboarding and surfing world, especially by those individuals lucky enough to reside on Maui. JL has been right there with the emergent crop of forward thinking SUP Board innovators. This year he has hatched a quiver of very cool SUP boards, from a 9’8” performance surf SUP to a 12-Ohhh! SUP gun.

Jimmy recognized the need to craft a Distance SUP for those that like to take their SUP sessions in longer doses. The 12’6” x 29” x 5” Distance board has a great shape and is a perfect tool to bring to the races. The attitude at JL Surf leans towards a standardized “One Design Fleet” concept. The idea being that going to a SUP race should be as easy as packing your paddle/shorts, getting on a plane and showing up at an event with a platform to paddle on waiting for you. Keep it simple, fun and most of all easy. A fleet of 12’6” JL Distance boards will make this possible for us on the east coast. Eventually some of the exotics will make the trek to the right coast or possibly get built out here and then we will have to create classes…or not.
That debate will come about when the gear shows up.
For now, we got Jimmies and we owe Dave and Trip a huge mahalo for leaning forward to make it happen.

Dave gets it. He sees the popularity of Stand-up just starting to form here and he is taking some significant risks to get boards out on the water for us to use in our racing series. He is in contact with one of the premier paddle makers in the industry; Kialoa SUP paddles will be spot-lighted as the paddle of choice for the inaugural ECORA SUP Race season. Dave and Meg Chun, along with legendary Makaha waterman Mel Pu'u, make beautiful paddles and we are stoked have them in our hands.

We will have other sponsors and equipment high-lighted as the season opens then moves forward.
Life is good…now if we can get the wind and wave to cooperate.

Oli Oli and Malama Pono
Dukey RD

Aloha Nui Loa!



Welcome to S.U.P.E.R.
The sport of Stand-Up-Paddling has re-emerged around the world and what is so obvious to those that partake is still epiphanic to so many that are just now sampling this awesome form of watermanship for the first time.

There are some outstanding SUP blogs out there and I am in no position, nor do I desire to compete with the state of the art SUP surfers that share their knowledge and spirit with the rest of us.

Outrigger paddling opened up a whole new world to me some years back and my heart is still in to cranking out some miles on the water...I just like standing up while I am doing it for the time being.

The S.U.P.E.R. site will follow along with the East Coast Outrigger Racing Association's (ECORA) introductory season of SUP racing while showcasing the equipment, venues and obviously the paddlers.

Oli-Oli and Malama Pono,
Bill aka "Dukey Rum Dumb"