lunes, 30 de septiembre de 2019

#Windsurf BURNING MAN | THE BLACK ROCK YACHT CLUB

BURNING MAN | THE BLACK ROCK YACHT CLUB

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Summer is here and festival season is well underway, and if you like your festivals eccentric, few come weirder than ‘Burning Man’ in northwest Nevada. So what does a desert rave up have to do with windsurfing and what is the Black Rock Yacht Club, Kevin Pritchard tells tale.

Words  &  Photos  Kevin Pritchard


Yeah yeah, you’re going windsurfing at Burning Man. I know what you’re thinking,  sounds like a big excuse to go party your ass off. Beautiful girls and rock and roll. Well, not so much rock and roll, let’s say tons of E.D.M. – Electronic Dance Music. But Burning Man is more than that, it’s a festival of creativity. Many of the artists and support crew can only be described as mad scientists, spending immense amounts of time and energy creating some wild thing that people can climb on, ride on, dance around, or stare at for hours on end. You cannot believe the amount of time, money, and thinking outside the box that goes into this festival. The art projects, the party palaces, the lights, the sound systems, the infrastructure; there is no real way to describe it. Whatever you think it is, or think it could be, multiply it times a hundred, and then a hundred again.

Amongst the planning of going to Burning Man for the first time, I asked everyone I knew about it. I got ideas and information, and comments ranging from “You’re going to have an amazing time!” to “Why the hell are you going there?” I started my journey to Nevada from Punta San Carlos in Baja Mexico. Yeah, you heard that correctly, from one of the most dusty, sandy, salty, desolate points of Northern Baja to the dryer, maybe even dustier Nevada desert with an international border crossing between. Talk about a drive. The 5 hours at the border didn’t help, neither did the nice border officer who put me in a secondary check for 2 hours going through my van looking for more, I guess dust, which made a long drive even longer.

Burning Man is an eight day, 24-hour-a-day, out of control party. It is a combination of art, music and cooperation that one must experience and absorb to even begin to fully comprehend. Some veteran burners start planning a year in advance. Others start packing a month early to ‘ease into the burn’. For some people, Burning Man is their life. Truly. It started out as a humble hippie celebration of fire on Baker Beach in San Francisco. Now, twenty years after it moved to the Nevada Desert, it hosts over 60,000 people each season at Black Rock City, a temporary city erected in the Black Rock Desert of northwest Nevada for the duration of the festival. Art, music and lots of dust puts it gently. I want you to feel what it is like to walk, ride, or as I did, windsurf on a landboard across the desert’s dry playa, but I simply cannot.

“Art, music and lots of dust puts it gently.”

 

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YACHT CLUB
When I pulled up to the Black Rock Yacht Club alone, having never been there before, my palms started to sweat. What am I doing here? Why did I sign up for this? I don’t know one person here. What am I doing? There was something different about it though. When you get there for the first time, they like to introduce you and welcome you with a hug. You might not know me well, but hugging is not my thing. I don’t like people in fact. Why I went, well I don’t know, but I almost turned around with the first hug. Windsurfing in the Nevada Desert? First of all there was no water for miles and miles, and secondly there were tons of people lined up to try it out. Strange. There were hundreds of people wanting to go windsurfing, all wanting to have fun and blast across the desert with a windsurfing sail. I have never taught so many windsurfing lessons in my life. To make it more strange, it was on a dry lake bed in the middle of the desert. Windsurfing. Yes. You heard it right.

My first run across the desert, I glided along, inches above the dry lake bed, flowing with the wind and enjoying the ride. Then the wind picked up and I found myself hanging on for dear life as the board careened along over the bumpy desert floor that had seemed so flat just moments ago.

The Black Rock Yacht Club is a group of “Burners” who teach windsurfing on land sailors at one of the biggest festivals on the planet, Burning Man. If you have never heard of Burning Man you are probably living under a rock, but it is a city in the desert, a network of dreamers and doers. It isn’t your usual event or festival. Their mission is to produce an event that guides, nurtures, and protects the community created by its culture. It is a city wherein almost everything that happens is created entirely by its citizens, who are active participants in the experience.

ROOTS
In 1997 Bill Weir and Jim Pettigrew headed out to Black Rock Desert for a bachelor’s party where they brought along some boards and sails that were much more primitive than what they use now. They continued to head out there each year to sail around, drink beer and blow shit up. When they went to Burning Man for their first time in 2005, they brought a land sailing rig and taught a few lessons in between grooving at the Green Gorilla lounge and cruising the desert at night on janky old bikes.

They continued to bring more rigs every year, and the camp grew. It took off, the people loved it and guys & gals were ripping across the desert! Their buddy Chad Nichols joined the crew and teaches hundreds of people each season. Mike Gebhart and Chip Wasson are also alumni. Bill passed away a few years ago but his legacy is carried on; his sons Logan and Walker are ripping sailors and help organize Black Rock Yacht Club, which just celebrated its 15th consecutive year on the playa. While  the  Burning  of  the Man is the main event, there is also a temple, created each year, where people can bring items, letters and memories of people whom they have lost. Among thousands of loved ones, Bill is remembered each year as the temple burns on the last day of the event, with his sail number US-M9 etched into the temple walls.


I have never taught so many windsurfing lessons in my life.”


THE DEAL
There’s no cell phone service, no internet, no Starbucks. You bring all your own food and water. The only thing you can buy in the entire city is ice and coffee, most certainly not from Starbucks. Everyone takes care of themselves and takes care of each other. The cost of the general admission tickets are around $420, but what a deal. 8 days of art shows, dancing, drinking, food, camping, heck I made money going there just by not spending that somewhere else.

Burning Man’s philosophy is pretty cool. Include everyone, radical self-reliance, radical self-expression (and let me tell you, people like to express themselves), civic responsibility, and leaving no trace. I like living simply, this was the final weekend of my 4 months of living in my self-sufficient van, but there is a difference between van life and leaving no trace. Leaving no trace means you can’t even put your dishwater on the playa or road or anything. It is a little contradictory, because they put water down on the roads, but nonetheless it is pretty difficult to haul in and out all of your food, water and trash while not leaving a trace. My van’s shower is outside and so showering without dripping water, making a mess and sticking to the rules, is a little tricky. I managed to figure out a shower bucket system that worked out pretty good. At first I was a little hesitant to take a shower outside naked with 60,000 people, but by day two I had my pants off, suds flying all over the place, just showering away in a bucket right on the playa.. talk about self expression!

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COMMUNAL
Communal effort makes this festival run. If everyone brings a little something; something that they are good at, or passionate about, then the idea is that everyone’s needs will be met. A girl from our camp described her experience to me, “One night, around 4 a.m. I was chilling back at camp, hanging around the fire. A girl walks up to us and asks if this is Black Rock Yacht Club? She had found a backpack in a porta-potty on the complete opposite side of the playa, 3 miles away. She had found a name and address and decided to make the trek to return it to its owner, who happened to be sleeping on the couch beside me. The woman was humble, happy to help out, but asked if we had any lollipops, as some people at her camp were craving them. I just so happened to have purchased 200 lollipops to gift to the event and so sent her on her way with about 150 of them. This kind of thing is probably where the term “the playa provides” comes from.”

You can come with practically nothing (except water, this is essential) and still have the time of your life, and be pretty damn comfortable while you are at it. You can also come too prepared. I brought a ton of food to Burning Man. Little did I know I was going to leave with a lot of food as well. I got there and the first thing I did was make myself a drink. Next thing you know, I am on my bike riding around just in awe. You get sucked into just riding and riding until you can’t ride anymore. And then you ride some more. Then you start talking to someone who has some food, they offer it to you and then you move on to the next camp. Start talking to someone else and they give you a drink, you move on, your bike breaks, you start to panic, but low and behold right there is a bike repair camp set up to fix your bike for free. What a place!

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NIGHT RIDER
I remember riding across the playa the last night I was there. There were so many people, so many lights, so much activity going on. I kept riding, trying to take it all in with every pedal. As I came out of the lights, it opened up into the full on playa. Art cars driving around like ants. People walking, biking, laughing, enjoying the moment. I felt like I was in outer space. It was all too surreal to take in, a brain overload. Awesome, yet indescribable. When I went to leave Burning Man, I left thinking, well that was fun, but I didn’t have that magical life changing experience that you often hear about. Did I have one of the most wild, crazy, eye opening experiences of my life? Definitely! Would I go back? When I first left Black Rock City, I said never again. Four hours of driving to the airport to take a plane home, I started to think well, maybe I could go back next year. A few months later and I still can’t stop thinking about it. I hear some EDM music and my heart starts beating faster. I guess I am going to have to go back!

“Communal effort makes this festival run.”

The post BURNING MAN | THE BLACK ROCK YACHT CLUB appeared first on Windsurf Magazine.

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domingo, 29 de septiembre de 2019

#Windsurf BALZ MÜLLER | RADICULO

BALZ MÜLLER | RADICULO

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25 year old Balz Müller from Switzerland goes by the handle ‘radiculo’ on Instagram, and if you follow any of his antics you’ll know why. Pushing the limits of windsurfing and taking the proverbial are what he’s known for, not to mention the most painful crashes you’ll ever see. But there’s more to this young innovator than what you see in his must watch videos; read on for an insight as Balz talks triples, freestyle foiling and strapless windsurfing.

 Words  Balz Müller  // Photos  John Carter


WORKING
I am a full time landscaper in Switzerland. I am paid by the hour and for the last six years I have been working at the same place. My boss is really supportive of my windsurfing and all I do. In the winter months we can’t work because of the snow. He is happy to give me those three winter months off and for me to go to a few competitions. It’s a good setup, I earn my own money so I am not dependent on sponsors. For me windsurfing and landscaping are both my passions! The landscaping pays for my windsurfing so I am living the dream!

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DEVELOPING
I cover most of my windsurfing costs. The project with MB boards I don’t really earn money out of at the moment. But it is nice to ride your own boards that you are developing. That was always a dream of mine and I think with big brands at the moment they would not be interested in the radical boards we make. We are not professional shapers, but we love to do it. It’s really interesting to see what is coming out of it. Every time we make a new board we are stoked to try it out. Nobody knows if it will work. We don’t expect anything from it and are happy if it works in the end.

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FOILING
The Pegasus board is very different to a conventional windsurfing board. It is much, much shorter, 172 cm. That is a really short windsurf board. You need to realize with these boards that once you stand in the straps you are just hovering over the water. Once you are up it does not matter what kind of board you have. All that matters is where you have your mastfoot position, your footstraps and the foil box. I could have cut this board straight after the mastfoot! I rode a foil board which was 120 cm! Once you are in the air it does not matter what you are riding, you just need to have a comfortable stance. Some people think foiling is only possible on 70 cm or wider boards. My boards are never as wide as a freerace or freeride board. I enjoy foiling much more on narrow boards. I have a centre strap which gives me more of a surf or freeride foil feeling than a racing setup.

Race foiling is vastly different to the foiling I do. The race guys have small foils which are great to go upwind and downwind super fast on, but you can’t actually use them for light wind foil cruising. Most of the guys that buy a foil are just going straight and gybing. They just want to enjoy cruising on a foil. The race foils are too sporty and too crazy. You can’t enjoy them! I am using a freeride foil, which I can almost use to freestyle and do wave stuff with! I am doing pretty much all my moves which I do in normal windsurfing on the foil. We had a discussion if I should be allowed to use the foil in freestyle competition, but the other guys did not agree from what I understand. It is not another sport, it is just another way of doing the tricks. Right now I am the only one doing it, so I guess they don’t want a maverick in the fleet. My brother actually can kick my ass at foiling. He sticks the moves better than me! We are foiling every day at home in Switzerland in the summer! We push each other. At home this year I never sailed as much before because of the foil. That is the craziest part. I was on the water almost every day. There was nearly always the possibility to score a few gusts with the foil. That is a big game changer for windsurfing in Switzerland. It is 50-70% more actual time on the water. In the end that is what counts. With foil or without foil I don’t care. If you want to complain about foiling that is fine, but for me it has changed my windsurfing outlook completely. It now makes sense for me to stay home in Switzerland and sail at home. I agree in windy places you will probably never get into foiling, but for me it is just amazing to fly over the water, even doing no moves. I have a custom Severne 4.8m which I use most of the time and is really powerful. I am using that on my 85 litre foil board in 8-12 knots. In 8 knots I am hovering on a 4.8, but in 12 knots I am fully flying around. You don’t need a 9m race sail to go foiling. The big sails are so heavy that in the end you don’t fly as early as with a super small freeride setup. That is what I like about foiling. I don’t need to get my big gear anymore, I can stay on my freestyle rig and enjoy days when you would normally never get on the water. That is the best part about foiling.

FREESTYLING
A lot of people think I am crazy trying to shifty or push loop on the foil. They need to realize that I dream about these moves all night long. It is not that I am going out there and trying moves just by chance or luck. In my head I am always thinking about where my foil will be on the landing and what could happen. For sure one wrong crash and you could die though! The other day I was on the water and was actually quite scared. I was not in control on the foil, I had too much sail power. There was a lot of current also and it was not easy to foil. There is always a chance you come out of the footstraps or something, but on the moves I do it feels pretty safe. I have never injured myself doing something crazy with the foil. The only cuts I have are from swimming with my legs next to the foil when waterstarting or getting in and out of the water; that is the worst. So I never try and do a move without rehearsing it mentally and visually in my head. I really think about what I am going to do. Even in normal windsurfing you won’t land a move if you are not able to visualize yourself in all kinds of positions. That is a really important aspect of freestyling.

I am doing pretty much all my moves which I do in normal windsurfing on the foil.

THE SHIFTY
The thing with the shifty is everybody crashed air shakas from day one when they were learning, but nobody thought that it was possible to turn those crashes into a new move. For six years I was thinking about the shifty and trying it on purpose. I think I was the first one to think it could be possible. I was open to the idea at least. The first person to land it clean was Steven Van Broeckhoven. I told him they could be done. It took me so much time to get Steven even to the point of trying them. I knew he could land them easy. I could not even do proper push loops back then. He was already doing push loops off flat water. I told him the shifty is an easy move once you are going for it. Four years ago we did the first good ones. Now in the first round of freestyle there are a lot of guys doing them. Spectators love them; for taking pictures they don’t look great, but in real life they look crazy. It’s a quick rotation and the people at the beach don’t know what is going on. For me it is like a cheese roll, which is also a flip move which goes fast, and the shifty is the same just the other way. There are still a lot of guys struggling with this move, but once you know the trick to them it is not that hard anymore.

DREAMS
I dream a lot about triple air rotations. I tried a Pasco into shifty shaka which would be a triple rotation upwind. Antoine Martin was trying push loops fully over rotated in Tenerife. He has no control on his shifty movement so it is nice to see him trying, but I would love to see him first getting the shifty dialled. Then he would easily land the push loop into shifty. It is not a hard move. The first time I tried this triple rotation was two years ago. I went for it and made a 720 Pasco shifty, then I came out of the straps and landed from 6 metres up with my feet on the board. I had a bruised heel for days. I am not so sure triple backward rotations will be easier than triple forward rotations when you stop. You can always stop the shifty movement. Like a push loop tweak into shifty should not be a hard move. The goal would be to get it down soon.

My dream would be to go somewhere with port tack side-shore winds, two metre waves, 4m fully stacked and an ambulance…maybe two ambulances (laughs) or at least a doctor, with five or six of the best freestylers. I would love to do that. It needs to be Amado, probably Gollito, Yentel and those guys that can be a bit mental and push the limits. Not the top ten from the PWA but ten radical guys and go to a place like Coronation in Western Australia for example. You would need to have a hospital close by because it would probably be bone breaking what we would try. Probably nothing would happen, but you need to have medical people on hand. When we landed those shifty’s four years ago we had a doctor with us on the water supporting us. He was a windsurfer. Steven was actually coughing blood that day. I had pain in my stomach from hitting the water. We were over rotating shifty 720’s and going into 900 spins fully out of control. Then it gets to a dangerous point, but having a doctor with you calms the whole situation a bit. You never think about injuries when you are doing the moves but it is still reassuring. I am so sure this would push windsurfing to another level.

The wave guys, it is nice to see what they are doing, but they are also getting more involved in the freestyle moves. Freestyle wave for me is the main goal I want to push. Why don’t the wave guys do shifty’s in their heats? You can do a shifty forward easier than a push loop forward. Getting height on the shifty is the only problem. I have never been to Pozo yet.
That is a goal for me. Until now I was always mentally scared to go to Pozo. I now have a 3.3m Freak and love strong winds. With that 3.3m Freak I can’t wait to send it. Pozo is a place to go huge. I love push loop forwards and all that stuff, so let’s see what is going to happen! I need to find out where the closest hospital to Pozo is first!

”I dream a lot about triple air rotations.”

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STRAPLESS
Back in Australia Patrik Diethelm actually screwed the straps off my board because I had such a swollen ankle. To be honest I don’t feel I have recovered since then. Right now I also have pain in my knee. I feel like an old grandpa in his seventies. My knees are not that smooth anymore, but when you are doing what you love the pain does not feel so bad. In Australia they took the straps off my board because I did not want to stop. I had to go strapless. It was actually a lot of fun. I would not say sailing strapless is the future but it was nice. I really think I should take a rest to allow my knees to recover but I just can’t.

THE HELMET
The helmet started when we were kids. I have two brothers and we all were on a similar level and by ten we were already trying forward loops. It got to a point where my dad had to make us wear helmets otherwise he did not feel safe. There were a few times he had to drag us out of the water after almost passing out doing catapults or whatever. He was more relaxed when we all wore helmets. He told us we were not allowed to windsurf without them until we were 18. I have kept my helmet since then, the one I have is almost twelve years old. As I have grown I have had to cut out some of the foam inside so it will fit me. I feel so much more in control with the helmet on. It makes me more comfortable, confident and able to risk more. In Cape Town I lost my helmet in mast high waves. My gear and the helmet went in different directions. My instant reaction was to swim for my helmet and not the gear. That was Whitsands in mast high waves, the helmet came first! I can’t use other helmets, I have become attached to this one. It is also good to protect your ears.

WINDSURFING FUTURE
My goal is to have my own boards on which I am able to have the most fun on the water. I am so happy to be in the sea surfing, windsurfing or foiling. I have so much energy and I need to get rid of it all. Windsurfing is one of the beSt ways to get rid of it and helps me stay fit too, and with foiling I now get so many hours on the water. In the end for me it is also like meditation being on the water. I don’t want to quit this. Competition sailing is not the way I see myself sailing in the future. It does not suit me and I want to travel the world rather than going to the same two or three places which sucks. That takes up all my free time, which I could spend travelling to other places. It would be nice to be world champion one day, but for me I feel that would be almost impossible. I think for me it is more important to go see the world and travel to new places. With foiling I can explore almost anywhere. My goal is to be on a boat, having foils, surfboards and everything with me and just jump off the boat and be able to have fun.

“Competition sailing is not the way I see myself sailing in the future.”

The post BALZ MÜLLER | RADICULO appeared first on Windsurf Magazine.

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jueves, 26 de septiembre de 2019

#Windsurf BIGBURY | DEVON DREAMS

BIGBURY | DEVON DREAMS

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Huge southwest swells pound UK shores a few times a year, but lining them up with sailable easterly winds is more of a once in a decade occurrence. Fifteen years after scoring an epic mast high plus port tack session at Bigbury, John Carter rolled the dice on a mission to the famed south Devon spot, hoping for the stars to align once more and score a repeat performance! The lucky crew that scored pick up the tale.

Words  Timo Mullen, Jamie Hancock, Dave Ewer, Andy King, Paul Hunt, Ben Page & John Carter. //  Photos  John Carter


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TIMO MULLEN
This low pressure system was like the elephant in the room, it just wouldn’t go away! Normally when these sort of weather systems show up they promise the world but quickly disappear. But this system just kept getting better, in fact, I don’t think I have ever seen such a perfect low. Bigbury is a popular windsurfing and surf spot, it picks up loads of SW swell, but in my experience (I lived at Bigbury for a few years) it rarely gets epic as it needs a very specific and elusive combination of wind and swell to fire. In fact the last time it worked perfectly was about 15 years ago!! Myself and JC both use the webcam at Bigbury as our go-to webcam to check for surf on the south coast of England, so we are pretty familiar on what sort of swell works here and the forecast 6-8 feet @ 17 seconds we knew would be epic. Obviously we needed wind too and we were not to be disappointed, this rare low was producing E/NE winds at 20-25 knots which is perfect cross-offshore at Bigbury. We knew the swell was due to hit late and last for two days, but when we pulled up to the beach at about 11 a.m. it was flat, and when I say flat, I mean flat, barely 1 foot! Suddenly our decision was not looking so good, but we knew the swell was coming, we just had to wait! Within two hours the swell really started to pick up and at 2 p.m. I hit the water. My first wave was logo high and just perfect, and within half an hour the swell was pumping – solid mast high and getting bigger!

I was using my Severne Blade 4.7, teamed up with my trusty Severne Mako 91 litre, a perfect combo. for the day. My Mako 91 is such a reliable bit of kit as it is super floaty but works perfectly even when it is hollow and pumping! And it really was pumping, the wind was pretty offshore so it was really difficult to catch waves as the swell had so much energy and speed you really had to work hard as otherwise the waves would just push through and you could get blown out the back, which is why I opted for a slightly bigger board. It was a day for big aerials, the lip just was being held up perfectly to give a very hollow and sucky target that just begged to be hit! Bigbury is a river mouth style break, which means the wave does peel, but as it was so offshore it was actually pretty hard to get some good turns in, but like I said, the aerials were insane!!

I sailed until dark and by the end of the day the swell had fully hit with every set consistently mast high. With the forecast for more wind and waves, we booked a hotel close by so we would be on it the following morning. I went to university in nearby Plymouth, so it was tempting to hit the town for a few beers, but we decided to be sensible and save our energy for the next day and opted instead for a quiet local pub. Well, out of all the beautiful pubs that we could have chosen, we managed to pick the roughest, dingiest pub in England, where the best looking women was a man! Fortunately that would help us stay for just a few beers and home for an early night. The next day at the beach it was still pumping, maybe slightly smaller than the night before, so we knew we had to make the most of a now dying swell, the wind was also pretty light. As it was a Saturday there was a lot of windsurfers and surfers already at the beach. My friend Paul Hunt had been at a big party the night before and fair play had managed to make it to the beach early despite a long drive and by the sounds of things a very heavy night! Unfortunately for Paul he didn’t last longer than 2 waves and after a pretty hungover aerial he twisted his foot badly and suffered a Lisfranc injury, likely putting him out of action for a year!

We sailed all day again in logo to mast high perfect conditions, it was great to see so many old faces from the last great day here 15 years ago, with everyone shocked at how long it has been since that last epic session. Personally I have never had so many good waves in 2 days, it was flawless and even sunny, by 1 p.m. the swell had almost dropped completely with the filling tide, so it even turned out that we were able to make our way home early, keeping wives and family happy. Could this have been the first Motley Crew trip without mishap? Well if you ignore the dodgy pub, missing my mate’s 40th birthday party, and the fact Hunty broke his foot, I guess this did turn out to be a perfect trip!

“ We knew the swell was coming, we just had to wait!.”


Jamie Hancock_Bigbury_0068 Jamie Hancock_Bigbury_0058

JAMIE HANCOCK
As is the way with adult life and parenthood, I was committed to a wedding in Portsmouth on the Saturday. With my fiancé being a bridesmaid I was on a full day of baby duty whilst painfully checking the buoys. I knew around mid-afternoon when the group chat went quiet and there was some solid groundswell showing up on the channel buoys that it could only mean one thing. The positive of being on dad duty was that there was going to be no looming hangover nor an all-nighter at the wedding. I did however have to leave at 4:30 a.m. to make it to Bigbury for sunrise. I saw some images coming through which looked incredible from the day before. So I knew my best chance for the swell would be to arrive at first light. When I rocked up on Sunday morning there were big period sets rolling into the bay with huge plumes of spray in the sun. I rigged a 4.2m and paired it with a floaty Tabou wave board and slowly managed to make it out to the lineup. The wind was in honesty a bit too offshore and it was really hard to catch the right waves. I had to wait closer in to the peak to have any chance of getting on a wave which lead to getting steam rolled occasionally from a big set followed by a big swim. I was pretty exhausted from the 4 hours sleep, long drive and heavy floggings, but it was worth it to catch up with friends and share an incredibly rare day with so many other British windsurfers. The best part about these days is the way it makes me want more. I can’t wait for the next big swell.

“The best part about these days is the way it makes me want more.”


Dave Ewer_Bigbury_0055

DAVE EWER
With an epic forecast brewing, I made sure my assistant shop guy went surfing on the Friday, giving me a guilt free trip to the beach Saturday afternoon (around the best state of tide) that I could justify to myself. Looking at the forecast it was looking fairly tame, 5-6 feet on Saturday and increasing 7-11 feet on the Sunday, a nice little warm up ready for some “proper sailing” on Sunday. I sloped off to the beach after a busy spell in the shop and got down around 3:30 p.m. As I drove down towards Bigbury it was clear that the swell had already kicked in a bit more than the 5-6 feet forecast. The car park was packed with vans and the beach was super busy with excitable and some nervous looking windsurfers. I could see Timo and Ben Page pretty far upwind with a couple of other locals scraping to slide in to some sizeable sets. I couldn’t get past my excitable friends in the carpark quick enough, rigged my 5.0 and stuck it on my 89 quad (the one I fell through the deck of after a bail out the first time I used it!). Once on the water it was clear that the majority of the sailors were struggling to get into some waves.

When sailing in such offshore conditions, to catch a wave you either have to wait on the inside, where there’s barely any wind, or you hope to get a gust and plane almost straight upwind on a lump before trying to get down it before the wind blows you out the back of the wave. It’s a bit tricky, but worth the effort if you can snag one. At this stage I was sailing with Timo who was sitting on the inside, taking the sets super late and charging for a bowl ready to rocket air his aerials. Ben Page, who’s just moved to Plymouth, was having what seemed to be the sail of his life, flying down the line hitting sections and going into orbit! Having sailed Bigbury since I was a teenager I was familiar with these rare epic conditions and followed Timo and Ben’s lead and had a few epic hits myself, not that anyone may have seen them! The late afternoon light was slowly fading and I was desperate not to burn out after the first day as we had “Big Sunday” to look forward to. Sunday morning dawned and I checked the webcam before dropping my son Blue off to another beach for him to go SUP surfing before his football match. It looked pretty similar at the beach Sunday morning, with just a few more sailors out, maybe I’d left it a touch late? There was plenty of new faces, Andy King (old Bigbury local), James Cox, fresh from his Gwithian BWA win, Jamie Hancock and about 30 other guys out too. There was some chunky sets rolling through, it was going to be a solid day. I was soon back out on my 5.0 and 89 quad combo and had the luxury of knowing I had a couple of spare 400 cm masts in the back of my shop guy James’s van too. As it happened I had a mast breakage free day. These sort of cross-offshore conditions with mast high plus sets don’t come around that often, but when they do, it doesn’t get much better at Bigbury. You slide into a swell that seems pretty chunky, only to charge down the line at ‘Mach 10’, hanging on for dear life till you can set up for a throwing lip to hit. If the wave and your timing are in tune, then you just get projected up for ever and a day so it seems. The funniest moment on Sunday was sailing around out to catch another set, only to see 3ft of a longboard blowing out to sea; the surfers on the peak were paying their dues. Sailing with your mates at your local beach on the best day of the year still can’t be beaten for me. It’ll give the local Bigbury windsurfers something to chat about for the next few years till the next epic forecast heads our way!

“The surfers on the peak were paying their dues.”


Andy King_Bigbury_0085

ANDY KING
A very long time ago when I was at Plymouth University, Bigbury and Bantham were my ‘local’ windsurf spots. Over that time and a few days since I’ve been lucky to score some great sessions there. It offers a wide variety of conditions on both tacks, but the most elusive score in my opinion is port tack wind with a big south coast swell. I can count on one hand the number of solid wave days I’ve had there with east wind, and maybe just one with waves over logo high. The wind and wave starved summer finally conceded to a stormy autumn and we’d already been spoilt with some solid mast high down-the-line conditions in Cornwall, but something equally intriguing was showing on the forecast radar this time in Devon.

The problem is not only do they put cream on the scone before the jam in Devon, but there’s usually a 50% chance the fickle south swell or east wind forecast will change, leaving you equally disappointed. But on this occasion the stars lined up, for the sailing not the scones! I had planned to sail Bigbury on Saturday, but a morning webcam check showed very little in the way of waves or wind. My patience wore thin and instead I sailed a local spot in Cornwall that offers good jumping in an easterly and ‘proper job’ scones!

It was good, but the large SW swell never really arrived there, so I was surprised and a little frustrated to see how good the conditions had got at Bantham that afternoon. Having missed the Saturday I was determined to get a piece of the action on Sunday morning so the alarm was set for 05:30 a.m. I had my passport ready to cross the county border and I arrived at the beach just before sunrise. My early rise paid off, not only were conditions firing but I blagged a free parking spot, £8 richer…right result. It was low tide but solid mast high sets were pounding into Bantham. I rigged a 4.7m and my Goya custom thruster 92 litre for a little extra float to help get into the waves against the strong offshore wind.

A fair few other sailors were on it early too, and it wasn’t long till there were several of us out in the lineup. The conditions weren’t easy, the wind on the outside of Bantham was really fickle, dropping you off the plane and leaving you pumping with all of your might to get enough speed to catch or avoid the logo to mast high waves. In order to stand a chance of catching the set waves in the very offshore wind you had to get perilously close to the impact zone with sneaker sets poised to take you out if you were unlucky or not paying attention. When you did get on a decent wave and break free of the wind’s updraft you’d have a few moments to enjoy stamping your own marks on the mast high lumps of sculptured water curling their way to shore before you had to consider an exit strategy as the right hander from the river mouth of Bigbury morphed with the Bantham left hander we were riding to set up a do or die end bowl often complicated with a surfer riding towards you!

I had a plan to catch the biggest set wave I could, for my own satisfaction not photo glory. However, as with most of my plans, it went a bit pear shaped. I managed to sneak late into a set only to start my bottom turn and see a throwing lip shutting down in front of me. So I figured I’d ping my kit over and out of the wave before taking a hold down. In reality I just pinged my kit directly into a dropping mast high lip that hit it so hard it sheered the stainless steel fixing on the deck plate, separating rig and board. I’ve seen many a rig lost forever to the sandy depths at Bigbury, so the choice was simple, save the rig and my board could fend for itself. Thankfully for me the tide was pushing and after a 20 minute swim I was reunited with my board for a swift deck plate pit stop before getting back on it. As expected the swell and wind both started to ease, so I packed up and headed home to Cornwall. I felt I probably missed the full brunt of the swell as it arrived on Saturday afternoon, but at least I had a taste of it early Sunday before the epic conditions hibernate for another few years!

“I had a plan to catch the biggest set wave I could.”

 


IMG_0643 Paul Hunt_Bigbury_0079

PAUL HUNT
Bigbury was a day off disaster for me. I missed the classic day 15 years ago, so was very keen to make up for it. Chris Audsley and I travelled down after a friend’s 40th the night before; I’d got involved with the wrong people and had a major hangover. When we arrived it was firing, huge spray and lining up for miles. I grabbed my 88 stubby and 4.7 Blade and ran down the steps frothing as I watched Timo and Jamie killing it. My day was about to get a whole lot worse!

I scored two waves and was just getting my eye in. The waves had smooth walls and were long peeling lefts, almost perfect it felt like. On my third wave right in front of the river mouth I bottom turned and as I was coming back up the wave a huge gust threw me into the air. I landed really heavily on the tail and felt a snap, it did not feel good. I looked at my foot and it was obviously in a bad way. Timo saw I was in trouble. He is always really good at keeping an eye on people. He has towed me in before and did so again this time. He then rallied the guys on the beach to help me up the steps as I had to be carried. Then he organized me a towel, water and called the ambulance. I was triaged in the end and Audsley drove me to Torquay A&E. After 3 hours waiting around I was diagnosed with a bad sprain and sent on my way. Just over half way home I got a call from the nurse who said there had been a mistake, a doctor had looked at the x-ray and diagnosed an unstable Lisfranc fracture and that I must return to A&E.

That was bad news, I’d never head of a Lisfranc, what a stupid name. I went to A&E in Portsmouth and sure enough it was unstable. I was booked for a CT scan to confirm and decide the next cause of action. That ended up being surgery, 5 months on crutches and a very angry wife. No windsurfing for a year, that sucks. I sit here now in May just about able to walk. The Lisfranc joint turns out to have a silly name but is very important, it supports the arc in your foot. I had hardware put in and then removed 4 months post-surgery. A Lisfranc injury is fairly common in windsurfing it seems, I’ve spoken now to 3 or 4 people who have had similar injuries. My advice is avoid doing it!

“The waves had smooth walls and were long peeling lefts.”

 

Bigbury_0041

 

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#Windsurf GERMANY’S LAKE DISTRICT | BAVARIA HIGHS

GERMANY’S LAKE DISTRICT | BAVARIA HIGHS

_MG_8233©mitchphoto.de (1)

Despite being landlocked, Bavaria in southeast Germany has a thriving windsurfing scene due to its plentiful number of lakes that sit high above sea level in beautiful countryside, fringed with views of the hills and mountains. Andy Lachauer and Michael Krumm give us a guide to some of the area’s best spots.

Words Andy Lachauer and Michael Krumm  //  Photos  Michael Berger/mitchphoto.de and Michael Krumm.


Bavaria is mostly known for its beer, the Oktoberfest (locally called ‘Wies’n’), traditional costumes called Lederhosen for men and Dirndls for women, the most famous river wave in the world called Eisbach or the biggest mountain of Germany called Zugspitze. But there is even more to the area than all that for a windsurfer. Around 100 km from Munich there is a large number of lakes and for every wind direction there is a place to sail.

LAKE AMMERSEE
Ammersee is the place to go with westerly winds and is just 30 minutes from Munich. Typical conditions are a mix of sunshine and rain with a wind strength between 10 and 50 knots. When the lake is ‘boiling’ from high winds it delivers the best waves for jumping in the area. Best place to hit the water is in the bay of Herrsching; it has good parking, toilets and restaurants. For no wind days, visit Kloster Andechs, a monastery just up the mountain from Herrsching for traditional food and drinks in a great atmosphere.

LAKE STARNBERG
Just 10 minutes away from Ammersee is the next lake called Starnberg. It has pretty similar conditions to Ammersee except is normally a few knots less wind. There are several entry points around the lake (Ammerland, Ambach and Sankt Heinrich) and best wind directions are SSE-S-SW-W. If you need spares, there’s a windsurf shop right next to the lake called Surftools
Starnberg (www.surftools.de).

LAKE WÖRTHSEE
Between Ammersee and Starnberg is another lake called Wörthsee, and is the place to go  when the wind comes from the east. It’s a pretty small lake with nice water colours and mellow light wind conditions for freeride and freestyle with the wind peaking around 5 p.m., right on time for a sunset session. Best entry point is at “Rossschwemme”, which has good parking and a shop and café right at the spot.

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LAKE KOCHELSEE
Lake Kochel (Kochelsee) lies on the edge of the Bavarian Alps and due to its location, is the place to go early in the morning from 6-9 a.m. to catch the famous south wind called the ‘Föhn’. Here you can score an amazing sunrise session with warm, sunny weather combined with strong and gusty winds almost guaranteed. Best entry point is at the big car park of the Kristallbad Therme spa at Kochel town. After your session grab a cold beer at the pool bar or spa in the Kristallbad Therme.

LAKE WALCHENSEE
In the middle of the Bavarian Alps is one of the most beautiful of Bavaria’s windsurf spots called Lake Walchen (Walchensee). Located at over 800 metres above sea level and surrounded by a stunning panorama, this place is a thermic machine. In the summer months from May to September this lake is blessed with a good amount of windy days with nice, warm weather while the wind is blowing from the north to northwest. It doesn’t matter if you prefer racing over pancake flat water on a slalom board, flying with the foil or jumping around with your freestyle stuff, you will love it! Best spot to launch is the ‘SUKI Walchensee’ windsurf centre by pro freestyle windsurfer Andi Lachauer. It offers good parking and infrastructure and is the place to go for Windsurf/Windfoil/SUP rental and classes in the area. From mountain biking, hiking and fishing to stand up paddleboarding, there are lots of activities to do in the Walchensee area.

LAKE CHIEMSEE
The largest lake in Bavaria is also called “The Bavarian Sea” and has three main spots: Seebruck, Übersee and Chieming. The Alps block winds from the southwest and Chiemsee only really becomes interesting with winds from the west or northwest and east. Seebruck is a super shallow spot that works best in east winds but bear in mind the reed beds where watersports are banned. Übersee is the most popular spot on Chiemsee in west winds and is easily accessible via the A8 motorway. It’s great for beginners as offers standing depth water and in strong northwest winds has good waves for jumping too.

Chieming has good parking and facilities (mini golf course and outdoor pool in front of the sailing club area) and you will find depending on the wind strength and direction (NW-W-SW are best), light to moderate chop, the sort of conditions that makes an intermediate or beginner’s heart beat faster! In addition, there is ‘Windsurfing Chiemsee’ (www.windsurfing-chiemsee-shop.com), a shop and windsurf school that leaves nothing to be desired.

LAKE TEGERNSEE
Tegernsee has beautiful panoramic alpine views and is a popular destination for the Munich upper class. It’s also very popular as a ‘Föhn’ wind spot, being an alternative to the rather rough Lake Kochelsee for these winds. Here you can find small chop and shallow water at all spots. After a solid session it’s worth visiting the Tegernsee brewery for a local beer with a Bavarian dish. Sailing is at three main spots – Gmund, Bad Wiessee and Holz. Gmund is located on the main road towards Tegernsee and you turn left after crossing the railway tracks to a large parking lot. Here you can rig up and just north there is an entry point. The spot works with southerly Föhn winds. Bad Wiessee is best for Föhn southerly or north winds and near the old casino area there is a large parking lot with a grassy rigging area and easy launch. Holz works with north and south winds and is reached via the small parking area on the B307 from Munich to Bad Wiessee.

Michael_Krumm_Brombachsee_2

FRANCONIAN LAKE DISTRICT
The Franconian Lake District consists exclusively of artificial lakes, about 50 km southwest of Nuremberg. The area was created to counteract the drought in northern Bavaria and was
completely finished in 2000.

Here is a guide to its main spots.

LAKE BROMBACHSEE
This lake in the Franconian Lake District is favoured by pure west or east wind, as the wind can then move freely through the valley. Best time is spring and autumn, with standout days being mostly in winter, when hardly anyone (except for a small crew that is always there) comes to the lake.

Allmannsdorf
This spot on Brombachsee is best on southwest or west winds and has a large sandy beach and grassy area for rigging. When the wind is up it offers good jumping and due to a concrete pier and sandbar can also offer good flat water conditions depending on the water level. It’s a perfect place for moves or gybing, the only downside is that it can be extremely crowded on weekends, similar to Torbole on Lake Garda on good days.

Ramsberg
Ramsberg on Brombachsee is the spot to go for north, northwest and east winds, offering a lot of space and a large grassy area for rigging.

Seespitz
This Brombachsee spot only works in strong east or west winds. In east winds a decent wave builds up for jumping and in west winds it is mirror smooth but very gusty.

BADEHALBINSEL
Badehalbinsel, on the lake known as ‘Small Brombachsee’, only works with east / southeast winds, but then it can be a real gem of a spot and has a small windsurf centre (www.surfschulebrombachsee.de).

LAKE ALTMÜHLSEE
Altmühlsee is another lake in the Franconian Lake District and in contrast to Brombachsee caters for winds from all directions. The best are directions from NW-N and it is the preferred spot over Brombachsee in these directions. Directly at the spot is a large windsurf centre, (https://ift.tt/2n93gi1), shop and motorhome park. This is the best place if you want to stay in one place for a long time. Here in the summer on humid days (even without predicted wind) in the late afternoon, one or two hours of wind can often be found. Otherwise, the wind probability is the same as for Brombachsee.

WIND AND WEATHER
The best time to visit is spring and autumn. On normal days you use sails between 4.8 and 7.0, depending on whether you are into freeride or freestyle. In storms, which unfortunately happen only a few times a year, than 3.7 sails and a wave board can be used. Best weather conditions are with passing lows from the west. On www.addicted-sports.com they have webcams to some of the spots. The water isn´t cold in summer  and averages 17 – 20 degrees, depending on the lake; Walchensee & Kochelsee are a little colder because of the Alps. Sometimes a shorty or a 3/2 full suit is needed, it depends on the rider, normally you can go with a long sleeved lycra and board shorts. At other times of year you will need your full winter gear.

NO WIND OPTIONS
Around the lakes are countless opportunities for cycling or hiking. At Pleinfeld, near Brombachsee, there is a summer toboggan run. There are also many boat rental options available as well as SUP and a new wakeboarding facility at the Zeltwiese in Absberg on ‘Small Brombachsee’.

ACCOMMODATION
The Bavarian lakes are perfect for a road trip and there are lots of hotels right on the lake shores or close to them. At ‘Small Brombachsee’ there is a hotel right on the beach (Strandhotel Seehof in Langlau). In Ramsberg there is the “Floating Village”, which are apartments on the water. There are also campsites in Enderndorf and Langlau at Lake Brombachsee, as well as at Lake Altmühlsee. At Badehelbinsel in Absberg and the windsurf centre at Altmühlsee there are camping pitches with electricity, showers, shops, etc. Otherwise there are plenty of apartments around the lake for rent at the usual websites, such as Airbnb.

“The Bavarian lakes are perfect for a road trip.”

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