Archive for the ‘Raves’ Category

Surf the Turf, a long Mountain Board Blog Post

Monday, March 8th, 2010

As I’m writing this I’m on Martyn’s netbook heading home through some beautiful mountains in the lake district, hold on a sec while I take in the view…better on the way to the site. Well anyway, that makes this a very on time blog.

We set off for Surf the Turf at 10 o’clock, arriving at 12.30 just as the site was opening, perfect! We got our gear in order and were greeted at the site by the super cool Markus and co-host Roo (sorry for mispronouncing your name all day). First impressions of the site were that it was a well run place, not to put anything against Another World but that’s a place you go to when you want no hassle hit the hill and go.

An example of this well managed style is that Markus wanted to see us power slide for speed before letting us on the runs. Now, we’ve done these before but didn’t have any technique so they were a bit hit and miss. He spotted this straight away and asked us to partake in the start of the mountain board lessons. Within 30 minutes I’d had toe side and heelside powerslides dialled and also a few essential tips that I’d both picked up as bad habits on by making them up by myself.

So we hit the hills ourselves, starting with a few rollers [getting a feel for border-x again!] and of course getting some major slides to stop with our new skills. After a couple tries here we went right to the bottom where there’s the awesome -HUGE- quater pipe. I hit this with a bit of speed which scared me but luckily the old skate skills kicked in and it was rather easy (and got easier and more stylish as the day moved on).

Then was time to hit some grinds, 50-50, the style of them were friendly to newbies and a first time land was rather nice. Kicking off the need to start a bit higher up and hitting the kickers. So we hit these obstacles for a bit before having lunch.

After that we tried to hit the full border-x from various points. It’s a large burmed course and I’m sure it’s sweet…in summer, the winter and lack of time to dry out made it a sludgy slow ride, not really worth it today. Until I have more confidence I’m a bit apprehensive about it, it’s quite a stony run which makes control harder and I assume falls more painful.

Towards the end of the day Martyn pointed out we hadn’t cleared a gap, sulking I said “Yesh mashter” and tried this nice step up a few times. We both cleared this clipping the top of the landing ramp having to hold into the bindings as much as possible to stay on the dirtboard. We also both managed to go down quite hard on this which left us wary of hitting this further. Lessons from this, you need balls for the speed and you need balls to try and stick the landing as much as possible.

Coming to the end of the day we had to try the rainbow grind rail – 50-50 again. The plan was to ride up it slowly and come back down to get confident with it. First try however I had more speed than I though and went over it first try which I was well proud with, this apparatus was actually easier than the other grinds because it’s so smooth, of course, it looks more hairy though. Lesson here, a well made rail is easy, just hit it perfectly straight, knees bent and body weight centre. I learned this from the couple fails and moreso from watching Martyn’s fails – cheers buddy! Just for reference he did make it over :)

Nom, nom, nom. Just dropped into the service station there for a rest and stretch. It’s freezing and pushing open doors hurts!

Back to the coolness. The end of the day was coming and we decided to go from top to bottom through the tricks and jumps. Carving the hill, powersliding were necessary we… didn’t make it top to bottom in one go. I know I have the skill but luck, fatigue or something else just kept it from happening, I fell twice but made up for it by handling the quarter pipe very stylish.

So this post has been very chronological so have I missed something out? Yeah. There’s a little chill out zone with a selection of smaller things to play on; balance boards, tight rope, creative(!) skate mini ramp, comfy indoor seats and trampoline. Speaking of which, there was a mountainboard with no trucks on so you could practice air time, or more specifically, 360′s – much easier without 7.5 kg board! Laid back atmosphere with easy to get along with hosts. Friendly locals – bikers and boarders. Good price. Excellent weather, I’m calling it the start of spring, the day was mildly warm, windless and cloudless which made for some nice vistas at the top of the slope. Lastly was the fact that they have a small selection of vehicles that are used to tow people to the top, sadly these were nonoperational when I was there but I was assured it was super fun and makes it easier to ride all day long.

If you can’t tell this has been a most excellent day. I’m feeling the boarding buzz and can’t wait till next weekend. You can’t get a better recommendation than that!

The perfect setup

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

Okay, so I came in from work on the 18/02/2010 and Martyn told me we were going dirtboarding, I’m not arguementative so I had to say yes!

We were just going on a local jaunt to what we call the high-rises, basically a largish hill with a grass option near a tower block. We were having a sweet time so I decided to up my game a bit, there’s a rail going around the inside corner with a 2ft gap in it. It’s fast and getting through this gap is hair-ee. I went for it without telling Marty, a manoeuvre which crossed his path and it was greeted with rapturous applause.

At this point we thought it’d be a good idea to hit a stair set we’d spied on the way home the other day. Basically there’s a nice downhill runnup to and from a series of smaller stair sets, starting with 2, then 3,3,3,5 and 8. Also what was brilliant for the time of day was there is a streetlamps all the way down, giving perfect vision for us, sadly not the camera though – that really sucked because we hit these stairs every way possible. All except the last set, too big for first try. The last set did however have a run-off down the side which was real fast and need some fast turning to not hit rocks and the like, but was worth it the two times I did it!

That was about it for that small jam. This is a place we can easily revisit, and I’d love to, in daylight so we can get some footage.

New people, new skills, new tech and old favourites

Friday, February 19th, 2010

Do I need to continue to preface these blogs with “this post comes way late”. I mean it must be about 50% of posts now. This time though I have a reason, I was going to do it last night (Thurs) but me and Marty went for a jam session, and earlier in the week I was ill. So anyway Sunday 14th February 2010 me and Martyn headed back out to the old favourite in the North East, Jesmond, for some fun times. Something was different…

We met up with James, a fellow boarder who funnily enough rides pretty much the exact same area as us as far as his local terrain goes, but he uses self-made bindings – me and Martyn had tried to create some earlier in the morning but our stretchy rope thing (duuuuh?) snapped for me on first use. James is a great guy and I think we’ll be riding with him from now on, his style is slightly different from ours which just makes me think I can learn a few things off him.

One thing I’ll not try to learn is the guts to try to go down a 45deg incline over …tenderous… terrain. So we’re bombing around Jesmond doing our usual thing and enjoying and one of the other new facts was I got an HDpro camera, these are water/shock proof action cameras perfect for this sort of thing. It has no screen but the wide angle lens captures everything you point it at. I used it for board cam and helmet cam (aka – Chebcam) and some of the stuff that came out of it looks brill.

Sadly the camera ran out of space (note for future, use more than an 8gb card when recording in HD). So we we’re hitting some downhill grass paths and pulling backside slide turns, which is a new trick for me. Martyn pulled it of first and was generally ruling the day so I had to follow suit, luckily I did and my pride remains. After this we found some wooden beams to try and grind, we were all very nervous at first because we have no knowledge in this area, but we got over our fears and had a few tries. Sadly we and the wood broke before anyone was successful but I feel we’re all pretty close to grinding.

We were out for around 4 hours on Sunday, it was the best time in the week until Thursday…

TBC