3.7.10
the slick rebellion
Just pay attention to what is happening at your home break on any given swell. Fundamentally things have not changed much: fined surfboards are still used by more then 99% of surfers. Yet the few finless boards present, if any, will be the center of attention of the peak, regardless of how friendly surfers might be. This is the result of the aura, genius and true dedication of a few surf phenomenons such as Tom Wegener, Derek Hynd or Richard Kenvin. Most certainly many are already following their tracks.
The beauty of finless for a surfer was captured immediately by Tom Wegener when he thought about shaping again and then surfing his first alaia. At the beginning he rode it prone, because after having mastered his art as a fined surfer, riding a finless plank of wood was suddenly a new beginning and a new form of glide, one he had never felt before, and one that happened to be extremely difficult. Soon enough he stood up and so did the amazingly talented surfers that share his Noosa sessions, capturing our imagination all over the world, and stimulating some of us’ need to try it too.
Trying is what it is all about really. So I tried and still am, sometimes successfully riding a wave, most of the time struggling to catch them, but always with an intense satisfaction when it is done right.
Most people will not do it because they wouldn’t want to waist a good session on their dialed board. Too bad; but then most people don’t like to get out of the track either. For those who dare experiment the finless motion though, a new world of glide will open its doors to them.
What is happening is not a revolution. The shortboard was a revolution, when from one year to the next, almost all longboards were replaced in the water by shorter single fins. In spite of the fame finless boards have acquired in the last couple of years (mostly alaias to be exact), no significant proportion of surfers will soon swap their usual boards on a regular basis. And yet, everybody knows someone that has one in his quiver, should it be made of wood or of foam.
Neither is it an evolution. The evolution was Tom Blake’s idea to add a stabilizer to his surfboard and make it easier to ride and turn, followed by creative surfers and shapers fine tuning whatever idea was theirs at the time (Bob Simmons, George Greenough, Simon Anderson, etc…), and contributing to surf’s big leaps. Considering the type of boards we are talking about, taking the only element of balance out of the equation would rather be coldly considered as a step backwards by most surfers. And who could blame them given the level of ability and technique required to surf properly those new finless surf crafts?
Rebellion is what most accurately defines what is happening with finless surf, or to simplify, finless boards.
Alaias have been shaped and surfed again for 5 or 6 years. Seeing some of the best surfers in the world ride them the way they do is striking after such a short period. What will the surfscape look like in a generation, when some young surfers will have learnt how to surf on these boards from the very beginning?
Part of the answer lies in the efforts of finless shapers and surfers to come up with new type of slick boards, adding some volume to the genuine alaia. They will float better, paddle better, and most of all allow accessing much more waves.
History and memory is one thing, improving concepts is another, and as French say, there is no need to be more royalist then the king himself… Finless foam or hollow boards are not as fast and flexible, but they are much easier to surf then the thin wood planks, and still deliver that very specific joy and stoke.
The movement started with one man, interested in ancient times, skilled and passionate. He reproduced what he saw in the Bishop Museum of Hawaii, but didn’t hang it on the wall like others before him. He surfed it. Then shaped another one and changed things. He found out what worked and what didn’t, outlines, lengths, rails, curves, he explored all aspects and even found the best common wood for the job. If everybody talks about alaias and the absence of fins today it is because Tom Wegener dedicated so much time to this idea. He still is, and logically, the next step was to add volume to the alaias, which he did with what he calls the Tuna, a bodied interpretation of the alaia, made of wood, or foam, or even both sometimes. Every day in Noosa he surfs and experiments with these finless prototypes, changing materials, measures, and templates once again.
At the same time, other surfers also started thinking that fins were not that essential for a surfboard to surf and begun their own experimentation, following different tracks, and creating a world spread interest through the films, footage and pictures that can be seen more and more often as time goes by.
What Derek Hynd is doing in his world class South African backyard is mind blowing. His approach is so different from Wegener’s that it allows to believe that more and more finless shapes and directions will be available in a close future. Instead of a long concave and sharp rails to grab the wall and fly, Derek Hynd started cutting inches out of old boards, and shaping channels on the bottom, and foiling back the rails, then re-glassed them and went surfing to see how it worked. It obviously does if he can spin several times big J-bay without loosing his forward momentum, then take a highline and accelerate even more while launching himself again on the steep wall of the wave.
In California, the everlasting Hydrodynamica project led Richard Kenvin and his accomplice Carl Ekström to create finless foam boards. For them the approach was similar to Hynd’s, using deep channels to compensate the absence of fins and create grip. The concept was however carried out by a designer, expert in fluid hydrodynamics, which led in turn to a totally different result. And Kenvin started surfing and filming to show what was going on at Windandsea.
More recently, Ryan Burch, goofying around and having fun as usual, dug a little more into the planning hull bible (Naval Architecture of Planning Hulls, by Lindsay Lord, first published in 1946) and thought that maybe something even more basic could work. A rectangular piece of foam for instance, slightly scooped on the nose and not even glassed (why bother?). And their it is again, the speed down the line is so unbelievable with his board that when you see the footage, it almost seems as if the film was played in fast motion, making waves that would have possibly not been makeable with a fined board, getting deep in the barrels with nothing but a piece of EPS. The cheapest board ever …
Historicism, empiricism, hydrodynamic theory and application; whatever the method, a few creative shapers and surfers have recently decided that it was time for something new, that they’d had enough of fins and of the everlasting debate of what set up is the best. Now for them, and those who listen, it is no longer the issue. As a lot of people agree, we live the best time to be a surfer, and the best time to rebel ourselves against the monotony of the line-ups and the dictatorship of the top 44 surfing style.
Tom Wegener has brought to our attention again the possibility of surfing finless (standing up). Without him we would still have forgotten that not so long ago surfers didn’t even have a choice, and most of all without him, finless surf might still be only anecdotic.
The virus has spread and is now very active all over our surfing planet, though few people have yet been contaminated. It is so true for those who are interested in contemporary surf culture, that no good festival around the world forgets to show exhaustively what is on: Noosa Surf Festival, Green Room Festival, Surf Film Festival Ciudad de Santander, Surf Film Festival Saint-Jean de Luz, etc… every one of them is now fishing for the latest finless surfing premiere.
Let’s just keep in mind that, one of surf’s unwritten basic rules applies in this case: the less we are and will be the better.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment