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Chayne on Jeffreyās Bay 2024.
A couple of years ago, after some twenty years of crowded sand bottom points, endless closeout beachbreaks and logjam Gold Coast traffic, I packed up and moved south. Following the dominant theme in my life, there was little planning involved, so when I finally fetched up on the outskirts of Ulladulla, down in Yuin country, it was pure happenstance that I found myself occasionally bumping into Chayne Simpson both in the water and out. I first got to know Chayne over a decade ago through our mutual involvement in Legless.tv. Iāve always found him a kind of calming presence. He exudes a blend of confidence, contentment and charisma that never fails to improve my mood. Given that my mood is usually fairly positive, I took these occasional meetings to be good omens indeed.
Late last May I pitched up at one of my regular spots for an early morning surf check ā it was small and clean but already starting to choke on the incoming tide - and found Chayne leaning on the rail next to me. We both had things to do, so the conversation was brief, but I thought to ask if he was planning on making the trip to J-Bay for the World Title competition a few months ahead in August. He didnāt think so. āIf it was J-Bay proper, Iād definitely go, but itās going to be on The Point, which isnāt the same. Itās a lot of money just to get there, so probably not.ā I left shortly after to go about my day and that was that.
Over the next couple of months life became pretty busy and a couple of nagging injuries kept me out of the water, so I saw nothing of Chayne but I kept an eye on developments with the Jeffreys Bay contest all the same. I wasnāt really surprised to learn ā in an entirely incidental way - in mid-August that Chayne was going to South Africa after all. Not long after that I watched on YouTube livestream as he beat Albert Munoz in the Open final. The next time I saw Chayne was a cool Friday afternoon in mid-September, when Ā we sat on his front verandah to talk through the 2024 World Title and what it all means for him.

R. People are saying it was the best run kneeboard contest theyāve ever seen.
C. 100% Couldnāt fault it. They put a lot of money into it. Gigs (Celliers) is quite well known over there, heās done a lot for surfing, a lot for kneeboarding Iād imagine he probably called in a few favours from people. Thatās just an assumption, but ⦠Micky Kirsten - CineFx - was the main sponsor.Ā I donāt know where the rest of the money came from, but I know it would have been an expensive gig. They had live broadcast, jetskis, professional judging. We have a contest here and we ask for priority and they say āOh, we canāt afford the extra judge.ā They had everything over there - it looked like a WSL contest.
Gigs has some connections!
I canāt imagine thereās anyone else in kneeboarding who could have done what Gigs did.
Do you think, with the bar set so high with this one in South Africa, that itās going to be achievable elsewhere?
I couldnāt imagine it happening here. I couldnāt see us getting the money here. New Zealand, I reckon theyāve got pretty good connections over there, with government grants and things like that, they can get access to those sorts of things. I just donāt think we can. I just donāt think weāre seen as a good business opportunity.
So is that what it is? Weāve got to be seen as a business opportunity? Whatās different about SA? What is it, is it just Gigs? Cos heās a kneelo, and heās got the contacts and the experience, he can say āWell I know how to do thisā?
Heās very well respected.
And Mickey Kirstenās a kneelo too.
Yeah, kneeloes in high places!
So how long before the contest did you decide to go?
Probably 4-5 weeks, I got a message from Steen and he said, āAre we going to J Bayā and I said āIāll go if you goā, and he said āLets go!ā and then he organised it all. I spoke to Shauna about it and she said, āDo it!ā She knows Iāve always wanted to surf J-Bay. It wasnāt long. Most people didnāt know I was going until I was going. Usually if youāre going on a trip you book it 6 months in advance and somehow run into people and you tell them and so they know youāre going. Well ⦠Shauna would say āOh Chaynes off tomorrowā and theyād go āWhere you going?ā and Iād say āOh, South Africaā and theyād go āWhat? tomorrow?ā So it was a pretty quick turnaround. I didnāt tell most people it was the World Titles, I just told them it was a surf trip with a bunch of mates. Word got out, obviously, but I wasnāt telling people I was going in the World Titles, but they all found out.
So why didnāt you tell anyone?
I dunno. I donāt really have a reason. I was just going on a surf trip. Didnāt want to make a fuss. I was just going on a surf trip, and there was a contest there. Thatās ⦠like I was saying, my whole approach to it - I just didnāt surf the contest, I surfed Supers. The first day we got there, it was massive and it was pumping and Shauna rang me and said āHowād you go, I saw the photosā and I said āI just surfed perfect Supersā and she goes āJob doneā.
Everything from that point on was a bonus.
Yeah. And that was pretty cool from my wife too. I guess a lot of wives would be like āOh, youāve gotta do well in the contestā, but she was just pumped that I got real good waves at a place Iāve wanted to surf forever and she was just satisfied with that, which was pretty cool. So, it was more like a surf trip than going for a contest.
So lots of surfing Supers - any practice sessions at the Point?
Not once. Actually, I lie cos the first two days when it was quite big, I couldnāt find the keyhole to come in at Supers, so I surfed my way down and then caught a wave in at the Point.
And that was your practice wave?
One wave from each session, on the way in. That was it. Itās just another wave. You take off on a wave and you do what it does, you do what it asks you to do, I suppose.
What did it ask you to do?
Cutbacks, lots of cutbacks!
Ā And a big bash at the end.
Yeah, it had a good end section on it, especially when it was bigger. When it was smaller you couldnāt really get to that section, it would run away, which ⦠the end section runs away from you so youāre coming at it, at it, at it, thinking youāre going to get it, but it keeps moving away from you. When itās bigger, it comes at you. It was quite intimidating to hit that end section. Youāll see a couple of photos - thereās one of Gigs especially, turning out - and itās heaving. Itās a pretty big section to hit. Guys were getting smashed hitting it, guys were sending it, and there were guys in their sixties, fully sending it.Ā It was pretty cool to see. I donāt know if they wanted to win or just wanted to show they could do it, to impress people or whatever, but they were doing it. Just that push from having everyone there that made everyoneās level go up. There were some guys ripping that Iād never heard of.
Thatās what you want though. If the surfās good, then thatās going to happen. If the surfās shit, itās just shit.
Yeah, at J-Bay we got very lucky.
For the duration of the contest, you and Albert and Steen took up residence at Dreamland, a two-storey house right in front of Supertubes. On the morning of the finalĀ day, you were in bed when Steen opened the curtains and looked out.
Yeah. He went, āOh hoh, itās BIGā and I remember laying in bed thinking oh fuck, whatās going to happen here today, and he said āThis is you; youāve got this! Youāve trained for this every day just by going surfing in Ulladulla. This is you.ā That sort of gave me quite a bit of confidence. That was before the semi. We were the second heat out, Albert went first heat, I was in the next one, and just ⦠the way Steen was talking that morning, building my confidence, made me feel so comfortable out there.
The conditions during the final were ideal for your style of surfing.
I like a big smooth canvas to work on! I dunno, it just all seemed to click. Iām not a big wave guy. It was 6ft, it wasnāt BIG. A 6-8 ft wave like that, yeah, comfy as. Thatās what I like to surf now. Fully in my comfort zone. Just because Iād been surfing so much in that two weeks, I knew ⦠you know the keyholes there are a real drama, but they didnāt worry me. Iād just sort of jump off the rocks and float out, whereas everyone was worried about it. Youāll see some photos of the keyhole where thereās like ten-foot waves, but you just, I dunno, you take a breath and duckdive and get out there. The jetskis were there, that was a big plus. Knowing they were there helped the confidence too, knowing you could ride a wave all the way in and still get back out to get another one, that really took the pressure off.
You love connecting full power turns, carving smooth arcs on big, open faces ā¦Ā
Style in surfing is pretty important. To look good on a wave, you know. Thereās a lot of guys who surf really well but look terrible on a wave. Itās Italo compared to Ethan Ewing - Iāll watch Ethan all day, but Iāll get pretty bored with Italo pretty quickly.
The best surfing often appears effortless - each turn flows into the next so that the whole ride seems to be simply doing what comes naturally on the wave. I know you rank Simon Farrer as the best ever kneeboard surfer. Itās obvious youāve drawn elements from Simonās surfing: line, economy of movement, precision and above all, flow. Yet no-one could say that youāre a Farrer clone.
No. I think our styles are quite different, Iām a lot more upright, whereas Simonās hunched and forward. His arms arenāt moving heaps, heās just there the whole time. Iāve probably taken parts of his surfing: the whole not having to fit a million turns in, go around a section cos the next oneās ⦠putting the turns where theyāre supposed to be on a wave, thatās what he does, and Iāve definitely taken that from his surfing. Definitely.
I want to ask you about something else. Pretty much at the end of the street here is (a reefbreak, predominantly a sectiony right-hander popular with locals and blow-ins alike.) It can be excellent sometimes, but itās a fickle spot, often an exercise in frustration. I couldnāt help thinking of it while I was watching the final.
Ha ha! THAT wave is a lot like where we had the contest! The Point is definitely a better version of it, but, well ⦠before we went, the reef here was breaking quite often and I was out there quite often. A lot of that had to do with the fact I had things to do here (at home), and its right there, so I was just surfing that.Ā Surfing that wave got me over there without meaning to have that happen. It was just uncanny that it was breaking. Itās not a wave youād look at and think āItās like J-bayā - but itās similar to where we had the contest. Itās not a predictable wave, youāll have a section come down here and you have to go around it and readjust, and another section will pop up there - it was really good preparation, but not on purpose. It was a happy accident.
You said earlier that you had a lot of strong support from Kyle Bryant - he wasnāt able to make the trip himself but was able to watch heats live on YouTube. He took on a mentoring role via SMS messages throughout the contest?
Yeah, I felt that luck was on my side. He actually said that. Kyle said in his messages that the cards were falling into place, āLuckās fully on your side for this whole contestā. He was watching the live feeds, watching the free surfs, watching who was getting knocked out. Gavin Colman went down early, he was a very big threat. He was surfing with me at Supers every day, first one out every morning. There was one day there that was only 2-3ft, sort of semi-onshore, I think Gav may have gone down then. I donāt know, I didnāt see his heat.
A day when those who rely on power paid the price?
Well, yeah ⦠Iāve been surfing my whole life in a variety of different waves. I can surf the grovelly stuff too, I can still make it work, but I just donāt enjoy it. Someone like Albert, heās the gun in that stuff, heās almost unstoppable in that. This isnāt a write-off of Albert at all. In 2-3ft sloppy waves, I donāt reckon anyone can beat him - he still throws spray, he still gets it vertical. I donāt enjoy doing it. I feel like I can do it if I have to, but probably not to the calibre that he does. You know, if that final had been in 2-3ft onshore waves it might have gone the other way.
But it wasnāt, and it didnāt: it was smooth water, a strong swell and a favourable tide, jetskis, real-time commentary and live-streamed video.Ā Two good mates in a world title final going down to the wire, with you and Albert both taking potentially winning waves in the last minute. Your last wave was the last of the heat, scored you a 9 and you took the Open World Title with a heat score of 16.17 to Albertās 14.43. Was it a kind of redemption for you after that 2020 Dunedin victory, the one you didnāt defend in Portugal in 2022?
Thatās what made this one such a meaningful win: that it was held in good solid waves. That final in New Zealand was the worst waves Iāve ever had in a contest. I won with two 4s. This one I got a 9 on my last wave.Ā It seems like everyone who surfs in Ulladulla was watching and it wasnāt embarrassing. Theyāve all said how good it was to watch. Theyāve all said they havenāt seen kneeboarding like that - ever - over all the competitors. āI didnāt know you guys could do that. It looked so smooth on those waves.ā You know, when they said they were going to do the live feed I was worried, but no-oneās had a negative thing to say about it.
That was an important factor for you, wasnāt it? Why?
I wanted people to watch it and think āKneeboarding looks funā, or not just fun, but impressive too. And they did watch it and they are saying that, so thatās a pretty big deal, donāt you reckon?
No pictures of you in the local paper?
I donāt know that there even is a local paper anymore! I think itās all about Instagram and Facebook now. The support I got from down here was unreal. You know, the Ulladulla Boardriders, Aqua Surf shop, all the people just putting things up on their Facebook or Insta ā āCheck this out, Chayne at the World Titles, you can watch it here.ā Never had that in Wollongong, not even close to anything like that. In saying that though, Sandon Point Boardriders shared a thing saying āChayne used to live here, heās in the World Titles, check this outā. Yeah, definitely the most support Iāve ever had going into a contest, for sure.
Did that help?
Oh yeah, 100%. Just, if you could go back through my phone and see the amount of well-wishes I got when I was going there, before it had even started: it was pretty incredible, like the people that wanted me to win, thatās pretty incredible. It makes you heaps keener to win when people want you to win.
So the boards you were riding are the same youāve been riding for years: the burgundy board ā¦
Yeah, the one burgundy board! Thereās about 15 of them, itās a bit of an in-joke with Parkesy. Everyone thinks Iām on this one burgundy board all the time, itās like - why does this board work in two-foot slop and it works at 8ft J-Bay as well? Itās actually a lot of different boards. Most of the contests Iāve been in over the last four or five years Iāve been on my grovel board. This one I was on my step-up. Itās a 5ā9ā. Itās more of a pin. My standard boards are 5ā7ā, my grovellers are 5ā6ā, this oneās just got a lot more pin in it. Itās the board Iād ride at waves around home most of the time. I had a fair few surfs on my 6ā0ā. I could have ridden that in the final. Looking back, I probably would, I was a little bit undergunned on the 5ā9ā at times. Thereās a couple of waves you can see in the footage where Iāve gone to hit it and havenāt got there in time. I would have got there on time on the 6ā0ā. I donāt ride the 6ā0ā very often, you need a big wall, you need a bit of area to move, obviously. Itās alright to have a big board to get onto the wave, but then if the wave doesnāt give you room to move when you are on it, you donāt want to be on a big board .... Albert rode his 6ā0ā. Itās pretty much the same as mine. He was drawing nice lines on it but again, I think he was getting smaller waves. He should have been on the bigger waves, then he might have done a bit better. He still did well. I think he was beating me until I got my last wave.
It was close, but he didnāt beat you, did he?
Yeah, I think he got a wave, and I caught the one behind him and the wave that he got put him in front and then I got the wave behind him and got the 9. So it was pretty lucky.
Did you know at that time, that youād got the score?
No. I didnāt know. I figured it was a pretty good score but I didnāt think it was a 9, and I didnāt know what he got, I just knew that his wave was a bit smaller and probably wasnāt going to allow him as much. He was paddling for it and he was going āYou gonna use priority?ā and I went āI will if I have to.ā And he said are you gonna use it on this one? And I went āNo, you go.ā I knew there was a bigger one behind it, so he went that one and I got the next one.
So, in the last minutes of the final it was just, āOh no, you goā ā¦
Yeah, but I knew there was a better one behind it. I could have blocked him. I had priority, but if I had, he would have had the one behind me, so I had to make that choice. So to get back to the other question, I was on the jetski going back out and there was a minute to go. At that point I didnāt know if I had the score. We couldnāt hear a thing, the jetski riders were giving us our scores. And I had like a minute, so Iām going āGotta get back out ā go go goā ā and he - the ski guy - was just cruising. I donāt know if he knew I had the score or not, but then I jumped off the ski and was paddling and he calls out ā 9.2ā or whatever it was, and that was it. I just paddled over and caught one in and that was the end of the heat. Thatās when I knew, when he gave me the score.
Was it a good feeling?
Yeah. When I was coming in ⦠you know it was a bit of a monkey off my back, cos Iāve always been ⦠plenty of people say Iām a small wave guy - if the waves are small Iām going to win the contest, cos Iām small. So to win it in good bigger waves, that was the whole feeling for me ā āThere you go, I can do itā. I knew I could do it, Steen knew I could do it, he was telling me every day, but I felt like half the people didnāt know I could do it in decent waves.
The small wave guy.
Yeah, me and Albert. The small wave guys, weāve always been told that. So to get us at 1 and 2 in good surf, thatās where that thing ends I reckon.
Thatās crazy, isnāt it.
Well we just donāt have contests in bigger waves. People arenāt out filming, so you donāt see much footage of kneeboarding, so when people see us surf, they just see us at contests, so they just go āthese guys areā ā¦Ā thereās heaps of footage of me online at Pipe - itās only 4ft, itās not big.
So. whatās big? There are waves around here that get up to like twenty feet. Thatās huge.
Iām not surfing that! Thatās big. I think thereās calling someone a small wave guy and calling someone a big wave guy, Iām neither of those ā Iām just a guy! Iām happy at 6 to 8 feet, unless itās heaving on dry rock, but if itās safe like that was, itās good. But Iām not kneeboarding waves over ten foot, itās just too bouncy on the knees. Iāve had some days out around here when itās been ten foot and Iām just bouncing! Itās gotta be super clean or you just bounce off. And that���s only fun for people watching from the rocks.Ā
Given the logistical hurdles - access to a quality surf break at the right time of year, an adequate waiting period, the availability of qualified judges, (including enough to run a workable priority system), internet access, video cameras and operators for a live feed, commentators, food trucks, merchandise, PAs, press and promotion - do you think it will be possible to produce a contest of this quality in future? Will it happen again at J-Bay?Ā
There was talk of it, but I think we only got to have it (at J-Bay) this year because they didnāt run the WSL contest there. It was the best winter theyāve had in 60 years. Iāve never seen so many teeth at a kneeboard contest, ever. Everyone was smiling. Even the sun came out.Ā
Maybe 2024 at J-Bay will forever stand alone as the year it all came together. Whatever happens from now on, one thing is certain: every World Title contest is going to be judged by a new standard, and that goes for the surfing too. Who are the next generation moving into the top ranks?
Owen Fairweather, Liam Taurens and Tom Novakov, although Tom is hardly a newcomer. Tom looked like the one to beat. On a righthand point like that ⦠I was quite impressed with him, he came out at Supers one day and he was killing it - good style, good bloke in the water too, not all frantic and carrying on upsetting people, he just cruises. Owenās the one though, heās just 18. Heās the next big thing for sure. I donāt think youād find anyone whoād argue with that.
So the NSW south coastās long-standing dominance of kneeboarding might be coming to an end?Ā
Itās hard to say. Owenās just one guy, but there seem to be quite a few kneeloes in Victoria, just underground dudes jumping out when thereās a swell. You always see someone out at Bells and Winkipop when you see video of the big swells.Ā
When we look at kneeboardingās future we tend to despair at the lack of new young blood adopting the low centre of gravity approach. Whatās your take on it?
Theres not a heap around, but weāre still ticking over, arenāt we? I donāt think itās as big an issue as everyone carries on about. A lot of guys start kneeboarding when theyāre 30, 35, for one reason or another, probably injury, ha ha! I think for kids, itās not cool. When youāre a kid, you just want to be cool, everyoneās just doing what their mates are doing, no-one wants to stand out.
Your two boys are pretty keen and competent surfers, but they stand up, right?
They kneel on their surfboards all the time. They might stand up on 5 or 10 waves, then theyāll kneel on a couple - they love it. I probably stand up 50% of the time, I reckon, so they see that Iām not just a kneeboarder, I can stand up too, and they probably think, āOh, maybe I can do both.ā I surfed bodyboards till I was about 17, and then slowly moved over to fulltime kneeling. Iāve always stood up on the kneeboard, but now Iāve got a couple of surfboards that Iāll take out quite regularly ⦠on smaller days. If itās good, Iām on the kneeboard.
Which makes you a bit weird, but a World Champion. A weird World Champion.
Yeah, Iām happy to be weird, but I donāt like that world champion thing. THATāS weird, I reckon, that we have a world champion. I dunno. People congratulate me on winning this, but ā¦Ā itās a funny one. I went in a contest. Itās not like a tour. The stand-up guys have their tour, we have just one event. I just won a contest and suddenly Iām world champion. Iām not the best kneeboarder in the world, Simon Farrer is. Someone will say āChayne won the world title, heās the best kneelo in the worldā and Iāll say āNo Iām not. I won a contestā. Thats what Iām trying to get at. I donāt think Iām the best kneeboarder in the world.
Will Simon always be the best in your opinion?
Yeah. Heās the one I most looked up to in the water as a kid, heās still the one I look up to in the surf now, probably. He doesnāt look like heās slowing down either.
It makes a world of difference to have a competition with good waves where you can see the best surfers at the peak of their ability. The best surfing in the world: thatās what you want to see in the World Championship. That has to be good for the sport. Do you think of it as a sport like that, or is it just a thing that you do?
It's a thing I like to do ⦠but if itās competition, I guess it is a sport.Ā If I were to grab my gear now and go for a surf, I wouldnāt consider it going to play sport. Iām just going and doing what I enjoy doing, but then as soon as you put a rash vest on and you have judges and what not ⦠itās a sport.
You were saying before that Albertās the ultimate strategic surfer - the heat IQ thing - yet here youāve come ahead of him with your approach, which is completely different. Not just your style, but your contest strategy. You have any thoughts on that?
I think the main difference between Albert and me is that Iām big on wave choice. Iām big on getting the best two waves in the heat whereas Albert will just catch whatever comes his way and rip the shit out of it. My strategy is to wait, get the best two waves in the heat and that allows me to surf them better because theyāre better waves.
When youāre free surfing is he the same?
Mm-hmm A wave will be coming, and heāll go āAre you going this, its your turn?ā and Iāll go āIām not going that, itās shitā. And heāll turn round and get it and it might be shit but heāll make it look good anyway. When we surf together, Iāll probably catch half the waves that heāll catch, cos Iām waiting for the good ones, Albert spends a lot of time catching shitty ones. Itās the same in a heat.
So J-Bay really worked to your advantage because it let your style come to the fore. Just the way you time your turns and flow through critical positions. Obviously, style is just one element in the judging criteria, but your approach - concentrating on just riding the wave, thatās who you are as a surfer and it really worked for you in that contest.
I think when it comes to a good wave it is a lot about style. It's definitely the best win of my life, for sure, but by a long shot. All things considered, the fact that it was probably the greatest contest weāve had since Iāve been doing it, with the organisation, the live feed, the jetskis, the judges, the priority judges, just everything. That contest had everything, and it had good waves as well. All the guys were there.
And to come out on top, it must fill your heart with pride. Your cup must be runnething over.
Yeah, 100%. And again, it fills my heart with pride and I hope it fills my kids hearts with pride. My youngest just had to do a speech yesterday. They had to choose a country to go to, and he chose South Africa. Never been there, never talked about going there, but he said āDad just won a comp in South Africaā in his speech, so thatās pretty cool. I reckon if they ran another one there in 4 yearsā time theyād be coming with me.

It may not be there, it might be ⦠I just hope they can continue with the venue choice, that they pick the right places.
Yeah, thatās probably the number one most important thing. If you get the right venue the rest of it just comes. The people will come! Like I said, me and Simon particularly werenāt going to go, but ⦠it was at Jeffreys Bay, so we went.
Rob Harwood Legless.tv
Pics: Steen Barnes @16images
#jbay#steen barnes#chayne simpson#albert munoz#rob harwood#leglesstv#kneeboardsurfing#worldkneeboardtitles2024#worldchampion2024#parkeskneeboards
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A TALE OF TWO BOARDS AND ONE WAVE
This is not a design article or surf trip story, but rather a combination of words that came to me after a recent trip overseas.
After 6 weeks of traveling throughout Europe and no surfing apart from a few 6ā body surfing waves in the Mediterranean Sea off Italy, we arrived in Bali. I didnāt have any boards with me, but I had an old favorite stashed at my good friend, Captain Peter Fletcherās house near Canggu.
Peter passed away nearly a year to the day that Karen and I arrived in Bali. His wife, Lia, graciously let me get my old board and also one that I had shaped for Peter a couple of years ago.
Packing up the boards to go to G-Land, it really hit me how lucky we are to be able to still go surfing even as getting older limits our options and the surf is getting more crowded all the time. Peter and I had made tentative plans last year to meet up in G-Land late season last year, but his sudden illness and passing put an end to that.
As it was, Peterās board was the exact same dimensions as mine but a completely different shape and volume. Mine was a 6ft, 4 fin swallow fish tail and basically the same board that I have been taking to G-Land and Indo for years - tried and proven. Peterās was a 6ft tri-fin arrow pin tail but more voluminous even though the same length, width, and thickness.
Anyway, arriving in G-Land after 6 weeks of no surfing and enjoying the food and drink of Europe, the waves were 6 to 8ft and pretty good. I surfed my trusty fishtail the first day and felt back at home on it, even though pretty unfit surfways.
The next day started off a bit smaller, so I took the pintail out to the top of the reef where the waves had more face and walls so as to get a feel for it. I could tell it had too much foam for me, but it did catch waves well, and I managed to jag a few nice long steep waves but not barrels. As the morning wore on, the swell came up, and after getting a long wave to the bottom end of the reef, I decided to sit with the crowd and try to get a real G-Land barrel.
I'm not particularly spiritual, but after waiting for a good hour, it seemed like I got a message to slowly drift out and sit next to a boil that started to appear just as the tide was dropping. After sitting there for about 15 minutes and simply enjoying the ambience of looking back to the jungle with the sun shining, wind blowing offshore, and swells rolling, I felt in a real happy place. Especially when there was no one sitting anywhere near me, and I caught a glimpse of what looked like the biggest set of the day on the way.
All it took was to sit tight and wait for it ā a big perfect set wave aimed straight for me. Everyone else was either too deep inside or too far away to get out to me. The accompanying video shows what happened, and this is where the "One Wave, Two Boards" headline is associated. Peteās board was so different from mine, but it still handled the wave no problem, except for when my knee slipped off halfway through the ride. Probably because of the extra volume and different fin location and set-up, I was not quite at home on the board but trusted it to make it to the other end. As can be seen, it was a bit of a rodeo ride!
As I turned off the wave, I again thought how lucky I was to be surfing and how we should not dwell on the negatives of crowded surf spots, onshore, wrong tides, flat spells, etc., but rather be appreciative of the gift that surfing is.
In my head, I said, "Thanks, Captain Pete," for the wave as I reckon it was him who guided me into it. And I dedicated the buzz I got from that ride to him.
RIP old friend Captain Peter - I'm sure you are sailing fair seas somewhere.
Words & Surfing: David Parkes


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Everybody loves Fridays.
Friday morning. It was flat yesterday but the forecast says swell is on the way. The windās offshore - I can hear the occasional gust howling outside, but Iām stuck at the office until 3 in the afternoon. On the plus side, sunsetās not till 7 pm and I don't have to pick the kids up from school, so I have plenty of time for an afternoon surf. Nice.
Ā Through the day I check the buoys every hour, and it's picking up fast. There will be waves, but where should I go? With the Ā building swell the beach break could be maxing out, but will it be big enough for the point? At three oāclock I decide on the half hour drive to the beach break, but when I get there, of course it's maxing out, damn it! Tideās way too low. Should have known - high isnāt until just after 8. What to do? Going back to the point will cost too much time ⦠but ⦠the tide seems to be filling in fast, maybe more water will help things clean up here.
Ā I sit in the car watching, feeling frustrated, a little anxious. Itās the classic waiting game. A few surfers come and go, nobody stays. A friend parks alongside and we talk from car to car. āWhat are you up to mate?āĀ
āI'm hoping that right-hander will turn on just before dark.ā
āOK, good luck.ā He smiles and drives away.Ā
I stay.
The clock is ticking. It's 5:15 and I just see white water where there should be waves. Damn it, timeās running out. I start thinking Iāve Ā blown it but then ⦠a middle sized wave just looked good. Might as well give it a go, I think, Iāve nothing better to do. I pull out my 3/2, slip into it and start walking slowly down the cliff. I'm definitely not in a rush.
Ā Once in the water, I start duckdiving. You know the drill, 1,2,3,4,5 ... eventually I make it out. I know the lineup and where to sit. Itās a while before my first wave, and itās nothing too exciting, but I watch a good one on the way back out. I wait some more, a big set breaks outside but the foam almost disappears before getting to me. I wait a little more, and then a really good looking one starts coming my way. I drop in, almost get barreled and pull out in time to see another good one go unridden. The froth starts building inside me.
Ā Soon, it stops breaking on the outside and everything falls into place. A couple more guys get in the water just before dark.Ā
āIt's good hey, looks incredible from the car park!āĀ
I nod, with a big grin on my face. We trade waves until itās too dark to see. Victory!
Ā To make things even Ā better, that night Iām sipping a beer at home when my phone beeps. Itās a message from Irene, a local photographer. āHey, I have some photos of you from today.ā
āHuh, really? Cool, thanks!!ā
Chus (JesĆŗs Fiochi Alonso)
(Edited by Rob Harwood, Pics by Irene)
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THE DARK DAYS BACKā 2021
Ā I have been struggling with how to start this piece. I guess I should tell you a little about myself.
What I do for a living is not who I am, yeah, I get to blow shit up and its super fun but itās not what defines me.
I have been a water baby all my life from growing up on the beach to commercial diver.
The ocean or the oceanās rhythm ebbs and flows within me.
Surfing has been the biggest part of my life for longer than I care to remember. For sure I have been out the water for extended periods before while working on projects overseas. Always with the knowledge that I will be getting wet again, sometime soon. I have never before been concerned that surfing will not be an option. I have always just figured I would surf till the day I die.
Ā October 2019 we were still basking in the glory of a once in a lifetime trip to the Ments. 10 Kneelos on a boat sailing around the Mentawaiās. Absolutely what dreams are made of. Red, Giggs, Lester, Larry, Craig, Steve, Johan, Andrew and myself. Jason the skipper of Switchfoot made it 10 chargers in total.
We had also had a run of solid swell at the local, which for me was all time as my new Kneeon that Nick had shaped for me had arrived. Nick and I had chatted over the phone, had a few video calls and bam!! this magic carpet arrives. Oh my sack, I have never been happier with a stick. My surfing went up in leaps and bounds. Never been happier in my life.
Ā Around this time, I started to get pains in my left hip which radiated down the leg. Initially it wasnāt too bad but it got progressively worse. It got to a stage where I literally couldnāt walk anymore. Thinking itās got to be the hip, off I went to the hip specialist. Had some photos taken of the hip, back to the clever guyās office and this is where things started to go south.
Mate, as hips go, yours look beautiful but I recommend you go see a neurosurgeon.
Your spine doesnāt look good at all.
You can imagine, Iām thinking āwhat the fuck, are you sure youāre looking at the right X-rays.ā
So, at least by this time I was on crutches to help me get around and waddled off to see Dave. Dave is a neurosurgeon that had done some work on my spine before.
Same sort of story, pain in my shoulder, radiating down my right arm.
True as nuts, I had gone to the shoulder clever guy who had told me exactly what the hip guy had just told me. Anyway, a long story short, Dave did a decompression on the C7 and T1 vertebrae.
I was booked on a boat trip to the Maldives with my good mate Guy. He is a stand up but I love him anyway. I manage to get on the plane without really having tested the neck or having had time for rehab of any sorts. Probably not my brightest move. We had solid swell the whole trip, but truth be told, I was in constant pain.
Once back in SA, I was off to see Dave again. X-rays and CT scans followed, and Dave said unfortunately we going to have to fuse the C7 and T1 but we will go in through the front this time.
Absolutely no problems whatsoever and I was back in the water 3 months later.
Dave, howzit Iām back. More scans and X-rays (starting to know everyone by their first names by now) followed. Yip, pretty much the same story, crumbling, degeneration of the spine.
I was booked in for a decompression on the L4 and L5. The procedure was pretty standard and uneventful. Unfortunately, just as with the neck, the decompression was not successful. A week later, I was booked in for a multistage fusion, L4, L5 and S1.
So, they going to open me up again along the same incision line, not feeling great about that but hey, there are worse things in life. Waking up from this op was a rude awakening. Fuck me this shit hurts. Trying to move was pretty tender for sure. Anyhow the drugs did their thing and a few days later I was able to get out of bed and lose the dreaded catheter. Walking was fair interesting to say the least, I had to laugh at myself as I looked like a mummy.
Little shuffles with my hands out front but hey, I was mobile. The day they let me out rolled around. Crap balls I felt like shit and was fair tender. It felt like someone was taking a mallet to my head.
I remember battling to get into the wheelchair to get me to the car. The nausea was just incredible, I thought I was going to throw up all over the place. Between the porter and Jo (my wife) they managed to get me into the car.
The ride home is not too far but I was deteriorating at a rapid rate of knots. Got home, Jo managed to get me onto her āthroneā where I just passed out.
Through the rest of the day and night I remember fleeting moments of being awake. Couldnāt move, didnāt know what was going on. Basically, a vegetable on the couch.
The next morning Jo realized that this wasnāt good. Somehow or other she managed to bundle me into the car. I have a memory of the gardener holding the car door open with a look of concern on his face. The next thing I was on a gurney at the hospital with Debbie staring at me. Debbie is Joās business partner and one of my best friends.
Tests and more tests.
Somehow or other I had picked up Bacterial Meningitis.
Jo had literally just saved my life. A few hours later and it wouldnāt have turned out well.
Some serious antibiotics and medication I canāt even pronounce later, my infection levels started coming down, but the headaches wouldnāt go away. Back into the noisy tube for some more scans. Was good to see all the guys and gals in radiology again.
Crap balls I had a rupture in the thecal sac. Basically, itās a sac that runs up your spine and over the brain. The sac contains cerebrospinal fluid. When leaking the sac ācollapsesā on the brain causing insane headaches, headaches that are just next level. Think migraine on steroids.
Back into theatre to patch up the leak.
Once again, they opened me up on the same incision. Success at last, once again freedom day arrived and was bundled into the wheelchair again and back into the car.
Was great to be home with the animals for sure. Jo had made a bed for me in the lounge as walking at this point just really wasnāt an option. To say I was tender would be a bit of an understatement.
A day later, I got this incredible pain down my left leg. Kinda like being hit with a cattle prodder. I remember screaming as the first one hit. Absolute agony, pain like I had never felt. It would last for about 30 seconds but in that time, I couldnāt move a finger for fear of escalating the pain. I just screamed and screamed. Over the next two days, it got worse and more frequent.
This was an incredible low point. I remember crying like a baby. I was emotionally drained by this time. I remember thinking I just want to be normal again. Remember, I can hardly walk, canāt even get down on the toilet to take a dump. I hadnāt had a shit for as long as I can remember.
My wife was washing me and dressing me. It was taking its toll.
This carried on for two days until it got to a point where I just couldnāt move.
An ambulance and crew had to come and peel me off the couch eventually. They dosed me up, got a stretcher underneath me and carried me out to the ambulance.
Jesus, what the fuck!! But hey, could be worseā¦right?
Back to my favorite people with the noisy machine. Hi everyone, true as nuts Iām back. Another scan revealed that the crushed bone material that they place between your vertebrae was leaking out and catching the nerve going down my leg.
Another twirl in theatre to clean up the debris, by this time the clock on the wall and I were good friends. I used to watch the seconds tick by as the anesthetic started kicking in. I woke up from here being wheeled into high care. Now I have to tell you this was by far my worst experience.
The following morning two nurses came to wash me. I was in absolute agony and they kept moving me and turning me. I was screaming in absolute agony, but they wouldnāt stop and no-one came to help me. To this day I canāt understand it.
Couldnāt wait to get out of there and back on to a ward. Or so I thoughtā¦
From there they wheeled me into an isolation ward. Apparently, I had picked up the dreaded hospital Super bug. My infection count was in the 400ās (8 being normal) and to make matters worse, the headaches were back. I had sprung another fucking leak in my Thecal sack. FUCK!!!
Back to my old friend on the wall with the ticking second hand. Again, opening me up on the same line. This time I wasnāt friends with the clock on the wall.
Dave patched me up as best they could.
What the actualā¦
My new home turned out to be a glass box in the ICU. In isolation in intensive care. Jesus, this isnāt good.
Nurse and doctors were putting gear on to come into the glass box. āWhatās going on???ā
Machines were everywhere beeping and hissing. āFuck me, this isnāt good.ā
Waking up at 4am with people sticking needles into you to draw blood loses its shine after a while. I think all I ate for the two weeks was watermelon in the morning that Debbie used to bring me with a cup of coffee. When I say bring, I really mean bribe the porter.
Ā Now you must remember I have basically been bedridden for 6 weeks and not had an appetite at all.
I could see the concern on peoples face when they came to visit, as much as they tried to hide it, it was there.
Nights were the worst and the tears used to flow. So as not to let the pressure in the Thecal sac become too great, they drained it every few hours. This as Iāve said to you before brings on insane headaches.
Morphine and I were no longer friends. It made me incredibly sad and depressed.
I came off the morphine by choice and gritted the teeth. Absolutely worth the pain.
Ā Lester and Marco organized a live feed for me for the warmup session before the SA Kneeboarding Champs. What legends.
Once again, I cried like a baby, but these were tears of joy. It was so good to watch my mates surfing and everyone saying āhiā on the feed made me feel like a million bucks. The brotherhood is strong here in Cape Town. Love these boys.
Ā At this point I was literally skin and bone, but my infection levels were coming down and I had managed to get out of bed and make the few steps to the toilet. The sun was definitely coming up for me. For the first time in a long time, I thought I was going to make it.
Fuck, the thought of dying in that glass box haunted me every night there.
Freedom day was like no other. Getting out of there into the sunshine and colors and breeze was a sensory overload, but hey, I was out and feeling goodā¦ish.
Ā My mates, Debbie and Sian had kept me going. Sian is my office manager and best friend.
She tried to feed me all the way through to no avail, true as nuts she used to arrive with bags of food.
Ā God it was good to be home.
Reality starts to kick in pretty quickly. Fuck me am I ever going to be able to surf again, am I ever going to be able to sit on the toilet again (itās the little things hahahaā¦)
Time to reset the mind from āfuck me, I donāt want to die in here to I need to get in the water againā.
Ā Enter the amazing Lara, the physio that is a gift from the angels. I remember that late December day shuffling and shaking my way into her office. By this time, all my muscles had wasted away and just holding my frame up was as much as I could muster. I could do about 2 minutes before all my muscles started shaking from fatigue and I was still shuffling like a mummy.
The question Lara asked me off the bat was āwhat do you want to get out of this.ā
āJust get me back in the water please,ā was my response.
At this point it was a fantasy I had to believe in, physically I was a mess, but I think mentally I was scarred and the mental trauma was real. But fuck it, if I could survive that, I can achieve anything. The will to get back in the water was incredible and became all consuming.
Ā Walking around the house became my exercise routine initially and braai tongs my best friend (in case I dropped stuff as bending was not an option). I had to hold on to everything at first as I walked along, eventually I could skip the kitchen counter on the way to the TV room and skip the chairs on the way to my room, and so it went on until I could just about walk the whole house without holding or resting.
Ā Lara had given me gentle low impact stuff to do, just to tone the muscles and stretches to get some life back in the buggers. Everything hurt. This was a continuous process that I did all day every day for a few weeks. I was starting to feel more stable on my feet which did wonders for my mental wellbeing. Progress was gradual but I started noticing results which made me feel like a million dollars.
Ā Getting behind the wheel again was a massive boost for me. My buddy Kante who is a running coach, walked with me from my local to St James, what a joy being next to the ocean again, mind surfing every bump that came through. I steadily built this up over time. Eventually I could make it to Muizenberg and back (5 kms). Everything ached at this point and the thought of shortening every walk was ever present. 4am wake ups every day can be a challenge and for sure there were mornings I couldnāt bear the thought of getting up. Sore back, sore hips, itās dark and itās cold, fuck this shit. On the odd occasion that I didnāt manage to get going, that feeling of worthlessness would set in. What the fuck is wrong with you, donāt you want to get back in the water? Thatās not a cool feeling. I have probably missed 3 days in the six months I have been rehabbing. A 45-minute 5km walk followed by an hour of rehab back at home. I canāt begin to count the many lonely hours I have spent in the dark, walking and processing thoughts and priorities.
Ā My weekly visits to Lara are always a highlight. My flexibility is measured as well as my strength. Some weeks just like some days are better than others. Lately there are a few moments of some days that I am totally pain free. These can quickly be followed by days and moments of crappy pain, but I will take the good ones for sure. Setbacks some and itās natural to be bummed by them. Thinking āend goalā always helps. Watching Billy Kemperās story after that crazy injury in Morocco has inspired me tremendously and there is a kinship that forms in adversity.
To keep the spirits up, I have ordered me a new board from Nick (Kneeon) which should arrive any day.
Jedd has also shaped me a 5ā4 twinny that looks more like something that should be flying in space rather than the water. Canāt wait to get these beauties wet.
Ā The daily grind continues relentlessly and itās not always easy to appreciate the reasons for the dark hours one spends with oneself on the rehab trail. I want the prize now. Sheesh, itās a constant battle upstairs. Hereās the weird thing, the closer I get to the end of April (paddle out dayā¦hopefully), the more fearful I become. Will I be able to, and can I still?
All this and more just keeps swimming in the head and thereās the self-doubt.
Fuck itās terrifying.
I have gone over it a million times in my head, do I just paddle out at a gentle beach break and see how it goes. Na, that scares me more. Soft waves are hard work and the amount of torque on the spine terrifies me. What if the nuts and bolts pop out?
There is no way in hell I am going back to that building with the big red cross on it. This drives me harder for sure back on the road, back to the floor and core exercises.
Lara assures me the hyperextension of the back I have obtained through this time will definitely be fine for paddling.
The torque and pressure on the lower back coming off the bottom and turning off the top, is what scares the crap out of me. The reef and I are intimate, god knows I have bounced and scraped along her so many times. I have certainly paid my dues. Ā
Wiping out doesnāt scare me, itās that word again āTORQUEā.
Perhaps I will just go straight on the first few. That in itself presents a bit of a problem at the local, but thatās where my head is.
I know you will all understand this, āwhat if a section just presents itself, just asking to be slappedā.
It is so ingrained in each and every one of us, that muscle memory just takes over. Going to have to be ever vigilant.
I have swum out to the peak just to be out there with the guys. The first time was not great. It took me so long just to get to the water. Jumping off the railway line so not an option. Doing the walk around and trying to get over the rocks was tricky to say the least.
Feeling the water over my feet was an absolute delight, but crap balls, had the water got colder since the last time? As soon as I laid in the water, it dawned on me that this is going to be quite the journey.
I couldnāt swim on my stomach as the pain was intense, but fuck it, I was going out. I swam on my side and back. Eventually I made it, the guys cheered and whooped, I felt like I had just won the lottery.
It was so good to be part of the conversation out there again, it was so good to hear how stoked the guys were for me, life was good.
I fed off this like I had been starved of life for ages.
Ā Today being the Saturday before the Wednesday that I go back to Dave (the surgeon), brings turmoil to my emotions.
Iām not sure what I am scared of more, being told you arenāt ready or yeah, go get in the water. I am so scared of not surfing to my full potential again. Every day closer brings more panic. I just want it to be over now.
Ā Wednesday morning dawned (but not really), up at 4am and back on the road. Usually, I am thinking about the workday ahead but this morning not so much.
My head is swimming with what ifs. What if there is still something wrong, what if I canāt anymore, what if, what ifā¦
On the drive to see Dave, the surgeon, my heart is beating at a million beats/minute.
Itās good to see Dave again in a weird type of way, he really is a very cool guy.
Anyhow, he sends me off for some more pictures of the spine. Gotta say I was staring at the radiologist for some clues, but nothing.
The stress is killing me, and I feel like my heart is going to jump out of my chest.
So, back up to Dave with the thumping heart, I can hear it in my ears.
It all looks brilliant mate. What⦠I could not believe what I was hearing. He took me through the X-rays explaining what he was looking for and everything was just right.
Thereās no use putting off the inevitable he says to me, go get in the waterā¦but donāt be stupid. I wanted to scream it to the world!
Obviously, the doubts started kicking in hard right about now, but hey, I had gotten the green light.
Thursday morning I was off to Lara for physio. I couldnāt wait to tell her the good news. The muscles on the left side of my back had been in spasm for two weeks now, so as thrilled as she was, there was the donāt be stupid again.
I had coached myself in my mind for months now, high tide, small waves and just go straightā¦right.
Ā Friday morning and the reports started coming in. Thereās a bit of a wave at the local.
āItās go time.ā With my heart in my mouth, I started packing the car.
Sweet Lord, it had been a while, I had to keep double checking I had everything packed.
I donāt think I noticed any other cars on the way, I was mind surfing all the way through to the local.
I got there a few hours before the high just to get my head straight and check the lineup.
There were some chunky 4 footers coming through, but I wanted some more water on the rock. I watched my mate Dave paddle out and get some screamers.
Steve finally arrived, āI thought you would be in your suit alreadyā he says.
This is it, heart in the throat again, off we went.
Sheesh it was so good to feel the waves crashing over my feet and legs again.
Jumped on my board and started paddling.
Woooohoooo absolutely no pain. Got out to the takeoff zone and everyone was cheering and welcoming me back. How humbling.
Mickey Duffus, a local big wave legend was out. Everybody back off he bellowed, this man hasnāt surfed for 6 months.
For some reason, this made me relax and just enjoy the moment.
Something started standing up out the back, Steve was sitting in the channel waiting for me to have my first ride.
āYou going Mick?ā I heard someone ask.
Yip I heard coming out my mouth, I spun and went.
Muscle memory and familiarity with the wave kicked in. I made the dropā¦Fuck I couldnāt believe it came around the section and just flopped off my board.
Steve and Dave had the biggest smile on their faces. The emotion of the occasion just swept over me like a wave, and the tears started flowing. All I kept thinking about was lying in ICU thinking fuck, I donāt want to die in here to taking off on the first wave.
Well, for the rest of the session, I absolutely sent it, trying to take off as deep as possible on the gnarliest set waves. All the coaching I had done in my head for the last few months went straight out the window.
In for a penny, in for a pound.
Ā Damn, I felt so alive, without a doubt, the happiest man on the planet. When I got back to the car park, all of the Kneelo crew were in the car park and boy were they happy for me.
Sean Thompson was there too, shooting my waves and recording the moment.
How blessed am I. Nothing was getting the smile off my face.
Ā When I lay in bed that night, I kept thinking of the months of rehab and hard work I had gone through. The many lonely dark hours of the mornings, but I had done it.
Ā The next morning, we were on it at first light with the Westside boys coming through as well. The Kneelo brotherhood in Cape Town is tight. I am so humbled by all the good wishes and thoughts from everyone.
Just want to mention Lester, who kept me sane in the last two months. We chatted every day for the last while, sometimes a few times in a day. He kept me motivated and hungry and for this I will be forever grateful.
There are so many people to thank for getting me through this period. I think you know who you are, and I will get to everyone individually.
Itās good to get wet again.
I started writing this piece to help anyone in similar circumstances.
Stick with your plan and give it everything no matter how hopeless your situation may seem.
At the end of the day this was such a therapeutic exercise for me. Something I didnāt expect.
The trauma was and is real and this has certainly helped me face it and deal with it.
If this helps even one person get over and through a rough period of hopelessness, its job done.
Mickey Kirsten
Legless Contributor
SA Kneelos
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A few quick phone calls for a 1 metre swell @ 10 seconds.Ā
Its mid week, we all have the same idea.Ā
We shuffle work, family etc in hope of scoring some clean southern swell energy with a favourable wind.Chayne Simpson, Albert Munoz, David Parkes, myself and we bump into Simon Farrer on the South Coast.It was the perfect mental health day.
This is a legless session.
Steeno
#steen barnes#steen#albert munoz#chayne simpson#david parkes#simon farrer#leglesstv#16images#kneeboardsurfing#bendalong#parkes kneeboards
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Legless Sessions
Lake Parade
Young DY point ripper Charles Mowbray dropped into our Wollongong stomping grouds this week to share some waves with our current World Champion Chayne Simpson and two x World Champ Albert Munoz.
On hand to capture some footage and to spread the legless love was non other than legendary Terry Day.
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CRYSTAL VORTEX LIQUID CORTEX from ZION WETSUITS on Vimeo.
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@charles_mowbray taking kneeriding to the next generation #leglesstv #kneeboardsurfing š· Harrison Morse-Evans (at Red Sands, Shell Harbour) https://www.instagram.com/p/CAy1ufrHFl-/?igshid=1ep3ktteurhx
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The Dream Run: Greg Holzmanās Island Life
Part 2.
If you were born before the last twenty years of the 20th century youāre able to grasp how much new technology and cheap air travel have changed the world and the way we live in it: profound changes that have touched every aspect of our lives. Surfing has always required commitment to the pursuit of good waves, but the nature and depth of that commitment has morphed and grown. Greg joked with us about one of the photos he sent us - him perfectly framed in the spiralling mouth of a smooth and luminous barrel - saying it was ānothing money canāt buyā. Heās right of course, but moneyās only part of it ā to experience the kind of nirvana we glimpse in shots like that requires planning, preparation of equipment, logistics, lots of water-time and perhaps more than anything, fitness. Add to this the fact that as a self-employed fisherman, when Gregās not working, heās not earning. Sponsors? Well, he gets a few boards from Buddy McCray. His logistical team is a loose network of local contacts heās developed to facilitate the various resources and services inevitably required at short notice in out of the way places. Gregās strike missions are conceived, organised, funded and executed autonomously: itās all his own experience, knowledge, time and money. There are few among us able to shut up shop and disappear, possibly for months at a time, living self-sufficiently on the road, chasing the chance of finding a particular spot firing for a limited time. You may plan for a road trip or a boat trip, but Gregās is commitment on a whole other level. Access to technology is one thing, knowing how to put it to best use is a skill acquired over time. Gregās background in fishing has been a huge help in interpreting long-range weather forecasts, weather maps, charts of out of the way places: all key factors in his ability to score quality waves. Help and advice from fellow travellers, including a smattering of kneeboard surfers spread around the globe. Behind all this though, remain two things. One is what started it all going more than half a lifetime ago in San Diego: an irrepressible drive to ride big, challenging, high quality waves. The other is what drove Greg to leave Oahu for the outer islands in the late 70ās: the drive to explore the outermost limits of his ability on his own, away from the crowd. While there are plenty of pro and semi-pro freesurfing footboarders criss-crossing the globe at any given time, each with a Youtube channel and an Instagram account, itās kind of nice to know that kneeboard surfing has Greg Holzman out there pushing the limits of whatās been done and pushing the rest of us to step up our game and look beyond our comfort zone.
Greg views his big wave pursuits as āstrike missionsā. Track a swell, find a spot, check wind and tide permutations, airlines, local travel, accommodation, be ready to go at the drop of a hat, and be prepared to surf at 100% when you get there. Heās been doing this for about 40 years, perhaps with increasing sophistication and expertise, but thatās the only change. We received an email just after Christmas.
Ā āSo for fear of more words Iāll give you the story of my first solo big wave venture. It was at Pipeline. 1978. It was a giant West swell. Surf reports werenāt accurate back then but looking out I could see it was nice East winds in Kailua and I knew a big West swell was pumping. I was all about Pipeline at the end of my Oahu period so I felt very comfortable out there.Ā Ā
I surfed with the heavies of the day, so I was pushing my limits. Driving up Kam Highway, the hour it took really got the heart pumping, especially when I hit Indicators reef and saw how big it was. More often than not, the swell was huge instead of too small, but in the 70ās no-one knew how big till you got there. When I got to Ehukai Beach Park I saw no-one out, perfect offshores and third reef sets at 20ft Hawaiian. Some amazing waves but I wasnāt sure I was ready for that!
Jack Lindholm was headed out on his bodyboard. I watched him catch a few incredible rides that got me stoked. The Second reef was capping hard and seemed like easy take-offs, but that was Jack on a bodyboard and he could take off later than anyone at the time.
I remember he didnāt make it out of a tube on one and came up the beach with his board almost torn in half. Ā I didnāt know him but commented on his board. He said he was going to change boards and go back out so I told him I would get ready and meet him out there. As I walked down to the beach I saw Sam Hawk paddle out, headed to the peaks at outside Log Cabins. I never saw Sammy again. Obviously, he lived, but that was all I saw of him as it was soon after this that I moved to Kauai.Ā Ā
Anyway, I paddled out. It wasnāt that hard; in fact it was really easy with the channel and a big West swell. Everyone was at Waimea Bay - for good reason. When I got out, I remember seeing the sets on the outer reefs break a minute or two before they hit us. What I remember most was how hard it was to catch those monsters on my 5ā2ā twin fin fish. The waves had a deep-water slope to them, and you had to take off as the wave was breaking. Jack had it down and before too long he was gone. I never saw Jack again either. Ā So here I am and all Iām seeing is giant lines - just like the movies - and Iām getting further and further from shore. Iām thinking that I may need to get rescued and wondering if anyoneās watching in the lifeguard tower. I thought how embarrassing that would be and decided I needed to move inside and catch one underneath or I was not going to get in. Paddling in was a death sentence and it was obviously on the rise, so in between sets I paddled inside. Ā When a set approached EVERYTHING in me said āmove outside NOWā, but I waited. I thought if I didnāt catch that first one I was getting to that beach dead or alive. Ā Luckily, I made the right call and that first wave was deep and inside and an easy take-off. Ā In fact, I commented to myself on how easy it was, really. Ā Once it hit that first reef I just sat there in this big easy barrel - no fear anymore - and the wave was just as perfect and easy a wave as I could get. It spit and I glided out onto the shoulder. I looked out thinking āI can do that againā when ⦠the whole channel was closing out. I immediately turned for shore, just in time to see it turn to close-out sets. Ā When I got there I heard the hoots and claps of tourists cheering. I had survived my first solo big wave event. It scared me but I never felt more alive and I never forgot it. Just like many firsts, they are worth remembering.ā
Ā So, fast forward to 2016, with Gregās island life undergoing change, and another dream run about to start. While in Kandui in May that year, Greg picked up a Facebook friend request from Paul Macklin, an Aussie traveller who for years had sent him photos of his surf travels. Paul was then living in Bali. Greg decided he needed to return to G-land, so in July he left for Bobbyās Camp.
Ā Paul met me in the camp. Bobby Radiasa remembered me - it was like I had never left. All the same guys. Many had gone back every year I was gone.Ā Having that family vibe in camp is a very addictive feeling and Facebook has kept us all back in contact. So, 2018 became the thirty-year reunion for me and G-land. I had three trips in 2018 looking for the gold standard G-land of June - July 2016 that was still the three swells of recent memory.Ā I got amazing waves, but that massive perfect Speed Reef (which rarely happens) eluded me. After seeing the photos of those days I swore I was investing in this as a goal: to get it at its best. I didnāt care how many trips it would take.
Ā After G-land in July 2017,Ā I was off to South Africa: from Bali to J-bay.Ā I worried about the cold, coming straight from the tropics, and I did freeze, but I learned a few tricks there as well on staying warm - including a 1mm wetsuit top under my clothes - that let no cold air in on those freezing surf checks!Ā Thatās where I met Gigs and Stevo. I stayed with Mike Ruthnum, who Iām indebted to for introducing me to great people, fellow KB riders, and secret surf spots that I will always remember.Ā J-bay was an eye-opener. Much had changed there.Ā Crowds were always a factor, but the town had a great vibe. The South Africans have all the forecasting at their fingertips now, so they come from around the country for the bigger swells, which I found different than the 80ās. But with that came KB riders. I found a very cool group of fellow riders who were happy, very much a club feeling, and with a wide range of boards ... it was an impressive group. I came home knowing that I would return next season. A month is not enough time in Africa. But as soon as I got home, I saw $500 tickets return to Bali. I knew Gigs was going and Simon Farrer - who I hadnāt seen since he was 18 on my island with Buddy - was meeting Gigs at G-land. Simon was already a phenomenon at 18. Seeing his movies made me want to spend time with these two world champs. So back I went for more.
Ā That took me right into the 2018-19 season with a passion for strike missions. I managed to strike a few Pacific spots early 2019 during Hawaiiās stormy moments. Each time selling more plants and looking: as soon as it was a good moment and I had cash I was going - sometimes with less than 8 hours to pack and be at the airport. I was on call for G-land when I saw a series of swells and good winds lining up. I told myself I wasnāt going to plan in advance for Indo anymore. My goal was one which wouldnāt end till I caught that 2016 Gold standard swell. Lucky for me it came on a day that looked like it wasnāt going to happen. The surf was huge and the direction was good with a high tide, but the wind was light onshore. I was pretty bummed when I saw the rain at 9 am, (not usually a good sign) but it passed quickly. All the guys went in. I knew the winds were changing with that sound the bamboo makes and quickly suited up. I got down to the beach and Donny the photographer said to hop on his bike. Blacky and he were headed out on the boat to take photos. I knew it was good and a heavy paddle out, so off we went. As soon as we neared it, we saw this was no normal day. When you see the photographer and boat driver pounding the boat and cheering like they were you know itās not a normal day. Two guys were out, but they wanted nothing to do with those sets. My heart was pounding hard. I knew this was going to be a test - of all I had learned to stay safe, and the test of my equipment I so badly wanted.
What made it even better was my photographer was right on it with me to document.Ā I paddled out to an empty lineup and two guys who just paddled over the sets. It was destiny, fate, or just plain perseverance.
I learned a lot: about my boards, my goals and how hard it is to drive through those shock waves deep in barrels when itās like that. I could see that what I needed was a board with the fins further back for stability as one bottom turn is all you get and then youāre behind and flying. Some I made, some I should have made, and others were just plain heavy. The crowd eventually showed up and the tide went out. One of the biggest problems with this kind of swell is itās only good at high tide for a maximum of 4 hours. Usually only about 2 to 3 hours at its best.Ā Thatās a lot of investment for such a short window. For me it was worth it. It taught me I could still do it and what my boards needed next mission to maximize my tube time.Ā
Ā Itās obvious that thereās a lot more to surf exploration at this level than meets the eye. A lifetime of preparation and expense may seem a high price to pay for memories - a few photos and stories representing the sole concrete evidence of mere minutes spent riding perfect surf - but to Greg, as for anyone else doing what he does, itās not about money.
Ā Iāve done 12 trips in three years and surfed Hawaii winters every swell I can in between. Iāve gone to 5 destinations and gone back to each - if I can - till I am satisfied Iāve caught it at its best. I feel I have only really achieved that this year (2019) at G land, which is lucky because next year isnāt going to be the year - with the WSL going off there in the middle of the season.
Ā In Hawaii we take surfing very seriously. It has changed from when I started, Then, it was much more about the soul surfer and not publicizing where you went and not photographing your sessions. It wasnāt for money either. Now, everyone thinks they can get a free something if theyāre good. Itās competitive and I try to remain in a collaborative mind-space. I have found itās probably a help that I am a KB rider because weāre always trying to prove we belong in the lineup. At this point I rarely feel I canāt deal with things in a lineup, but often I know the fight isnāt worth the effort. Iāll voluntarily move out of the space as I donāt like catching scraps. If I have no chance for the sets, Iāll remove myself from the situation to save myself from certain mental crisis. Or a yelling match. This happened a few times at Jeffreys this year and in September 2018 at G-land with 80 guys in the water. Everyone - even your friends - are on a different level and chances are youāre not going to like what you see, so Iām out at that point.
Knowing how much effort went into getting himself into the line-up for those sessions, thatās a pretty big statement, one that we might all be wise to keep in mind every time we paddle out.Ā Ā
Words - Rob Harwood -Ā Legless.tv
Photos: Donny Lopez, John Barber & Courtesy of Greg Holzman
#greg holzman#Rob Harwood#legless.tv#kneeboard surfing#kneeboard Hawaii#hawaii#steen#kneelo#gland#donny lopez#john barber#blast kneeboards
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Richard āNatā Palmer #leglesstv #kneeboardsurfing #thelord š· @16images (at Wollongong, New South Wales) https://www.instagram.com/p/CAfPWOFn4py/?igshid=ltnw6x8a5ypr
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Special days @simonsparrowfarrer #leglesstv #kneeboardsurfing š· @16images @hartbruce (at Wollongong, New South Wales) https://www.instagram.com/p/CAYgs5ZntSY/?igshid=1mp543yeqjwar
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@chayne_oin #worldchampion2020 #leglesstv #kneeboardsurfing š· @16images @parkeskneeboards https://www.instagram.com/p/CASYnJ3nVWW/?igshid=zyp9sfcaqic9
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You know that travelling feeling #leglesstv #kneeboardsurfing @chayne_oin #worldchampion2020 š· @16images @parkeskneeboards https://www.instagram.com/p/CAOK5jcngYC/?igshid=trwj9no20tic
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Peter Fairweather in full flight at the current World Kneeboard Titles in Dunedin.
Pics: Brad Colwell - Legless Contributor
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Pretty big: Chayne Simpson, World Champion 2020.
Australia has a newly crowned surfing world champion. On the 9th of March, Chayne Simpson, from Wollongong NSW, beat Californian Sam Coyne to win the World Kneeboard Surfing Championship in convincing fashion. The event went down in Dunedin, New Zealand, organised by the New Zealand Kneeboard Surfing Association. Conditions were varied throughout the event with the final surfed in small waves on a high tide that effectively saw competition reduced to a game of strategy and patience. This is particularly ironic: Chayne made the quarter finals of this event when he first entered in 1999 and has consistently placed high since. Heās been runner up a number of times, but never won. Always the bridesmaid, now at last, the bride.
Chayneās been riding kneeboards since the age of about 15, when he was growing up on the NSW south coast. A mad bodyboarder at the time, he recalls trips after school with his brother Troy, and Mark Slater, whose dad Rob would ferry them around to surf the pick of the local breaks. With a healthy kneelo underground in the area it was inevitable that Chayne would see the possibilities offered by increased speed and turning power: it wasnāt long before Rob Slater had the boys on kneeboards and surfing regular club competitions with the Wollongong Area Kneeboard Association (WAKA).
This is amateur surfing, the kind where people turn up month after month, year after year, because theyāre dedicated to their sport, not because thereās any financial gain down the track. Itās very fertile ground, but kneeboard comps are often more about a chance for the far flung and sometimes isolated kneeboard fraternity to catch up than winning. The bulk of the field tends to be pretty flat, but the top level are as far beyond the ability of the average kneelo as the top 44 footboarders are above the average surfer. At that level, competition can become intense: a World Title is at stake after all.
Chayne lives less than a kilometre from Albert Munoz, a transplant from Puerto Rico now resident in Wollongong, also a two-time kneeboard world champion and one of Chayneās best mates. The two donāt surf together all that much because both have young families and wildly different day jobs (Albert holds a PhD and is a university professor, Chayne is a fireman and a qualified signwriter.) Chayne reckons he has the pick of the surf because his work allows more flexibility to plan sessions around the forecasts, while Albertās job dictates when heās able to surf. Albert can be found at East Corrimal any day there are waves, (outside of office hours), while Chayne tends to travel the South Coast a lot more, hunting quality. When they do surf together, surprisingly, thereās little competition. Said Chayne, We donāt compete at all when weāre free-surfing, at least I donāt. I like watching what heās doing, but that old clichĆ© of trying to do better, you know - heās done a turn, I want to do one better ⦠I think weāre getting a bit old for that.
The two first met at the World Titles on the Sunshine Coast in the early 2000s. Chayne remembers Albert as a really annoying little bastard in the water who just wanted every single wave that came in. Freesurfing he was annoying the hell out of me. I think I had a bit of a go at him, told him he canāt have every wave and to just calm down. He just ignored me and paddled away. After Albert moved to the South Coast and joined the WAKAs, the two ended up mates. Itās a solid friendship thatās endured some 16 years now, with the pair often travelling to competitions together as well as working on Legless.TV.
A very talented waterman, Chayne surfs because he likes doing it. He rides kneeboards because he likes the point of difference it brings to a line up as well as the pure camaraderie that pervades this tiny branch of surfingās family tree[RH1]Ā .
Chaynes relationship with the World Title has been fraught from the start. He remembers being ousted by a ruthless American in the quarter-final in 1999, when the competition was run without a priority system. A wave popped up where Chayne and another competitor were sitting.
He was sitting inside me, so I asked him if he was gonna go, and he said no, Iām not going, you go. I went, and I turned around and he was behind me on the wave. I got an interference. One of the dirtiest tricks youāre ever gonna get, I reckon.
Chayne doesnāt push the contest side of things at all.
No, Iām definitely more into freesurfing, 100%. I could never go in a contest again and Iād be fine. Some people train for it, study opponents and all that sort of thing, yeah: I just go surfing. I also wanted to win this World Title, but ⦠I nearly got knocked out first heat again in this one, it was as close as it gets. I think Iām not that competitive until it gets to the final. Iād rather get knocked out first heat than come second in the final.
Of course in Chayneās case this is no hypothetical supposition.
In previous titles, where Iāve bombed out first heat, I couldnāt have cared less. Iāve just gone āoh well, that was funny.ā But when Iāve worked to get to the final, through the whole contest, and then I donāt win, that actually does crush me a little bit at that point. Kyle Bryant mentored me a little through this contest. He sent me a message that said āDonāt come second, mate, secondās fucked. Youāre better off getting knocked out first heat than you are coming second.ā I reckon heās 100% right.
At the 2009 event, held at Opunake, NZ, Chayne was seeded into round 3 but was knocked out in his first heat. Unfazed, he took off in a campervan with his brother and a mate and a guidebook.
We had a Surfing New Zealand book, no kids, no women. We just travelled around and went surfing. We chased wherever was offshore and had swell, had a few beers every afternoon. Ā Every corner we turned we got pumping waves. We scored everywhere we went. Best surf trip Iāve ever been on. We just got lucky ā unlucky in the contest, lucky in the trip.
Kneeboardingās regularly criticised for the age of the people who do it. With a heyday perceived to be somewhere in the late 70s, kneeboarding has produced several world champions over the age of 40. Past winners have expressed a desire to see the world title go to new, younger surfers, but this is a branch of surfing whose constituency is aging, into which few younger surfers care to venture. The event this year was remarkable in that both finalists were under 40. Chayne is as keen as anyone to see new blood in the sport. Who does he rate?
Well, itās an ageing sport. The talent pool in that younger age range isnāt deep, but there are some guys. Tom Novakov (son of past World Champ Michael Novakov) came through the harder side of the draw and took down a couple of guys people probably wouldnāt have expected him to take down, but he surfed well, he had me on the ropes in the quarters. Thereās a young kid from Dee Why whoās surfing really well at the moment, Charlie Mowbray ā he wasnāt there (at the Worldās), but he surfs really well. He wouldnāt be 20 yet. Owen Fairweather, heās from Victoria. His surfing is so much better than any of us were at his age. I wasnāt even kneeboarding at his age - heās 14, I think. Heās ripping, heās going to be one to watch, for sure. His dad, Pete, has won the Phillip Island comp. In fact, heās the only Vicco to win Phillip Island.
Thatās fine, but is there enough new blood entering the sport for it to continue as a competitive field?
Yeah, thereās enough to keep it going. Thereās not enough for it to reach new heights or anything like that, but theyāre trickling. Thereās probably just as many kneeboarders now as there were when I started out. Ā
So, what was it that drew you in to riding kneeboards in the first place?
When I started, I was riding bodyboards and kneeboarding, but I went full cripple around the time I left school, when I was around 17 or 18. It was just ⦠fun! I kind of liked the fact that it was different. Surfing Pipe all the time, it was just so suited to that, and just doing turns. I was riding dropknee before ā you do a turn and the tail slides out and you go into a spinner. You do a turn on a kneeboard and it just holds the rail, youāre just down low and ⦠youāre carving rather than just sliding.
So, Chayne is a world champ who just wants to go surfing. With Wollongong the long-established centre of Australian kneeboarding, he surfs a lot with Albert, his World Title arch-nemesis. Some 16 years after their first meeting they seem to have worked out how to get through a session by dividing the available waves equably between themselves, but the contrast between freesurfing friendship and cut-throat competition is not lost on Chayne. Their friendship has been forged over years, through long hours at close quarters - travelling to comps, sleeping in cars, hunting waves together. When I pointed out that their friendship might be seen as unusual, Chayne agreed.
No way that would happen with the standup guys. Their one and two are focused on contests all year, training and eating right. They have to, itās their job. I couldnāt think of anything worse than a sponsor putting pressure on you, saying that you have to finish in the top ten this year or weāre going to cut your sponsorship money, that pressure must be insane. We donāt have to worry about that, we just go surfing. If the World Titles are on one year and we donāt want to go - like Spain (the last World Title two years ago) - we just donāt go. Just go surfing. You know, the odd person over in New Zealand actually looked at me funny like that. Theyād see you going for a surf and theyād say, āOh, youāre going to do some training for your heatā. Iād say, no, Iām just going surfing mate. Yeah, people are funny.
The 2020 Worldās contest, like many others, was marred by inconsistent surf. With a contest window of limited size, and a lot to get through - with age divisions as well as the big one, The Open - the organisers had a busy week. The Open Final came right at the end, but the best waves arrived much earlier in the week.
The Final was easily the worst waves of the whole contest, through every age division, every heat. It was almost unsurfable. They waited until the very top of the tide. I mean, every surfer on the planet knows at the top of the tide it goes slack ā no waves break. It was up against a concrete wall, so there was backwash through the whole line-up. It was one to two foot, it was choppy. There was only pretty much one good wave caught in the final, and that was my first wave. That was why I managed to keep him off, because after that first one there was stuff all.
Chayne took that one scoring wave, and priority, and hung on.
Itās not something I do, ever, but Iāve had those other finals where it was always my fault: something went wrong, I didnāt do something right and lost it. Well, I wasnāt going to lose this one, so it was about the last 8 minutes, and I had priority. I just sat half a metre away from him. Every time he paddled, I paddled. I donāt know that he could have caught any waves, but I knew they were going to be no good, and he was getting desperate and taking off on just anything. I managed to hold him right down to the wire. Neither of us got to perform, it was horrible. I did apologise. With about five minutes to go, I said Iām sorry about this mate, but Iāve got to do it. He was fine with it. He just laughed and said, āYeah, it is what it isā, and I continued to block him. It might have meant more to him than me, maybe I shouldnāt have blocked him, but I donāt know, I donāt think he was going to get a wave anyway. They just didnāt come in.
We talked briefly about money and the influence it has on surfing. Chayne likes the idea of surfing as amateur sport.
People are in these competitions and everything, but theyāre not that competitive. Weāre not surfing for hundreds of thousands of dollars.
So, why do the contest at all? Were you motivated by the titles you didnāt win previously?
That was my full motivation. My motivation for going to the contest to start with ⦠well, I actually wasnāt going to go, but Parkesy phoned me and said heād appreciate it if I went. You know, as promotion for his boards and all that, so I went. I had pretty much no intention. When Albert asked me if I was going I was probably 90% not going, but once I was there, and once I got to the quarters, I thought, Iām not going to let another one go, Iāve got to get this one.
And the lovely Mrs Simpson - what does the missus make of it?
She just loves that I love it. Sheās proud of me for winning the World Title, but she says to me all the time ⦠I go away on these trips with Zion and Drag and we do these video clips and she always says āI donāt know why you go in the contests, you get way more enjoyment out of doing thisā. Sheād rather me not go in the contests, just go away with those guys, do the videos. She knows Iām not stressed about doing that stuff. I always have fun and in my eyes it does a whole lot more for kneeboarding than a contest win does. A lot of people said that to me while we were over there, that they really appreciate the clips that we put out, cos thereās no-one else doing that. I wish there was ā I donāt want to watch myself surf! Iāve had quite a few messages on Instagram and Facebook from younger guys that are getting into it because of those clips. Theyāre not getting into it because they might win a contest.
Particularly when you have a contest with the final held in unsurfable conditions. There was that one day where everybody turned up and it was offshore and barrelling. In my mind, that would be the time to have a contest. Just put everybody in the water and see whoās going to be the best.
Yeah, it was cooking. That was the day they did all the age divisions. They didnāt do the Opens that day. The day after the final, on the way to the airport we went in and surfed that beach again and it was even better ā it was fucking cooking! Me and Maukino and another young guy from New Zealand. They were keen to surf some swell as well, it was 10 out of 10 pumping. There was me, about 4 American kneeboarders and a bunch of local guys. The whole beach was cooking. So, if the final had been on that next day, and weād had video, well that would have done wonders for competition kneeboarding.
This year the South Africans kicked off a big campaign with a lot of big claims and were all out to win the Title, and they didnāt get it. They had some wins, but not the big one. How did they take that? Ā
The South Africans were great. They motivated me big time to go, actually. They were all online with the Saffa attack and they were going to take over and that fully motivated me to go over and not let āem win. But theyāre really good blokes and theyāre really good surfers. Thereās three or four of those guys who are world class, and theyāre good guys. Albert and I were in a heat with Lester (Sweetman) who was their main threat, it might have been round 5, and we knocked him out and I thought ā heās a really nice bloke, really chummy, wanted to have a chat, gives you props on your surfing and all that - but I thought when he got knocked out he was going to lose it, but he was fine. Came up and shook our hands, smile on his face - Great surfing with you - and off he went. And theyāre all the same. Yeah, top blokes and if they keep doing these contests like theyāre talking about, just keeping the ball rolling, one of those blokes is going to be at the top in no time. Ā
Chayne has an uncanny ability to thread his way through deep barrels and an explosive above the lip attack. Both are documented in a growing body of stills and video online via Legless.TV and longtime sponsors Zion and Drag. Chayneās widely recognized by kneeboarders as one of a handful of surfers pushing the performance boundaries. His name is as familiar in kneeboarding as Simon Farrer or Peter Crawford. His win was popular.
I need to mention that. The support we got from people I donāt even know, just random people stopping us to say that they wanted me to win, they needed me to win. That put a bit of pressure on, for sure!
So is the pressure off, now youāve won a World Title?
It will take the pressure off in a way, but ⦠I donāt know how Iām going to word this without offending people, but I donāt want another 50 year old to win the title. My motivation going into the next one is to make sure we donāt get someone old. You know, see some of the kids go through instead of those really old blokes.
Itās great that your style of surfing has finally been recognized. Donāt get me wrong. Simon for instance: heās a great surfer, but he doesnāt surf the way you do. Heās less progressive, more of a classical surfer. Youāre different. Long barrels and then massive airs.
Thatās how I want people to know me, I want them to know me as the guy whoās in a barrel and comes out and does an air. I donāt want to just be a guy whoās got a World Title. Freesurfing, I wouldnāt have been happy with any of the waves I surfed in the contest, except for one in the teams challenge, I almost would have just went in and done something else for the day cause I just wasnāt surfing well.
So being World Champion, does that do anything for you?
Well, people have been coming up to me at the beach and congratulating me on winning the World Title, but itās funny, having a kneeboarding world champ. Like, what does that even mean? Itās more embarrassing than anything. Itās a funny thing, competition. There are people around that I surf with, whose opinions about surfing mean something to me. Iām good mates with those people, and theyāve all congratulated me, and that feels good. Theyāre genuinely happy for me as well. Thereās a few guys around whoāve been saying - āOh, I thought you were world champ already, you know, I donāt see anyone else surfing like you surf.ā And thatās such a wanker comment, but thatās whatās been Ā happening. At the moment, the guys I surf with are all pro surfers: Asher Pacey, Harry Bryant, Craig Anderson and all these big names. When those guys come up and say, āFark, how was that turn,ā thatās ⦠well[RH2]Ā , having guys that shred in the surf, that you look up to, telling you that a wave that you got or a turn that you did was sick, yeah, thatās a better feeling for sure than a contest win.ā
Chayneās back home in Wollongong and keen to get back on the road making videos with the crew from Zion wetsuits. He had surfed twice already the day we spoke and was pretty pumped.
āThe guys I travel and surf with, I donāt ever get the feeling that theyāre like - why have we got this kneeboarder with us. Theyāre just stoked on what Iām doing, that Iām doing something different, theyāre happy to tell me that I got a good wave, or did a good turn. When youāve got people like Taj Burrow or Dane Reynolds commenting on your clip, that sort of blows my mind. Thatās pretty big.ā
Words: Rob Harwood - Legless TV
Images: Steen-16images, Richard Kotch, Others supplied by Chaye
#world champion 20#Chayne Simposon#rob harwood#legless.tv#kneeboard surfing#dunedin#albert munoz#parkes kneeboards#16images#richard kotch
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The Dream Run: Greg Holzmanās Island Life
Ā Some questions. Who are you, really? Where do you live? How do you make a living? What turns you on? What frightens you? What do you want from life and what would you sacrifice to get it? Ā Write your answers down on a piece of paper and then, next to each answer, write down why. Take your time. Think about it. You might discover some surprising things about yourself.
Ā If youāre a kneeboarder, youāll have been asked āthe questionā by someone whoās not. There may be any number of glib retorts tossed off over a shoulder with a laugh, but the question of what keeps each individual kneeboarder surfing in a manner generally seen as archaic, curious or just plain weird, will always have a real answer, one that reveals something about our individuality. Sometimes the answerās so simple that it needs no explanation. Then again, sometimes the simplest things can be the hardest to grasp. At the most basic level, human motivation has to do with need: food, shelter, belonging. Once needs are met, desire takes over. We become driven by our strongest desires. those to which we ascribe the most importance, and hence the most value. The profile youāre about to read is an object lesson in this principle and how it can shape a life.
Ā Lately weāve been exchanging emails with Greg Holzman. If the nameās familiar itās because heās the subject of a few drool-provoking photos published here over the last year or more. Weāve known about him for a long time, primarily through shaper and Hawaiian legend Bud McCray, but Gregās something of an enigma, staying out of sight and quietly doing his thing. A fisherman by trade, Gregās thing involves finding the best, biggest and emptiest waves he can sensibly contemplate, and riding them with rare style and grace. Here at Legless.TV we reckon that qualifies Greg as a genuine underground hero, though we suspect heād probably be reluctant to describe himself in such terms. Weāre not about to enter the debate about the merits or otherwise of the whole concept of āundergroundā: our job is simply to record and present to the world what is. Gregās based on Kauai, the outermost island of the Hawaiian chain. We started by asking Greg for a little biographical background. Oh yeah: thatās us in italics, everything else is Greg.
Ā My fatherās family moved here before WWII, to Honolulu, but my dad met my mom in California, USA. Ā I lived in La Jolla a few years and saw the Lis fish crew kneeboarding Big Rock and was sure that was the thing to do. Everyone on stand-ups was eating shit there and it was like a gladiator arena. Ā Then I saw Greenough films in a movie theater in 71/72 - with the barrel shots. My Dad got me a G&S twin-fin fish and I brought it back to Hawaii when we moved to Kailua on Oahu. I remember it sucked, but it got me there. I was a kook for three years, from 12 to 15. I never did surf Big Rock, which was the goal when I started. But then in 1974, Local Motion opened the first surf shop in Kailua, and I was one of the first kneeboarders in there. They had a few nice 5ā4ā fish twins and I had some Christmas money. I bought a nice Robbie Burns (owner of Local Motion) shaped kneeboard. I took that board to Maui, where I went to 10th grade high school. I got kicked out for putting too much priority on surfing. I was devastated. I went to the school in the summer and begged them to take me back, but they said I wasnāt college material, which was true. I just loved the outer island life in the 70ās.
Ā Outer Island life in the mid-70s can be seen in surf films of the day: Fluid Drive, 5 Summer Stories, A sea For Yourself. If you were a kid watching those movies in a rented hall somewhere that wasnāt Hawaii, the images of hollow waves in clear, warm water, white sand with palms swaying gently in perpetual offshores was almost too much to bear. Greg was living it.
Ā It all really started when I was 15. I surfed Maalaea September 1974 and May 1975 with all the guys like Jeff Hakman, Reno Abillera, Sammy Hawk, Owl Chapman. It was like I was in a movie. Just the best swells ever, photos in all the magazines - historical stuff. That was my first real tube riding. I was 15 and I was in these big windy tunnels, trying to figure it out. There was no going back to ānormalā pre-surf life after that. Ā Later on I was scared out of my head some days at Specklesville and Hookipa Lanes. I would duck dive and the wave would just suck me back over as I was so light, but my Duck Feet fins just saved me time after time. I learned to love it, not fear it. By 17 I was in public high school ā surfing, cutting class on Kona winds, riding Pipe and a place called North Beach on Kaneohe Marine base. Ā We would sneak in early mornings and avoid the Military Police.
Ā Military Police? Really?
Ā Yeah. I became a master of deception. I got to know the kids on base and would take on their identity. While other surfers were getting busted, I was heading back to my friendās house where the Mom would be super happy their kid had a friend off base. Ā These kids were not popular at school! It all worked out and I became the kid that came into school at recess or lunch with wet hair and sandy feet and everyone wanted to know how the surf was. Ā Thatās where I learned to enjoy surfing by myself. Ā It was cool, and I knew I was a lucky kid who had broken the code. I remember more than once being woken in period 6 by my history teacher all worried I wasnāt getting enough sleep at night, when it was actually I was up before dawn, on my bike through the back of the military range with a flashlight ⦠and then riding to school for my 25 cent taco lunch and 5th and 6th period. Iām not sure how I graduated but I did.
Ā I became good friends with Buzzy Kerbox, as I was roommates with his girlfriend. We surfed the North Shore a lot through the winter of 78/79. He got me in the know with Pat Rawson, who shaped his boards. Pat made me a few boards and I surfed Pipeline a bunch with Buzzy. Ā He was on a roll with big wins and it was an interesting time, but I knew it wasnāt going to last. The North Shore was getting very popular and my secret spot at Kaneohe Marine Base was now too risky to sneak on - I had turned 18 and could be arrested and thrown in jail. Something had to change. I got a newspaper, looking at outer island jobs, since I was thinking of going back to Maui. I saw a job for a cook on Kauai. I watched that ad change and the salary get better and then one day my friend and I were with our girlfriends and I just told him āIām calling these guys upā. Ā Our girlfriends thought we were kidding but the chefs were desperate. They said they would pay our way over to check it out. Ā I was 19 and thought Iād just go for the ride. I ended up with a company truck and a condo and my first strike mission. Our girlfriends were just shocked! I told my mom after a month she would have to come to Kauai if she wanted to see me because I was staying for good. It was heaven - even the military base let us on, no sneaking - and the waves were epic. Ā After a year I bought a Jeep and my life was as good as it gets. Ā Everyone worked in the restaurants at night and surfed in the mornings. Ā It was a big party. We all knew we were in the best place in the USA. Nobody wanted to expose it. Photos were not a thing, but a few came up from time to time and as the years have gone by, theyāre now showing up.
Then Hurricane Iwa came in November 1982.
Ā The last storm of the 1982 hurricane season, Iwa struck Kauai hard, with winds of up to 193 kmh, massive swells and storm surge. Hundreds were left homeless, schools were closed indefinitely and President Reagan declared the island a disaster area. Greg was living in a beach house and when the eye passed over, escaped to a friendās house inland with just two boards and the clothes he was wearing.
Ā Everything changed after that. Many surfers became construction workers and many got serious about life and money. The age of innocent fun was being tested. Restaurants were closed for half a year. I tried the construction stuff, but I couldnāt work in the day. Ā I had always worked nights and surfed days. Ā It just felt wrong. A friend had a boat and took me fishing. First time out, we caught so many fish. In the morning we brought them in, got a slip in the butcher shop and then we went to the cashier at the grocery store and she gave us money ... wow that was different! I was always giving her my money for food. Ā I thought - this is something I can do on the ocean: Ā work a few days and make as much as I normally do in two weeks ... I got to get me a boat! Ā I learned everything I could from this guy, who was a tough old fisherman: it was all in my plan that I was going to get my own boat!
Ā But things were tough and housing became an issue. I was homeless by 1983 but eventually I managed to find a house on the westside of Kauai. It was three bedrooms for $275 a month. So cheap! I got a roommate and life became pretty easy. Ā I was fishing about 10 days a month and banking money while surfing the rest of the time. Life was cheap and the waves were good. I had decided I would get a boat and I was ready. My first boat was a disaster ā a 50 ft wooden boat that had little chance of getting a slip in the harbor. I found a mooring I could lease in Nawilliwilli harbor and kept her there. Ā March 1984, she sank trying to deal with a 24-day storm. I woke up to the Coast Guard saying my boat was on the rocks and I needed to get the fuel off before the tank ruptured and I was in real trouble. Ā That was a lot of work, but lucky for me because that boat would have killed me if it hadnāt sunk. At $10,000 and a year of my dedication it was the school of hard knocks, but it made me learn what I needed to find and how much I was going to have to save to get it. Ā It took me 5 years, but I finally bought a 26ā Radon hull from Santa Barbara Ca. - an all fiberglass trailerable boat I could leave at my house. I still have it. That boat has been my golden goose for 35 years. Although Iām presently not fishing a lot as Iām focused on surfing, I assume one day I will go again. Itās ready when I need it. Ā
Ā With the purchase of his own boat, Greg became able to finetune the way he structured fishing around surfing. The state of Hawaii officially recognises 137 separate islands, but there are many more, many so small theyāre not marked on charts. On one of these, Greg had found good waves ⦠ and he began to surf them.
Ā I wanted to surf and fish in areas of Hawaii few knew of, so I became a solo bottom fisherman. In Hawaii, that means mainly deep sea vertical long line fishing with targeted hooks in deep-water, anchoring in 400 to 1200 ft of water on deep drop offs and seamounts. I was good at this - surfing and this style of fishing help each other. Ā I became familiar with every sea condition: Iāve been anchored and fished in water that was plain scary. Fishing certainly helped me understand the sea. Like all my endeavours, I took it to the limit. Ā I became the best and it all came from my desire to surf an uncharted island, a place which I shared but never would photograph. Its Hawaiian name is Wai Uliuli or āblue blue waterā. I lived for that and made my fishing an excuse to get to that place. It really only got good on high surf warnings, so it was not for the meek. I was often solo surfing or with a friend or single crew member. Mostly I surfed it alone, and it became a spiritual thing which made me comfortable in heavy water. This spot needs a specific swell direction to work well, and of course the right winds. It was always empty. One time the waves got so big I was forced to spend the night on the beach, digging a hole in the sand and using my board as a blanket. Luckily my crew was able to pull anchor and re-set in deeper water. The waves just rose so quick I couldnāt get back out to the boat. After that I was determined to bury water and supplies on the beach to make sure that if it happened again, I was going to be OK. I was sure to be prepared next time. I promised never to take photos or bring cameras and to this day, few exist from my trips. I was offered big money to get the shots, but I never wanted anything to do with exploiting a place I considered - and still do - sacred and holy. Many friends have been, but never a camera. Of course, this was all before iPhones.
Ā To Greg, the years from 1983 to 1992 were golden. Great boards, great waves, making a good living from the ocean, travel: he was living a dream life. Bud McCray was a big part of it.
Ā It was 1983 when I met Buddy McCray. My younger brother Pat was also a kneeboarder, following me into it. Ā Pat lived on Oahu and he met Buddy in the surf. Ā Buddy missed nothing and was quick to come over to Kauai that summer, and he brought a board for me. Ā He recognized that I was willing to test anything, so he sent boards over and I would just give him feedback. His boards got better and better. Sometimes I didnāt like them, but he would tell me to keep trying and many times they did get better, but for me, I kept getting more into the basic no wing, no channel, short fish. I tried pins and squaretails, but it was the basic 5ā6ā flat bottom Vee that did it for me. In the early ā80ās surfers were having issues with large waves. I was able to sit inside of them and often catch the sets, because they were constantly under-gunned, but my fins and low center of gravity allowed me in easy. Buddy had me sold pretty quickly on the four-fin set up and by ā84 things were full tilt. Buddy came over to Kauai regularly the next few years and brought various kneeboarders with him, including Albert Whiteman and an 18-year-old Simon Farrer. Buddy had great timing and we just surfed so much! Every time he came the waves were good. Ā In 1987 he decided to take Lee Pattison, Mike McGuire and myself to G-land. Buddy was well known in every corner of the world by then, but it was my first trip. Bobby Radiasa had been to Hawaii and stayed with Buddy, so we were treated very well. It was a special time to be there, as many know - that first trip was so eye-opening. Before that, I didnāt feel I needed to go anywhere, but after, I knew the best waves in the world were not in Hawaii: for consistent offshore long-period single swell events, it was all happening in Indonesia. Ā Once again Buddy had sent me to the happiest place on earth, with three new boards and a surf camp owner who made sure we were taken care of. Anyone who was there will agree it was one of the best times in the history of surfing.
Ā Greg went back to G-land again for 6 weeks the following year. On his way home he stopped in at the Sari Club in Kuta, where he met Mary, a sweet Californian girl who also surfed ā well, of course. Her trip home included a stopover in Hawaii, where Greg showed her around. They had a great time surfing big waves together. Thus began a union that eventually brought them three children. Ā In 1989 Greg travelled to Jeffreys Bay with Buddy McCray, and in 1991 he went again, and found more than just waves.
Ā The waves reminded me of home - cold offshores in midwinter, storms hammering the coast and filtering down to a sweeping right: I loved South Africa. I found a plant group - Cycads - that fascinated me. I was lucky enough to be brought in by some great experts in the Cape, who also liked seashells, which I was collecting in Hawaii. Ā With a bit of horse trading I was taught about these plants, taken into habitat a few years later as a research assistant for the National Botanical Garden and shown around the country by Nature Conservation officers. Ā This began a 30-year love affair and the beginnings of my own Cycad nursery which today allows me to fund my surfing obsession. This wasnāt always the plan, but I also played a huge role in the study of many newly discovered Cycad species in Panama. I helped in collecting and working to help people better understand this important ancient plant family, the oldest continual seed-bearing plants on earth. Ā Over 200 million years! Cycads live for hundreds of years and are extremely valuable. Theyāre threatened with extinction in South Africa from poaching. They are living art and I wanted to help by competing against the black market by growing Cycads from seeds I produced over 20 years: they grow 10 times faster in Hawaii. Ā It may be the romantic idea of a 30-year-old dreamer, but I achieved a lot.
Ā Gregās wife, Mary, had formerly been a competitive swimmer, so it was natural for their three kids to follow suit, at least for a while. Their eldest, Matthew, retained enough competitive drive from all those junior swim meets to become a pro body boarder, but thereās a fair bit of the old man in him.
Ā Matt loves to kneeboard when the surf isnāt crazy. He was charging huge Pipe at 17 and got waves in contests that made me live another aspect of surfing - thatās vicariously through your kidsā performance. Sean was less competitive, not wanting to have to live in his brotherās shadow, so he became an amazing diver who took on my love of the hunt.Ā From boars to deep-dive spear fishing, he was leading his peer group, so they both had few problems fitting into this racially diverse island life.Ā
Gregās daughter is now 15 and can surf, but her Dad reckons sheās become a bit of a landlubber and isnāt getting out in the water. Heās hoping that will change. After all, Greg had a period away from surfing himself not so long ago. He and Mary divorced in 2012, He had been feeling pretty jaded with the surf scene - jet skis and egos and social media, and by the 2013-14 season, Greg stopped surfing altogether - for the first time in his life.
Ā I quit cold turkey, Greg Noll style. I tried to play tennis for 2013/14 and just concentrated on my kids. Finally, I realized I hated competing. Tennis is usually a very competitive game, and I love watching and coaching competition, but after two seasons it was clear that tennis didnāt cut it in the adrenalin area. Times were changing in Kauai surfing again - times are always changing! By 2015, life was expensive and hard for young families, which got a lot of guys in that 30-something age having to work more. My life was getting cheaper and the kids didnāt need me as much, so I began to surf full time and fish less. The winter of 2015-16 was an amazing season which ended with a bang - double late West swells in April. Buddy had made me a board a year earlier and it worked amazing. The foam was different, but the boardās flex made it magic. I could feel that flex and the thinner board flew in 10ft plus Hawaiian power. I never looked back. When those West swells came in, I was surfing so well I just didnāt want it to end. Buddy made me two new boards and by May I was dying to try them out, so I headed to Kandui and quickly realized that this surf traveling was the greatest feeling of all. With the high-tech forecasts and Facebook etc ... strike missions could become a lifestyle.
Greg has seen a lot change in surfing over the span of his life. From starting out at a time when the introduction of legropes caused major schisms in surfing circles, he has witnessed the birth of professional surfing, the transformation of backyard businesses into international brands, the growth of surf tourism, the age of the sponsored free-surfer and the expansion of surfing into its various power-assisted and highly specialised genres and sub-genres. Just as the humble legrope unexpectedly brought about a fundamental shift in how and where we surf, new pressures and new technology have expanded the scope of surfing and changed how and where we surf yet again. We talked a little about the way things are now.
Ā The IT revolution, with the advent of smartphones, social media and instant global communication, has been felt world-wide - Kauai is no exception ā and short of the collapse of western civilization, thereās no going back to a time before. The local Kauai policy of no photos, no publicity may have been enforceable in the 70s and 80s, but in the 21st century, exposure is inevitable, and it seems thatās especially so if itās unwanted.
Ā Yes. The trouble today is that nothing happens without photographic evidence and pictures tell a thousand words. Iām less affected by this on the road, but I tend to be pretty quiet about my backyard. Though it affects me less now. Iām finding that the standard surfersā taste in waves and priorities can rapidly change, especially if a few friends find it the place to be. Every year is different. Sandbars, swell direction, winds ā they all seem to run in groups that will send surfers from one place to another, chasing the in-vogue spots of the moment.
Ā On Kauai we have serious issues with the use of jet skis during High Surf events. It can be a real issue. Because of our round island, the swells can wrap which - means a lot of the jet-skis end up tow surfing the same waves 50 paddle surfers are riding. An example is a place I surfed for 25 years without a ski around. Itās much like Kirra, with a strong sweep, long walks up the point and long paddles. Now I canāt surf there. Itās just too much a scene. Iāve had waves that I was on and in the barrel and 100 yards down the beach a jet-ski goes and U-turns to swing a guy in. Well, I have ridden right up to the wall of water from their tow-in turn. Hitting water that fast inside big barrels leads to bashings on my back on the bottom. Complete floggings. I have never surfed there again with skis out. Donāt get me wrong. I love tow-ins in the right big-wave situations. I have towed in on days surfers are not out on outer reefs. Thatās a different animal, but jet-skis and paddle surfing are not compatible. Itās a complete change in vibe and the tow guys never get less greedy, itās always more, more, more. Iāve spent a long time campaigning for issues in my surfing on Kauai. From military beach access after 9-11 to Anti-Federal Marine Sanctuary expansions to advocating for jet-ski enforcement in surf areas. The threats continue to grow.
Part two coming soon.
Words: Rob HarwoodĀ (legless.tv wordsmith)
Images supplied by Greg
#greg holzman#buddy mccray#blast kneeboards#legless.tv#leglesstv#Rob Harwood#kneeboard surfing#kneeboarding#kneeboardsurfing#kneeboard Hawaii
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