Too often I’m hearing groms say they’re bored. If you’re in school, you’re bored. Now it’s summer and you live by the beach. Not every kid gets to live by the beach and go there and play whenever they want. Enjoy it!
Too often I’m hearing groms say they’re bored. If you’re in school, you’re bored. Now it’s summer and you live by the beach. Not every kid gets to live by the beach and go there and play whenever they want. Enjoy it!
So you go to your favorite surf shop and what do you find? They tell you that to get a new leash tie you have to either buy a new leash (way too expensive for this little rope) or buy a pair of baggies that come with a complimentary leash tie. Either way you’re looking at spending $20-50 just to get this leash tie. And that’s all fine and dandy for surf companies, but what about us? We just need a freakin’ leash tie and we’re not rich!
Last time I needed a leash tie, the guy at the surf shop basically stole one out of a pair of baggies and sold it to me for $2.50. There are two problems with this. First off, what about the person who buys those baggies and doesn’t get the leash tie they expect? Also, $2.50 is a lot to pay for that little rope!
One other problem I have with leash tie’s is that there’s no variety. They’re always black! What if I want a red or a blue one? Why isn’t anyone addressing this problem? I want to go to a surf shop and buy 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 surf leash ties at a decent price and even pick out the colors I like.
And now we can.
I’m introducing surf leash ties in a variety of colors, at a great price: 4 leash ties for $5. That’s only $1.25 each, and these things are even tested for 400 pounds of pressure, so you can count on them to hang on to your surfboard.
When they sell out, I’ll buy other colors, like orange, maybe some camouflage, and whatever else you tell me you’d like to see.
It all started because I refused to buy a converter box. One day, because of governmental forces, I couldn’t watch TV any more. They wanted me to spend $50 on a converter box, and I wasn’t feeling it.
After the first few months, I wasn’t even interested in watching TV when someone had it turned on at their house. I just wanted to surf, chat with people (people who were sometimes annoyed because they wanted to watch the TV), and blog.
Blogging is fun. Looking through surfing news is fun, and finding interesting topics to blog about in the surfing world even takes me through some really fun content that has nothing to do with surfing. Like the ninja cat, luxurious prison cells, and the world’s largest tree house.
I finally got the converter box, mainly because I was curious. What’s new on television after 6 months? How will it affect me? When I returned to the civilized world after living in Alaska, up by North Pole, after 4 years, the world had a few treats in store for me, and I thought TV might surprise me in the same way.
When I came back from Alaska, I was surprised to see self-checkout lines in grocery stores, and some things I remembered seemed different: really high bridges scared me. I hadn’t been driving for those 4 years, and even speeds over 55 freaked me out a little. How could people go so fast and not constantly think about how fast they were going and how easily they could die? Not that sharing land with black bears and moose is much safer.
Eventually I got used to all of this again.
Unfortunately there isn’t anything new on TV that convinces me the $50 was worth spending. I’d still rather go surf than sit there and do nothing. The last two nights of flipping channels and checking out the converter box have been the most unproductive nights in the last six months.
I’m not sure if the TV or the weird blogs (above) is more likely to turn my brain to mush. But eventually I do always find something you’ll like, like this ridiculous picture of people about to get washed away. Yea, this is much better than TV.
(More below the picture…)
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No joke, I’m pretty sure this is the beginning of something big. These guys are wearing a satellite-tracking device and being “pinged” while they surf. This new technology tells them how fast they’re surfing. Cool, huh? What if it gets cheap, or we find a way to track how fast we go? How fast you can launch could become another bragging point.
What do you think about how this could affect surfing contests?
Howdy- I know it is way late notice but we just had 3 people drop out of our indo trip on July 26th- Aug 7th, and were hoping you could maybe spread the word to fill the spots. We have 4 from Malibu (one is a State Life Guard) and one from SB. It’s an amazing boat, it is literally in the top 3 boats in indo. The crew is super attentive- Ricky the skiff driver, sits in the channel all day and snaps photos with his huge 400mm lens- you watch them at the end of the day on the big flat screen and get to take home a disk at the end of the trip with all of your waves on it- it’s a great set up. Since they are in a pinch they are offering the spots for $3,500 vs. $4k. If it is totally packed they will shoot up to the telos as well at no extra cost. We have all the fights and transfer dialed in if you needed it… Let me know if there are any questions. We appreciate any help.
Thanks so much,
K.C. Blinn
Blinn Design
310.435.1799
957 15th St.
Santa Monica, CA 90403
last year:
http://www.blinndesign.com/indo2009/
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