Posts Tagged ‘surfing’

Gold Coast Surfboard Repairs

Friday, July 30th, 2010

http://goldcoastsurfboardshapers.com.au/ Don’t you hate waiting weeks for your surfboard to be repaired? There is a Gold Coast shaper who repairs dings in days. (more…)

Gold Coast Surf Schools

Friday, July 2nd, 2010

http://goldcoastlearntosurf.com.au/ Surf schools are not all the same. Learn what questions to ask to ensure you find and are only taught by the best. (more…)

Gold Coast Surfing Lessons

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

Learning to surf is difficult. Learn the best way to learn with this amazing Gold Coast beginner surfers guide.

Getting a Gold Coast surfing lesson is only the start of your surfing journey. Unfortunately, too many surf schools will not give you anything that will help you after your lesson finishes. It is up to you. To learn to surf though, you need some knowledge and some things to focus on. So when getting your lesson, we recommend you:

  • Try to remember a small number of things from your lesson to take into practise
  • Get your instructor to speak to you about how the ocean works, on a practical and safety level
  • Get some local knowledge so you know the best places to learn to surf.

If you are learning on the Gold Coast, all this is covered in the FREE learn to surf guide. You can download your copy from the www.GoldCoastLearnToSurf.com.au website.

Gold Coast Learn To Surf

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

Download the most comprehensive guide to learning to surf on Australia’s Gold Coast, FREE of charge today

So many surf instructors will have you believe that if you go with them, you will learn to surf in a flash. If only it were that easy for the person learning.

Learning to surf is actually much more challenging than this. Before you book your lesson, you must:

  • Understand what makes a good and bad instructor
  • Find the ideal instructor for you
  • Work out what type of class suits you best
  • Understand what you will get out of the lesson

Once you finish your lesson, the learning really starts. To assist your learning you must:

  • Find a good learning beach
  • Find an appropriate surfboard
  • Understand what you need to practise
  • Realise when it is time to get your next lesson

The FREE guide at

Gold Coast Learn To Surf

will give you the answers to all these points, and much, much more. So if you are considering learning to surf on Australia’s Gold Coast, visit

www.GoldCoastLearnToSurf.com.au

and get your FREE learn to surf guide today.

Gold Coast Custom Surfboards

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

Gold Coast Custom Surfboards – This video tries to help surfboard shapers and repairers understand what their clients are doing, when using the internet to find their services.

This video attempts to shed some light on the search behavior of surfers, who use the internet to find the products and services they are looking for. It takes the viewer through some of the things that surfers will not search for as well as the things they will search for.

Too often in this industry, proper use of the internet is seriously neglected. Either poor websites or none at all are used. Just do a Google search for a shaper or for surfboard repairs in your area to see what I mean. You will be amazed by the weird hodge podge of results you get. This means that the shapers who are looking for clients, cannot be found by them.

The intention of the video is to help surfboard shapers who are looking for new clients, use the internet to find them.

Gold Coast Surfboard Shapers

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

Gold Coast Surfboard Shapers - Surfboard shapers are difficult to find sometimes, they are too busy shaping or surfing. We try to help with resources like this video

Surfing is such a perfectionists sport, you need equipment which responds specifically to you. Only a surfboard shaper can design a surfboard for you in this manner. Further, if your surfboard is damaged, you really want to get a quality and professional ding repair to endure the shape and balance of your board is not compromised.

This video explains the difference between an off the rack surfboard and one designed by a shaper.

Surf Travel Article

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

I read a really great article about surfing, family and travel today.  It is a really refreshing perspective of this great past-time we all love.  Here is the link, I hope you enjoy it.

http://trekaroo.wordpress.com/2009/06/23/surf-together-stay-together-family-memories/#comment-76

Damo

Surfing: The Spirit Of Exploration

Saturday, December 27th, 2008

I tend to surf at Mermaid Beach most of the time.  The waves are certainly not the best the Gold Coast has to offer, by a long shot.  The main reason I surf here though is to avoid the crowds.  Its a funny thing, surfing and crowds.  There is not a surfer in the world who professes to enjoying surfing in an overly packed line up.  Yet as an observation, we often needlessly exacerbate crowding through sheepish behaviour (Ie. Following the pack). 

On any given day at Mermaid, there will be at least 3 or 4 peaks.  Typically only 1 is being surfed, and by many surfers.  I’ll always have a look before jumping in, and pick a different one to surf on.  The quality of wave and the number of people on each peak will all play into my calculations.  I’ll typically trade some degree of quality for a smaller crowd, but thats just me.  I’ll also often walk up to a kilometer in either direction to find the wave I’d like to surf.  As soon as I catch a wave though, someone from the pack surfing the other wave will invariably paddle over to join me.  Heaven knows why they were not there already, the wave had been breaking there all day.  Obviously they just didn’t have the imagination or intelligence to realise the wave was there, before I caught one.

I’m contantly amazed also by the number of surfers who arrive at the beach and do not look for a wave. Rather they just paddle out to the closest group of surfers assuming that will be where the best waves are.  I’ve had days when I was the only person in the water, with peaks forming all up and down the beach, yet an additional surfer will come and sit on my shoulder.  On these occasions, I just paddle to the next wave and continued my session there, wondering at the other person’s intelligence all the way.

But witnessing this kind of behaviour day in day out begs the question;  What happened to the spirit of exploration in surfing?  Where did it go?  When was it replaced by such sheepish behaviour where we just follow the crowd?  Perhaps I am just a little different to most surfers and enjoy an uninterrupted surf.  Perhaps most of us actually enjoy the hussle of a crowd.  I don’t know.  I do think this pattern of behaviour is weird though.

Here is a thought too, for a 2009 New Years Resolution.  Everytime you go to the beach for a surf, spend some time on the beach observing the waves before you paddle out.  You may find a better wave if you look, you’ll definitely catch more waves if you find a less crowded one.