VIDEO: Boujmaa Ripping in Moulay
Ok so this is just a slide show movie but we considered it still news worthy when you see that some of the sequences are just Boujmaa displaying his usual insanity and creativity. Check out this slightly crazy Moroccan daredevil.
Click here to read more:
Boardseeker Windsurfing Magazine » | Boardseeker Windsurfing Magazine
GIVE US A CLEW
GIVE US A CLEW

SAM ROSS’ 5-SECOND SHRED
Quick Tips For Improving, Whatever Your Level
(This Technique feature originally appeared in the Nov/Dec 2011 issue of Windsurf Magazine. Print and digital subscriptions for readers worldwide are available HERE.)
Quite often when we are learning moves we come unstuck at the same point in all of them. Finally mastering one element is good news as, if that one skill’s sorted, then the door’s open for a whole host of moves to come together.
The rig-flip has always been one of these. The gybe immediately jumps to mind as so many times we come round, about to exit, and the rig gets ripped from our fingers. There are so many other moves at every level where this is also an issue.
Heli-tacks, clew first water starts, gybes of every flavor and spocks can all end in flames as the rig is pulled away from us.
The rig-flip is well documented and the tip of moving the hand to the boom clamp when flipping is one of the best out there, however there is something even more fundamental that could unlock all these moves.
Ask yourself the question ‘on which point of sailing do you have the most power in the rig?’ The answer is a broad reach. However what about when we are clew first? And the answer here is that it’s the opposite! The closer to the wind we are clew first, the more pressure is in the clew and if we release the rig the result normally ends in a crash.
So we need to flip the rig when we are pointing off the wind. As soon as we come round to a beam reach, in a bit of breeze, it will be incredibly hard to control. The heli tack is a great example as we often try and force the rig through the wind only to have it ripped out of our hands. The gybe is another as we hang on too long to stabilize but end up unable to flip the rig in control.
So it’s not just how you flip the rig it’s when. Stay off the wind for a no pressure rig rotation.
The more you practice this, the better your rig rotations will become and that should mean that your success rate with moves increases dramatically.
Until next time, happy flipping!
For more tips and coaching tricks, head over to www.sam-ross.co.uk
Click here to read more:
Windsurf Magazine
Black Box 87 Wood, PlancheMag (France), May 2013 [EN-FR]
This test was featured in the May edition of......
Click here to read more:
Starboard News
WINDBREEDERS
WINDBREEDERS

A new film by Lake Alliance featuring freestylers Steven Van Broeckhoven, Phil Soltysiak, and Max Matissek who ask “When was the last time you changed the weather purely with your mental strength? In this short movie, Steven Van Broeckhoven, Phil Soltysiak, and Max Matissek, did what seemed the impossible: WINDBREEDERS…
Dead calm, no wind at all. The scorching Egyptian heat was unbearable, and it seemed like an endless spell.
There was no sign of change. We summoned every last bit of strength we had, and made it OUR mission, to bring back the wind.
A Lake Alliance Production; be part of it: facebook.com/lakealliance
Every shot of this Clip was filmed with a GoPro Hero 3.
Click here to read more:
Windsurf Magazine
Magnificent Menegatti – the Interview
Out with the old, in with the new! Alberto......
Click here to read more:
Starboard News
Register now for the European Phantom 295 events!
The 2013 Raceboard Worlds Championships is......
Click here to read more:
Starboard News
Windbreeders with Steven van Broeckhoven, Phil Soltysiak and Max Matissek
Breeding wind. Steven, Phil and Max made the impossible possible.
Click here to read more:
continentseven.com
Video – Express Yourself with Nicolas Akgazciyan
Nicolas Akgazicyan, one of France's top......
Click here to read more:
Starboard News
VIDEO: Oda Johanne – Bonaire in 30 seconds
Norwegian female freestyle talent Oda Johanne continues her quest around the world, training and windsurfing and perhaps even entering a PWA event this year… She just posted a new blog update which includes this little snippet from her last session in Bonaire, where she spent a few weeks training and enjoying the Bonaire life. Now back at home Oda has scored a few sessions in the icy cold Scandinavian waters, including one that could have resulted in a fine over €1000 for disrupting some birds. Tell us your thoughts below, is there a spot near you that looks epic but you are restricted because of wildlife related laws?
Check out the pictures and Oda’s full report on her website – odajohanne.com
Click here to read more:
Boardseeker Windsurfing Magazine » | Boardseeker Windsurfing Magazine










































