We join two icons of New Zealand and Australian surfing, now mentors and industry leaders, on an old-fashioned road trip to wherever the wind may blow them.
Jason Falconridge
Back in the 80s and early 90s, whenever you picked up an NZ Surf publication, it seemed to be full of the good times antics and power surfing of Taddy. Early on Taddy learned that the party times, although good times, weren’t gonna build a life beyond riding waves every day, and he began to forge a long career with O’Neill that would see him climb the ladder to the point where he was the big boss man of NZ. These days Taddy is committed to the job of running the ship, yet there’s no doubt the grommet inside still lives and when given the chance to hit the road, his heart begins to skip a beat and the ‘Good ole days’ yarns begin to flow.
“Road trips are the pinnacle and essence of surfing in New Zealand. With the two-coast selection process, from anywhere you are pretty much guaranteed to surf every day of the year depending on where you live and how much of a road demon you are. This is the great aspect of living in New Zealand, we have the two big islands scenario that basically receives swell from all directions and wind variances from all directions. We are all ‘Road Warriors’ unless you live at the beach.
Esta historia es de la edición Issue 184 de NZ SURFING MAGAZINE.
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Esta historia es de la edición Issue 184 de NZ SURFING MAGAZINE.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
Trigger Finger
Ask any top surf coach and the two elements they will concentrate on and recommend are a solid bottom turn and being able to develop speed - as they say, speed is your friend, and many of the best surfers on the planet also happen to be the fastest surfers.
THESHAPESHIFTER ROGER HALL
Ladies and Gentleman Choose Your Weapons: How to decide on your next surfboard.
The Olympians
Over 50 years ago surfing’s greatest ambassador of all time, the legendary Duke Kahanamoku, had a vision that one day surfing would become an Olympic sport.
The Gladiator Pit
Born from the era of the Roman Empire, armed combatants known as gladiators would enter the arena also known as the Gladiator Pit to face up against other gladiators, animals and criminals in fierce battle in what was seen as entertainment often ending in death to one or the other.
Rising Grom Asia Braithwaite
There are those young athletes that get into sport who possess natural talent, even the X-factor, yet as the road is usually a far-too-easy passage, they either take it for granted or don’t push beyond their capabilities.
Licence To Score
The adventures behind the wheel of Mount Grom Luke Griffin.
Land Of The Long Lefts
It was the year 1966 and the sport of surfing was sweeping the world.
Theshapeshifter - Roger Hall
Ever heard of a Mini Simmons?
The Road Less Travelled
Take a look at a map of our coastline and you will see thousands of kilometres of coastline, 15,000 to be almost exact, making it the 9th longest in the world.
Then & Now
It was the early 80s and the world of sport was evolving rapidly.