newspodcast October 26, 2011
Sharks and Surfing- a documentary being made for the Wavescape Film Fest in December is busy becoming what it is destined to be- a pretty slick production featuring a host of shark experts, shark attack victims like Andrew Carter, and goebats like me who have spent way too much time in the water during the annual sardine run on the South coast of KZN every Winter. It also features Port St. Johns ripper Avuyile Siyavuya and Port Alfred’s Lungani Memani focusing on our experiences in the water surfing the East coast- they’re both good kids- busy growing up fast I was stoked to hang and surf with them a bit on the coast but the waves proved a little strong at times, but their spirits were stronger- except at New Pier 8 feet, you gota have more then a strong spirit to want to have anything to do with that! After a couple of weeks shooting, and an interview on East coast radio with shark lover Olivia Symcox they headed back to Holland to a dark edit- cave and haven’t emerged since! These pics are from their website surfingandsharks.com check it out the pics of us doing a shark dive on Aliwal Shoal are pretty wild! I still cant believe I did that- they wanted all three of us to paddle through the 100 strong pack of sharks and sit on our board dangling toe while Marc Addison filmed from below- probably one of the dumbest things I have ever done but I was happy to leave Avo and Lung’s on the boat their intentions quite clear! I remember sitting on my board just tryna breathe and not feel like sharkbait when I remembered the top of my black booties had this little grey area by my toes about the same size as a sardine- I wore the boots for a very fake sense of safety and man did that backfire! But we got the shots and I got the hell outa there still in one piece… a few weeks later Avo and I were cruising the coast looking for waves when we heard on the radio that an American researcher got chowed ‘researching’ on the same boat in the same area with those same sharks and lost his hand and leg below the knee- we both went cold- one of the dumbest things I’ve ever done- so far…

 check the little grey bits on my boots- talk about a bad idea...
 I even tried paddling with my fist clenched i was so paranoid about my little white hands looking tasty!
 AC having his say
 the boys weren't feeling it...
After a few weeks back in the Cape I saw some pretty epic conditions lining up for the coast on the charts and enlisted star shooter Ant Fox to fly down and try nail a few more ‘money shots’ and that we most certainly did…

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October 12, 2011
 January 17, 2011

Heluva thing these days in ‘die wille Wes Kaap’ there are no doubt more surfers here than the rest of S.A…what happened? Ten years ago this place was black wetsuits and blank boards – I guess it’s a cycle. I reckon the last time surfing was so huge in the Cape was the late 80’s hey? So those who complain (mostly speaking to myself here!) can only be grateful that the good years have come and gone, lucky for us there really are a lot of waves around here, it’s the culture, heritage and etiquette that needs to keep evolving…
Unfortunately it seems the demographic of the average surfer around here is not exactly your standard ‘life by the sea’ surfer but the kind that only got into it later – no dis-respect to them, it’s just that without a grommethood you miss out on a whole lot of the respect part of being apart of the ocean and our sub-culture. Surfers wax on about this very topic the world over, and I’m sure a lot of you out there have a lot to say, so what do you reckon we do about it?
When line-ups in and around the city bowl and South Peninsula have swelled to ridiculous proportions? Am I partly to blame as a struggling free-surfer? Or is it the surfshops, surfschools and raging trend infested surf industry lambasting us with images of girls in bikinis on waves, healthy living- all that stuff, unfortunately for me, this very machine im going on about sustains my surfing habits. I’ve sold out, but I still have a voice! So where are the groms? Down on the Patch in Llandudno the next generation has appeared- we just have to get their parents to sign a waiver first for some good old fashioned grom-abuse! The circle will become full again, groms with respect will pick up where the weekend warriors leave off, and maybe one day surfing will be uncool again and the line-ups will just be clogged up with kelp and thick swells!
 Icy kegs- more fun to drink?
Oh ya and next Sunday we will be rolling retro with RVCA and Vudu surf for an afternoon and evening riding boards from the past fifty years, the boys will be playing some music afters at the lifesaving club, and there will be a fire and cash bar so bring some chow and make an evening of it if you’ve got an old board that needs riding- come on down and check it out I believe Jordy and Wok are gona pull in as well as a bunch of other locals and pros like Roy Bryson, Liam Wood and Vudu team rider Elan it’s gona be a jol I just hope the waves aren’t like they were last weekend im actually gona check the charts now…yep- looks Southeast and smallish so we in- so pull in!!!
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podcastApril 25, 2010
 Non_violent_fisherman take on Mozambique
Life in Mozambique does not lend it self well towards maintaining an on-line audience so apologies all round for the delayed blogroll/age…things have been characteristically slow out here in East Africa since the waves stopped waving, but today there is swell and i’ve promised my self i’m a surfer again- I just hope the current stops currenting down the point I rode three waves this morning and came in broken!
 nymphos aboard the Nymph...
How’s Royden winning the Cold Water Classic hey- what a champ, Dave Richards bailed Scotland for some tropical reelers here in Mozam shooting with me and AVG, he flew straight to Brazil from here looking sweet for a good seeding what with the volcanic cloud of ash thingy trapping most of the world tour in Euroland-eish!
 good for something
Lilo ended up a little Mozam-bleak after losing his passport and after failing to take notice of the fact that when you enter a foreign country, no matter how small the airport is- you need to get a stamp…he found himself very close to spending a bit of time in an African jail but thanks to a little persuasion and guidance from the local crew(Dom King, Jao and Richie you guys are champs)and of course the token wad of cash he finally got on the plane toward J-bay. Shame is all I can say- his first photo trip, he loses his passport, Ipod and flight details on the first day, gets hardly any shots and quite literally has to buy his way out of the country- I hate to use the expression but This Is Africa- she takes no prisoners so there’s a lesson here- the other lesson I learnt is when there are waves- and AVG is amped to shoot- ride ‘em! This is the first time i’ve had the oppurtunity to shoot with the energizer bunny that himself- our first session was nearly five hours of shooting! I kept waiting for him to say something or pull the plug and when we finally got out he admitted the same thing- gota make hay while the sun shines hey…that we did.
 lurking down Frango beach side with Shonalan
For now, we’ve rented a sweet pozi with a glimpse of the line-up for May so if you know where I am-come visit! We plotting a bit of prospecting a thousand or so miles North in the Cabo Delgado province- truck rides and chappas, one board and the full camping set-up, feral time proper and if we find what I think we are gona find- it’ll be on like Donkey Kong and the ‘zag better send AVG here pronto!
 lurking Frango beach style with the angry snail, what a ride....
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April 13, 2010
Eish its been a bit of a blitskrieg flurry of shooting and missioning since AVG and the boys arrived…
Lilo got a tour of the town thanks to the local boys- when we woke him up this morning he looked like he’d mummified himself in his mosquito net- classic, South winds have been a bit of a plague early mornings but it seems to ease up during the day with the sun- this is the first significant Winter surge so sand is packing itself nicely on the points courtesy of the South North current winding- yesterday was most productive, grey skies made for a moody light, AVG was floating on one my boards with his long lense nailing shots, Lilo was getting to know the reef a little better and Dave took got one from way up the point i thought he was gona have to some exploring in the caves underwater to get back out!
Right now the sun is shining, studio’s open, the boys are starting to shuffle and pace- time to go spend some more time in the office…  the brothers checkin out the new zag  little backdoor pitty  South wind morning bust up North
 March 28, 2010
 I love this shot...
Sitting in Hotel Tofo Mar feeling the colonial vibes with a Bloody Mary, some Iggy Pop, and the sea breeze. One swell down and one on the way- AVG, Lyle Meek and Frank are on their way Thursday- good timing methinks… We’re going on a boat called the Barco Onda as soon as they arrive a hundred or so nautical miles up the coast goosechasing some slabs and an endless point that’s been calling for years- we living in the sticks proper- i hope the accommodation suits our pro’s- living off the fire and no running water… We’ve been loitering between sessions on our friends balcony overlooking the line-up- the best of both worlds i guess- there’s nothing like a shower after a surf the sand’s been so hot on the run down and back from the beach we literally cook our little footsies!!
 drive by fishing...
The other day a giant Rock Salmon swam past us on a local’s head so we bought it- easiest fishing in the world! We cooked that guy, braai’d him, fried him, sashimi’d him and there was still heaps left over. We then hit the beach for a good old fashioned beach party- i strummed till my fingers bled and we sang ourselves raw- Pura Vida, with a little too much Tipo Tinto rum in between…

I was talking to my brother Sean about the Malaria here- apparently, in the Tradisionale which are the traditional healers of this country there is no known cure which hints at where the Malaria came from in the first place- us?
 drive by
Mozambique got it’s name from Moa Al Habiq one of the foremost Arab settler/invaders who resided on Mozambique island as Sheik. The Arabs only came as far as Inhambane- which is where we are now, before the Arabs the Chinese were here way back around the twelfth century. After the Arabs came the Portuguese who have their own bloody history- the big question is: who brought the malaria?
 yep, we have been surfing...
“Having once been robbed by a gang of christian marauders, one is not so timorous of the heathen.†David Livingstone, March 2, 1856, Tete, Mozambique
 roadtripping
These days its the South Africans who lead the charge in the re-settlement of this fine land, and the government has realized they’re good for something- development! Whole tracts of land along the coast have been hung, drawn and quartered in the name of tourism. Everything from eco-lodges to square mansions all on top of the poor sand dunes! The other presence to be noted here are the Chinese- who are back in force, they offered very kindly to fix the roads, provided free electricity for the people, (who the government promptly started charging everyone for) all in return for fishing concessions of course! Nothing for mahala hey but still, the seas blue, and the waves keep on waving, the people of Mozambique are the friendliest people i’ve encountered and Afrika our mother just keeps on keeping on!
 our other balcony
all photos by Dantrona, stay tuned for a slideshow and movie from the last swell…
 good for something...
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podcastMarch 16, 2010
 good for something...
I now realize how much im just ‘chucking it out there’ online with this blog, and try my hardest to stay unaffected by the comments that sometimes de-construct me so un-aptly- im no angel I admit- but im living this life as a professional freesurfer- whatever that is- and trust me, I’ve given it a lot of thought! If I could tell you how much money I’ve made or get paid as opposed to what I’ve put in- eish!! That’s a heavy one- socially and financially incapable of maintaining a relationship something really is going wrong I mean I know I’m good for something right- but how much good?
Two things I’d like to point out that mean a lot to me are respect and heritage…especially in our surfing culture, as far as im concerned that is where It all leads back to- I respect the people out there who support me and my surfing/travel habits, I have heritage enough through my life traveling and surfing to know what I say or publish in the public domain is there for the picking- so once again I’d like to give thanks to all the mense out there who have been chucking their two-bits in on this blog. It has helped my writing so much and I promise to keep uploading stuff as long as you people all over the inter-web keep nailing it too- hopefully I will find some more pertinent themes as I travel into East Africa addressing issues we as surfers often just roll up the window at and keep driving past- things like the social in-equalities in this world, the rich just get richer and the poor work harder! I am not complaining about this life I have been described as given to ‘on a platter’- I too have felt the sting of financial strain and political hate- ten years ago I was in London slaving twelve hour nightshifts of demolition work to get my first trip to Indo as well, I turned thirty and finally started getting paid to surf! I still cant get a credit card these daze because I’ve got negative credit rating- which means no accounts, cellphone bills nor residential address- Bob Dylan said: â€To live outside of the law, you have to be honestâ€
So what I aim to keep doing with this blog and my writing- is keep it honest and stay on the road, grateful yet aware of where I am in the swirl of things, constantly looking to make a difference no matter how small wherever I am, and hopefully bring back the stories to you in front of that screen to feel what you want with- again thanks so much for all the comments, I hope you all getting waves, or getting to waves sooner then later- like I wrote above next stop Mozambique- gona do the Buzzlightyear: “To infinity and beyond!â€
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March 11, 2010
Eish I finally make it home- 10 flights, a busride or twelve, and plenty roadtripping – all for what? A few shots in some magazines and some half-hearted scrawls in my blog and maybe an article or two in a couple magazines? Time to shake things up a bit- not to mention the fact that my sponsor’s budget is already dry and now I have to wait for the mags to go to print before any photo incentives or articles are invoiced and paid for!
Now lets not take this rant of mine as a complaint, but I have to say as an aspiringly-conscious person approaching a new-era on our planet- lets face it- flying is so ‘last year’ every time I get on a long stinking flight I ask my self- “Why am I doing this?†Smelly feet, cramped seats and disinterested air hostesses hopelessly unaware of how ‘thirsty’ I can be on long flights- only to arrive somewhere and climb into a air-connditioned taxi and drive through Carbon Monoxide infested streets, arriving at the beach with trash all over- (in the line-up and on the beach) Am I really living the dream? Or is the only option left a Donkey cart with Bruce Gold rolling nowhere slowly but at least stepping out of the melee that modern society has left us living amongst- I mean aren’t we as surfers supposed to be the ultimate escapists?
yet we are so embroiled in society’s toils and ignorant of the environmental pressure pushing this planet past the point of recognition- the world as we know it has changed completely- not only is everything so damn expensive it’s borderline ridiculous! Living the life of a freesurfer I get to see and feel the extent of the pressure we are putting on this fine earth- be it ignorance of plastic on far-away islands, conveniently swept up with the coconut husks and natural fibres then chucked in the sea- out of sight out of mind- or the pressure of traffic on the Island of Bali- how many scooters with dodgy two-stroke engines, trucks with dodgy exhausts, people puffing cigarettes everywhere! What are we actually dealing with? Well, on the busride with Bruce Gold from East London yesterday, I decided to get to the bottom of it all- and calculate my own carbon footprint after four countries, ten or so flights, a dozen bus rides and who knows what else- all for a few waves shining glossy at you in a magazine..?
Well, all that carbon-footprint kak is hella confusing so I did my own bita math- Durban-Indo-Papua New Guinea-Indo-Joburg-Cape Town- East London those are just the flights! A good 30 or so thousand miles as the crow flies – never mind driving all over Bali, I mean all over! Missions by scooter, truck and bus all over Papua, and of course all the food, plastic wrappers, and life’s little luxuries in between- HAIBO! That’s a lot of junk to have accrued, a bunch of miles to have traveled and a loada crap to have left behind! So the bottom line then? I really don’t know- how much is enough? We are fed images of empty line-ups advertising easy holidays – easy for you maybe- but what about ya kids or their kids? Will they be able to hit the Mentawiis on a luxury boat trip? I think we all have to slow down a bit- maybe the donkey-cart ain’t such a bad idea? Maybe set-up shop closer to home and be on it when the waves arrive rather then chase them all over the planet? Or move to Indo with a wad of cash, a taste for Indo-women and village life? Chuck it all and bail to some poor country and try do something positive maybe? The bottom line then is to make the effort to be that little bit more aware? Think twice, make a sacrifice and you may not feel it straight away but like the ripples of fresh swell those thoughts might eventually gain enough momentum to give someone else a ‘ride’ further down-the-line?
Thanks to google for the hopelessly confusing search on various sites pertaining to the calculation of one’s carbon-footprint(whatever…)
 Would the world or this wave be a better place without me travelling across the planet for hidings like this?
 November 11, 2009
 East african runway
What is it about African countries that makes you feel so grateful to be alive and kicking when you get back home? Is it the likelihood of tropical disease? The endless hours driving crazy roads, fake police living off bribes and roadblocks? Nah I’ll tell you- it’s the realization that even though you are stoked to be back- you know deep down inside you wish you could just get back there!!
We got stranded in Richards Bay for two days tryna get my bankcard that was swallowed in Inhambane and here’s the thing- all over Africa, her people have been known to bend over backwards to help you- back in SA at the Nedbank I felt like a frikken refugee- they needed this and that because my drivers license melted on the dashboard after two days of travel- I try explain I need access to my account so I can put petrol to get home to Port Shepstone to get my card re-issued but NO. My controller says you need an affidavit. So off I go to the Police Station.
Captain Xulu listens to my storey, hands me a sheet of paper but no pen- I ask her if I can use here- NO, I ask everyone in the whole police station they all ignore me tryna look important eventually I raise both hands in the air and shout to the station commander who eventually obliges me with his pen. I fill out the form and hand it back- the dude doesn’t even read what I wrote, he just scrawls what must have been his signature, stares up at the clock for a full minute- then writes completely the wrong time- incredulous, I repeat my mantra œWinning without fighting and trudge on down to the bank only to find there’s pretty much nothing in my account as the banktellers stare down at me like a criminal- these are the reasons why I simultaneously love and hate our wonderful country- I left the bank restraining myself from losing it all together and driving straight back over the border- what has our country come to? Either way this is supposed to be a blog about surfing so lemme start again.
We surfed crystal, tropical peelers eighteen out of twenty one daze, my bro Sean caught a Sailfish on a ski and we mauled that thing voraciously after two weeks of beans and rice- living off the fire and surfing in fullsuits and hats the sun was so strong, we dived, drank Laurentina Pretas, made fast friends with the locals, jammed, slept, read and worked hard to stay cool in the shade- smooth sailing, pura vida-living off the sea and out the trees what more could a freesurfer mullet need? To never have to go home to our nation of mall rats and fat cats living out their materialistic false fantasies-sies! Is all I can say- get me past the border- any border as long as there’s an ocean¦
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