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photodad2001
January 23rd, 2010, 05:02 PM
I wanted to see what everyone's background on here was. I guess I'd have to say that I was originally a skateboarder. I've surfed, and started snowboarding as a "jibber" or "freestyler", then evolved into a carver. I've skied a handful of times and find minimal enjoyment from it. Wanted to know if others had similar backgrounds or if everyone else was different.

b0ardski
January 23rd, 2010, 05:26 PM
1st and only ski lesson under the lights at Mt Spokane in '73
3rd time skiing got a spiral fracture at 49 degrees north in '75
1st season pass at Schwietzer in '84, 60+ days, skied my 1st black diamonds
1st snow board was a lightly used '81 experimental performer bought in'85 but skied & tele'd till I bought my 1st "modern" snowboard an '89 K2 TX and started using hard boots a year later.

I still ski occasionally

Gecko
January 23rd, 2010, 05:39 PM
skateboarding in the early 70's, surfing and snowboarding in the early 80's

gus
January 23rd, 2010, 07:41 PM
started skating around same time.
skiied with parents a couple of times at age 4 (but that does not count)
skiied once around eighteen.
started snowboarding age 21.
hardboots two years ago.

Fastskiguy
January 23rd, 2010, 07:45 PM
started skiing in 1974, it's still my first love :)

kinpa
January 23rd, 2010, 07:56 PM
I started skiing in 1979 when I was 8 years old at Killington, VT where in rained on Christmas day! My bother, who is 2 years older than me also learned then. I spent my whole childhood keeping up with him. Guess why I learned to snowboard? But, I did show my brother up in that area!!!!!! :)

Zone
January 23rd, 2010, 08:02 PM
None of the above.
Windsurfing circa 1979-80

utahcarver
January 23rd, 2010, 08:08 PM
Surfing at age 14, skating at age 15, Wintersticking at age 18 (circa winter 1977).

Mark

photodad2001
January 23rd, 2010, 08:55 PM
None of the above.
Windsurfing circa 1979-80

You'd think I would have put that in the options!:eek::o

Steve Prokopiw
January 23rd, 2010, 09:35 PM
a quarter Russian,an eighth English and an eighth Greek.

Oh, and I started skating at age ten but always felt born to snowboard and started at age 15 on a 5 1/2 foot plank of oak which I warped at the ends and screwed on two car seat belts and steel fins.Really.1980/81

Seraph
January 23rd, 2010, 09:35 PM
Skiing since I was 10, pursued it obsessively and passionately, and became bored with it by the time I was in my 30's and never thought I would go on the mountain again...that is until I tried snowboarding and was reborn.

And just for the record, I used to do longtrack, short track, and inline speedskating, and dropping into the corners at the start of the crossover feels alot like the initiation of the carve, especially the 500m and short track.

johnasmo
January 23rd, 2010, 10:42 PM
Skateboarding as a kid back in the 1970s. Urethane wheels were the latest thing. Didn't learn to ski until late 20's. Didn't learn to board until late 30's. Surfing snow on softies and freestyle boards got me hooked bad then. Hardboot carving is something to do between dumps.

scrutton
January 23rd, 2010, 11:07 PM
skiing first. On first day of skiing I saw snowboarding and decided it was what I wanted to do. Started snowboarding (plates, ski boots w Burton Air) for last 2 months of season.

Later that year I started skateboarding.

Windsurfing was tried briefly during that year also; and later became somewhat of an obsession.

energyrail
January 24th, 2010, 12:33 AM
started skiing at seven. the patience to learn how to slide the wrong direction probably wouldn't have happened till my 20's. I started snowboarding soft and hard at 25, after my skiing got to the point I felt good about it. Always wanted to ride alpine.
I guess my other background is Slalom Waterskiing
now 27

BlueB
January 24th, 2010, 12:54 AM
I was going to say the "baby shoes with buckles", but then I remembered that at those days the kids' ski boots were still leather and laces:

BlueB
January 24th, 2010, 05:36 AM
Half Ukranian, a quarter Russian, an eighth English and an eighth Greek.
Try this:
1/2 Croatian, 1/8 Serb, 1/8 Hungarian, 1/8 Itallian, 1/8 Czech (of probable Jewish descent), raised as Yugoslavian, and wait for the best, South African citizen prior to becoming Canadian.

lowrider
January 24th, 2010, 05:54 AM
Started on hard boots riding up rope tow without skis late 60's early 70's:AR15firin

Jonny
January 24th, 2010, 05:58 AM
Skier since 1961, eventually PSIA intructor, sometime racer. I still ski about half the time, especially if there's serious pitch involved. Much better skier than rider, in terms of versatility - I'll come down pretty much anything on skis while on a board I have to be more conservative.

Windsurfing since 1981 or so.

First tried a board after hours in a foot of fresh at Bromley around 1980 - a couple of brothers were offering good skiers a ride on something they'd cooked up - kinda like a Snurfer but wth no rope from the nose - wish I'd invested...

First snowboard was a Burton Backhill (all wood, no P-Tex or metal edges), quickly replaced in 1987 by a Cruzer (beveled swallowtail, single center fin which I removed) - still have that board for surfinging around in the backyard - no bindings on it.

First hardboot board a Hot Logical, around 1990 I think.

Seraph
January 24th, 2010, 07:59 AM
I was going to say the "baby shoes with buckles", but then I remembered that at those days the kids' ski boots were still leather and laces:

Now that is old school. The first time I went skiing with my dad he had a circa late 1960's K2 spider sabich model (the tri color ones) with cubco bindings.

My first pair of skis were Rossi Jr. SmashJ's. Favorite has to be split between the K2 Comp 710 (195 cm) and K2 Comp 810's (205 cm) circa 1982. Look Bindings and Lange XLR Banshees (cold toes, but awesome performance).

First Black diamond...Lucifer's leap at Butternut in Massachusetts.

aaaah the good old days.....Anyone remember the knee high ski boot craze?

Neil Gendzwill
January 24th, 2010, 08:42 AM
Skis starting in early 70s, skateboarding since 1976, softies starting 1986, switch to hardboots in 1990. Still skating from time to time.

SEJ
January 24th, 2010, 08:47 AM
Skate board and BIG TIME water ski as a kid. (Still water ski) Discovered snow skiing in my early 20s, Boarding in mid 30s, Hardboots in mid 40s, about ten years ago.

Hans
January 24th, 2010, 08:54 AM
Started sailing (= also gliding) in 1972. Before that I did some monoski waterskiing.

Istvan
January 24th, 2010, 09:16 AM
This is me explaining correct EC technique to my sister back in '76 in my 3 buckles..... (well, back then I was goofy...) she just had no clue 'bout it..... :ices_ange

Chucklebeast
January 24th, 2010, 10:17 AM
I grew up surfing in Hawaii and still chase waves around the world, but fell in love with snow at age 30. Started on both types of boots cause I got lucky and had a friend with extra alpine gear:cool:

Dave Pushee
January 24th, 2010, 10:50 AM
Born in 1947 in NH and raised in NH. What else could I have started with bu skiing?

Dida
January 24th, 2010, 04:55 PM
In '96 or '97 my dad took me to try snowboarding (I was 8 or 9 yeras old). I was excited about softboots and how cool they are compared to hardboots skiers use. And I was pi**ed when all the softboots at the shop were rented and they only had hardboots. But what the hell, I tried it with hardboots. And at the end of the day, my dad reserved some softboots for me for tomorrow.
The next day, I was so excited about trying softboots, "this is real snowboarding", I said...
and then...
"what is this POS? I cant control the board in this slippers...". I hated softboots so much that since then, I never ever stepped into them again.
I just thank God that the shop didn't have softboots the first day I came there. Maybe I wouldn't experience the joy of the Dark side, ever. :angryfire

So, all in all, I'm buckled up from day one. :1luvu:

b0ardski
January 24th, 2010, 06:20 PM
"what is this POS? I cant control the board in this slippers...". I hated softboots so much that since then, I never ever stepped into them again.


yeah, old ski boot liners in sorels didn't cut the mustard an laces and straps are still laces & straps.

My buddy Russ has a motto I really like;
Real men were stiffies

boarderboy
January 24th, 2010, 06:33 PM
since '64. (19)

BB

energyrail
January 24th, 2010, 06:52 PM
wow some of you are really dating yourself

snowboardworm
January 24th, 2010, 07:22 PM
"Dating yourselves" says the young fella from dawson creek.

i started skiing in the middle 70's a couple times a yr. i never really enjoyed it but hated being beaten by a sport. xc skier, slalom water ski, speed skater and softboot boarder 1999. loved the sport even tho it gave me a really bad concussion on the 3rd day. bought a helmet for the next season and haven't looked back. started hard bootin and skiing march 2009. love the control and speed that ski boots and hard boots give, but it is still filler for between snowfalls and when the groomers are nice.

photodad2001
January 25th, 2010, 12:07 AM
Not sure about the percentages however....

I have English blood. My mother's maiden name is Severn and if you follow our history there is a Severn Castle and coat of arms, also the Severn River in England (not sure if direct decent). Great grandmother on mother's side is Cherokee. Father's side German (grandfather was in WWII in a U-boat... US, he came to the states as a child) and also Irish and a splash of Ukraine.

jpenn
January 25th, 2010, 03:00 AM
Snurfing in early 70's, then skiing, skateboarding. Took some time off for marraige and kids, then skiing again and then softboots in 95 and hardboots in 06. Rails were impossible to learn without breaking some part of me.

boarderboy
January 25th, 2010, 08:19 AM
wow some of you are really dating yourself

I've always found myself to be a congenial and, above all, Cheap Date ....

BB

Dave ESPI
January 25th, 2010, 01:05 PM
The last option is actualy closer than all the others. :eek:
I had to have some lowerleg braces when I was young because my ankles were not growing properly. I had braced ankles and orthotic arch supports until I was 6 years old. I was blessed with super stong ankles that later in life became a godsend with snowboarding as I tend to ride with a lot of ankle based movements.

I rode a skateboard for a little while, and had a nasty spill that took out a few teeth and required stitches in my chin, but it did not keep me from snowboarding later that year in 1995, and the rest well.... been boarding ever since.

For the past few years, I've done "carving" on the lake with Jetskis in the summer.
AS to my bloodlines, I'm Black Irish.

Monster Carver
January 25th, 2010, 09:31 PM
Skiing 1969
Surf 1976
Snowboarding 1988
carving 1990

NateW
January 25th, 2010, 10:24 PM
Born 1972 (German, Scandinavian, more or less)
Skateboarding 1978ish, kinda (plastic banana board... no tricks)
Skiing 1982
Skateboarding (for real) 1984 or so (ramps, ollies, etc)
Made a snowboard in shop class in 1985 or so, rode it twice, it sucked.
Started snowboarding for real in 1988 or so.
Haven't skied in about 3 seasons, but I vow to again, eventually. Need boots.

steamboatrailer
January 26th, 2010, 09:59 AM
Started skating on clay wheels,then came Sims Pure Juice wheels.I'm sure a few can remember these.Soft boots(1984-90).Hard boots to present.I cut my teeth snowboarding on Berthoud Pass,riding with Butch Bendell and Mike Troutman.These guys were making thermoplastic boards ,ULTIMATE CONTROL BOARDS(UCB).

queequeg
January 26th, 2010, 10:17 AM
I started skating when I lived in Tokyo. My parents wouldn't let me so I borrowed spare decks from friends, usually a vision Mark Gonzales, Psycho or a powell McGill. My first deck was a Vision Grigley that my uncle bought me against their will as a reward for good grades/behaviour (I was a hellraiser ... and he was my favorite!), with G&S trucks and Sawblades, which my parents STILL didn't want me riding ... I used to sneak it out of the house. Sometimes when they were away at a party I would skate out on the balcony (we had this enormous balcony on the 14th floor, it was really fun to skate there, but I would always get in trouble for leaving marks on the floor).

Snowboarding was much the same: I started out on borrowed boards, Burton Elites, Burton Cruise's, and a Kemper Mini-Rampage. Once my boarding school allowed it, I started renting snowboards at Mt.Sunapee during weekly school ski trips .. that was usually a Free 5 or a Free 6 (I saw a Free series board this weekend at Stratton - took me back!). My first board was an Avalanche Kick Freestyle 165 Damian with incredibly lame wintersurf bindings (PAINFUL!), I saved all summer to buy it. Ripped those bindings out of the deck at least five times. Thing looked like swiss cheeze by the time I was done with it. I remember trying to carve on that board ... I kept seeing pictures of alpine riders in transworld (back when they covered us) and finally saw some dude carving at Temple Mtn in NH (there were a bunch of carvers there) and bought my first PJ 6 with that summer's earnings. I've been in plates ever since :-D.

carvedog
January 26th, 2010, 12:21 PM
I didn't see a category for me.

Which is: I tried to ski but it sucked in so many ways, I needed to find a better way to enjoy winter.

I would not say that I was a skier. I did not have much proficiency at it and while it was better than staying home on the couch - at times it wasn't much fun.

eastcoasticerider
January 26th, 2010, 02:44 PM
The kids in our neighborhood started back in 63.we rode those neat metal wheel skateboards down some hairy Pittsburgh topography. They actually let off sparks at night.....bearings meltdown.......we brought the boards back from a California trip.......then built more from rink rollerskates.....

teach
January 27th, 2010, 04:55 PM
Skateboarding in mid 70s in midwest led to desire to mount little skis in place of wheels to ride on snow (back before global warming, we had full snow cover the whole winter). Finally got the idea to turn a small toboggan into a stand-up steerable snow vehicle with some "air shooms" and a small fin. Saw the photos of Tom Sims and Lonnie Toft in Skateboarder on "skiboards" and wrote to Sims asking how to get one. They asked for a few dollars postage and sent me what I guess was a prototype. That made my winter, and the next!

John Gilmour
January 27th, 2010, 05:41 PM
A roller skater.... at 17 months old (1965)... My mom hated dragging strollers in NYC (ever try to shop at Bloomingdales on a Saturday with a stroller in the 1970's???) ... she walked everywhere....and dragged me...

I did ski early at age 3, I was skiing at Stowe... and by 4 or 5 I was at Aspen/Snowmass for its grand opening..(Yes I have photos to prove all of this)

Skateboarding... I embraced Rad pads after my first deck .... a Wayne Brown Kicktail with Sure-grips and road riders 4's every deck I have ever owned since then has had tilt risers of some sort... until I started hanging out with Peter Verdone...

http://www.peterverdonedesigns.com/pvdtrucks.htm

These are the only trucks I ride without tilt risers..


Bought my first Slalom skateboard in 1974 Fibreflex 30" pro slalom w/ camber with Trackers and road rider 4's, then 28" Henry Hester cutaway w/ OJ superjuice and Bennett Pro Ad -Tracs, followed by Sims Slalom Full nose (Made by Bob Turner of Turner Summer Ski for Sims) with Tracker Full tracks and Kryptonics CS- 62mm Orange in front and CS-62mm Reds in the rear. Slalom and downhill skateboarding were my favorite sports as a child. I set some insane high speed slalom courses in the 1970's down cat hill in Central park...against traffic....

Snurfers- rode them in 1976. Owned my first set of Skis in 1976, barely used 'em. Started skiing again in 1982.


Did it all help with learning snowboarding??? Not one bit. I got beat up....the 3 fins and lack of highbaks and sidecut on my Sims FE 150 ...At least it had screwed in metal edges... just made frozen granular impossible to ride.

I made my first highbacks out of soccer shin guards which I shoe gooed together (To increase their stiffness and resistance to tearing) and put a skateboard spacer block on it and multiple holes because I did not know how much lean was appropriate.. I did copy the lean of my Koflach Valuga 4000 lites (a Ski randonee Boot) as a reference (I had already gone to hard boots- thought softboots crippled your performance and Saw it as a main reason why TOM SIMS won races on his Hardshell Koflachs... followed also by Tom Burt and Damian Saunders (Avalanche)) and wanted something to use with soft boots while I sent my original pair of hard shells back (The original pair I ordered was a full size too large ..I actually had to become a Koflach dealer to order them- though I got'em at wholesale). I was never happy with the performance of my proto highback.. in part because the buckles were fastex clips... and I could never get them tight enough on my LL bean Boots- I got bone bruises on top of my feet from the fastex clips that took 20-25 years to go away.

I think I sold 6 Sims Snowboards in my first year as their East Coast Rep...and perhaps 15 total in three years...lol... You took such a beating learning...and unbelievable beating....on East Coast scratch.. I never thought it would ever get popular.

Heritage...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visigoths

nearly half...

part Comanche indian

the rest is Chinese.. so I guess German/Chinese mostly..

groovastic
January 28th, 2010, 11:37 AM
This is me explaining correct EC technique to my sister back in '76 in my 3 buckles..... (well, back then I was goofy...) she just had no clue 'bout it..... :ices_ange
:biggthump
:lol::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol:

carver
January 29th, 2010, 08:06 AM
One of the first pro surfers. Hap Jacobs rep at first surf trade show in 1959. Yeah, big deal, free surfboards. Started skiing in 1959. Many of the surf guys got into skiing then. Many raced and got real good at it. Snowboard in 1992. Alpine in 1999. Yee haaa! To think a little more on this. Being part of the surf mat rats at 22nd st in Hermosa Beach from 49 to 52 or 53? Then to surfing, which was not to big of transition because we were standing up on our mats. For you skate board guys, it started in front of my house on 25th and Silverstrand in Hermosa Beach. None of us can remember who took the box off the 2x4. We went to a 1x6 real quick and as they say, the rest is history.

C5 Golfer
January 29th, 2010, 10:06 AM
It all started back in the 16th or 17th century when my GreatX8Grandfather was carving around the family Castle in the Alsace area in what is now known as France. He was the first to mount his boots to a long metal bread pan with bindings made out of worn out Lederhosen and broken cow bells. Please make note of “metal bread pan” -- I believe he was the first to use “metal” on a very early version of what is now known as a snowboard. He was pretty much a snowbum until 1689 when Louis XIV came along and destroyed his ski Castle and sent him riding into Prussia. See link to the family Castle.

http://www.ot-lembach.com/site_Fleckenstein/index_angls.htm

Not much is known after this expulsion from the slopes until my Great Grandfather left Prussia in 1860 with 3 metal snowboards and immigrated to the USA into the fine State of Iowa. He found flat land everywhere, no place to ride so he removed the archaic bindings and used these pans to display watches and jewelry in his newly formed watch repair business. He had a son who followed in his footsteps of watch repair and inherited none of the family athletic genes of Alsace – he did not even ice skate. As he grew older he married a fine young woman named Eda and fathered a son – my father - who shed the watch repair desire and became a photographer, married a fine woman named Marjorie from close by farming community. In 1947 they had a 2nd son and named him C5 Golfer. I grew up in western Iowa where I ice skated 5X a week and rode my heavy steel Schwinn bike in the deep snow. In 1967 driving a beautiful red 63 Pontiac to the finer State of Washington found this Great Pacific Northwest was the place to live for the rest of my life. For the next 30 years I bought and raced several Autos and 4X4 Jeeps – ate many suppers on the greasy decks of Chevy small block motors. During this time I fathered two children who during the education process enrolled in several ski and snowboard schools. I could not understand the desire to put a couple of sticks on your feet and freeze to death. At the ripe old age of 50 my son, bless his heart, kept after me about taking him to the slopes with this thing called a snowboard. Being the good dad that I was – I gladly took him up to the Pass where he boarded with friends while I watched. He and his sister kept after me to try snowboarding with them so that Christmas day 13 years ago I took them up on it. After more falls on my A$$ than I can remember – pretty much beat up - I cooked them dog food for dinner that night. Being a Stubborn European I said to myself “Self, get back on that board” and so I did.

Hope you enjoyed my heritage story.

DjulezD
January 29th, 2010, 12:56 PM
I chose surfer because as a little boy I was fascinated by surfers and waves, but so far I probably spent more time on the slopes than in the water. Overall I spent probably more time roller skating than any other "sliding" sport. There should be a "all of the above" or "else" answer.

My recollection is not very accurate, since I almost started everything at the same time, around 9 or 10. First was windsurfing, then surfing, then rollerskating and skiing. Rollerskating on a daily basis. Skiing every weekend or so. Windsurfing more often than surfing, because waves needed family holidays to be seen and caught. Skate came in the mix at some point but I went higher above the vert on eight than four weels and you go way fast on roller skates, on flat, downhill or towed.

Started monoskiing at the end of the eighties and snowboarding a few years later. HB and asym of course. SB came later, with the "freeride" time. Then I rediscovered alpine carving through BoL six years ago.
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SEJ
January 29th, 2010, 07:51 PM
C5, great story. Do you still have some of that vintage metal?

ARCrider
January 31st, 2010, 01:44 AM
you didn't have lace up ski boots as an option
and Arlberg bindings.
skied from '65,
waterskied in the 70's
windsurfed in the 80's
snowboarding from 2000
snowkiting 2007
kiteboarding 2008

Kiting is the thrill.

bjvircks
January 31st, 2010, 11:59 AM
In the early '60's I started as a 'do it yourself' kind of skier at about age 7 on the flatlands of northeast South Dakota.

There was a beer distributer's facility across the street from my house and in the winter they would clear the lot of snow for the semi trucks to come and go. The snow would be piled in a hill about 10 ft high... not more than 100 feet from our front door. I found a pair of tiny wooden toy skis and poles in our basement and just had to try them. The snowpile was steep and very irregular so I made a set of tracks down the side as best I could. After falling many times and getting thoroughly frustrated I turned my back on my destiny.

Many years later in '78 a college friend, for $25, sold me an old set of skis with Cubco bindings and a pair of ankle high leather boots. I drove to Wausau, Wisconsin (where I had relatives I could stay with) so I could teach myself to ski at Rib Mountain. Being the quintesential know-it-all I went up the hill with absolutely no instructions or assistance whatsoever. I still consider myself very lucky that I walked away from those days intact. In '80 I bought real ski gear, graduated, moved to Minneapolis and took lessons. I spent a lot less time skiing when I started to fly hang gliders in Mpls and later southern California.

Then in '88 came the return to the midwestern flatlands when we moved to Iowa from SoCal. Skiing and flying were essentially over... or so I thought. Divorce started in '99 helped me to reestablish who I really was as a person and allowed me to return to the activities I enjoyed. This was ('00) when my son started to show some interest in boarding. I bought him a used Kemper with bindings. He thrashed around a bit but lost interest. At the beginning of the next season I said 'what the heck' and tried it out. I was hooked on riding right from the start. Whenever I went on a trip with my area ski club I was the 'token' snowboarder.

In '05 I was complaining to a coworker that I was frustrated with the way my feet got to hurting in softboots because I would strap in so tight in order to get more control. He said 'There's this place online called "Bomber" where they snowboard in something like ski boots." And the rest fell into place like dominoes. I still do a lot of skiing with wife 2.0 She skis and rides softies, but this year at WTF'10 she tried hardbooting (sort of... ski boots)

And so... this was my journey to carving. Where to next? Who knows.

C5 Golfer
February 1st, 2010, 04:45 PM
C5, great story. Do you still have some of that vintage metal?

Nope -- I think my Grandmother melted it all down during the Great Depression for wheels she needed for her skateboard. But then the wheels did not last very long... she sold the set up and bought a carbon bike frame.

b0ardski
February 1st, 2010, 09:34 PM
Being half hillbilly and half norseman, and born on a snowy day in montana my, destiny was a given.

softbootsailer
February 13th, 2010, 07:15 PM
Makaha Surfing Championships 1965
Aspen 1985...:eek:
Saw these two pics together about 1995 and was amazed at similarity.
Cold Surf is not just a Slogan...but a state of Mind... :)

photodad2001
February 13th, 2010, 09:59 PM
Makaha Surfing Championships 1965
Aspen 1985...:eek:
Saw these two pics together about 1995 and was amazed at similarity.
Cold Surf is not just a Slogan...but a state of Mind... :)

Something that I feel is being lost in these sports is "Style". The personality of your riding. Things have gotten so technical that the individuality and personal expression is taking a back seat to pushing the limits (both jibtastic and carv-oh-lishious). A couple days ago I was riding with my daughter in fairly good conditions but it was jammed packed as there were 29 tour busses in the lot (counted them) filled with highschool and jr. high groups. My daughter and I (after the colision fest from a few weeks ago) found a nice blue run that was pretty much ignored by everyone else since it didn't go under any lifts (no show offs) and there were no "features" on it. We were just "having fun" and I was being a bit silly, over exagerating my "effortlessness" by making big swooping arcs with arms down and relaxed with a bit of head tilt complemented by some hip thrusts like I was listening to some soulfull hits from the 70's. I wish I would have had a big pick in my back pocket and a rainbow colored head band on.

SunSurfer
February 13th, 2010, 10:28 PM
Born 1959.

Skater - 1970 onwards - metal wheels on the first board I rode, then started to make my own from old roller skates and laminated plywood decks. Polyurethane wheels available commercially in NZ from about 1975. Got heavily into slalom & downhill, less so into ramp/halfpipe. Still have a pair of Tracker trucks & Road Rider 4s imported from the States in 1976.

Body surfed from 1973, added a handboard from 1986 onwards. Started surfing on a surfboard at age 38 after getting my highly myopic/astigmatic eyes LASIK'd.

Skier - 1976 to 1996, still jump on two planks occasionally.

Snowboard - 1996 onwards. The instructor who gave me my first lesson couldn't understand why I wanted to angle my feet the way I'd ride a slalom skateboard. I wanted to carve from the word go, I just lacked the right equipment. First carve board was a Burton PJ 6.2, but my carving took off just two years ago when I got my hands on a 180cm Riot.

SunSurfer