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    GO FASTER TIPS WITH JORDY VONK!
    GO FASTER TIPS WITH JORDY VONK!GO FASTER TIPS WITH JORDY VONK!If youre chasing more speed on the water, youre in luckJordy Vonk is back with Episode 2 of Windsurfing Hacks, and this ones all about getting faster. In this latest instalment, Jordy shares top techniques and insider tips to help you boost your speed and leave your mates in your wake. Dont miss this excellent video packed with practical advice to take your windsurfing to the next level!In this second episode of Windsurf Hacks, pro windsurfer Jordy Vonk shares tips on how to become the fastest windsurfer at your local spot! Whether youre sailing for fun or competing in racing events, Jordys advice will help you boost your speed and performance.The post GO FASTER TIPS WITH JORDY VONK! appeared first on Windsurf Magazine.
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    Red Paddle Co Future Paddle series Something for all riders / SUPboarder overview
    The post Red Paddle Co Future Paddle series Something for all riders / SUPboarder overview appeared first on SUPboarder Magazine.
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  • Red Paddle Co Future Paddle series - Something for all riders / SUPboarder
    Red Paddle Co have always had a paddle range, but this new 2025 range of paddles launched with their new Future series of ...
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    SARAH QUITA OFFRINGA: INSIDE THE MIND OF A CHAMPION
    SARAH QUITA OFFRINGA: INSIDE THE MIND OF A CHAMPIONSARAH QUITA OFFRINGA: INSIDE THE MIND OF A CHAMPIONJohn Sandiford travels to Aruba to meet Sarah-Quita Offringa, whos dominated the ocean with 25 world titles, but she isnt finished yet. In this episode of the SunSide Kingdom Show, the Aruban icon opens up about facing her fears in monster waves, why retiring at your peak is overrated, life beyond the podium, what scares her most, her love affair with windsurfing and staying Caribbean strong. Check out the video here:The post SARAH QUITA OFFRINGA: INSIDE THE MIND OF A CHAMPION appeared first on Windsurf Magazine.
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    Paddle4Pearl Across the English Channel
    The post Paddle4Pearl Across the English Channel appeared first on SUPboarder Magazine.
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    OLD SCHOOL VERSUS NEW SCHOOL: DUDU LEVI
    OLD SCHOOL VERSUS NEW SCHOOL: DUDU LEVIOLD SCHOOL VERSUS NEW SCHOOL: DUDU LEVIDudu Levi takes a nostalgic trip back to his freestyle roots, digging out his original dream boardthe legendary Mistral Joker. He puts it head-to-head with his current ride, the cutting-edge Future Fly Tamado. Curious how they stack up? Check out what he discovered:Old school VS New school The Joker 2007 VS The Future Fly TamadoI got a great opportunity to try the board that was my dream when I first got into freestyle windsurfing and I wanted to Show you my experience from the session and show the difference and changes that the boards have gone over the years. Hope you enjoy and if you have the chance to take a ride on one of the old school boards, do it and enjoy!Thanks to: Ofir Kabesa for letting me use the board Neri Shahar For the clips Music: Oran LoyferThe post OLD SCHOOL VERSUS NEW SCHOOL: DUDU LEVI appeared first on Windsurf Magazine.
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    NORDHAUSEN 2025 NEWSLETTER
    The post NORDHAUSEN 2025 NEWSLETTER appeared first on SUPboarder Magazine.
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  • WWW.WINDSURF.CO.UK
    RUARAIDH SOMERVILLE: THE POZO FIX!
    RUARAIDH SOMERVILLE: THE POZO FIX!RUARAIDH SOMERVILLE: THE POZO FIX!Ruaraidh Somerville heads to Pozo alongside Willy Maclean, Eddie Maclean, and Lucas Meldrum in search of a well-earned windsurfing fix. With the legendary Pozo Izquierdo delivering its trademark conditions, the crew from Tiree gets a taste of this iconic PWA hotspot.Ruaraidh brings his signature wit and sharp storytelling to the trip: dont miss his insightful and humorous take on the action, the atmosphere, and what its like to show the ropes to the next generation at one of windsurfings most hardcore locations.RS: My plan to go to Pozo and put in some reps in Gran Canarias dubious windsurfing mecca came out of being injured. A quick windsurfing fix was needed now I was healed up from an ankle injury which had put me out for most of the 2025 winter.KING KONG?Hookipa is king, Pozo is King Kong reads the legend on the Pozo Winds t-shirts worn by sunburnt German nationals swigging a few San Miguels after a day of chop-bothering in the sun. Is Pozo King Kong? Is Hookipa king? Theres nothing particularly benevolent and Arthurian about the Hookipa rocks, about floating out on a 5.2 with nothing but your guts and a prayer keeping you from mashing either your sponsors goodwill or your hard-earned cash into pieces. Maybe they mean one of those horrible medieval kings who burnt people on stakes.On the other hand, its hard to see a monstrous, misunderstood beast in Pozo, a spot that for the entirety of my most recent trip there, closely resembled a choppy lake in Switzerland. Once you get over the wind that never stops blowing and the mild risk of knocking a fin out on the bunker, Pozo gets a bit less scary. Pozo is maybe King Kong in that its a bit hairy and probably smells, and perhaps also that youd be advised to buy lots of bananas if youre planning to visit. Otherwise, the comparison falters.POZOPozo isnt scary its fun. Ish. Playful is a more honest description. Accessible, for sure. Cheerful staff at the various rental shops arm a never-ending stream of bump and jump enthusiasts with shiny new toys to thrash around in friendly onshore mush. The only real fear at Pozo comes from some of the maniacs who sail it. Various misadventures on the rocks at Scarborough, on reefs in Ireland, or in shore breaks on the east coast of Scotland, made me think I knew fear in windsurfing. I was wrong. Real windsurfing fear is trying to water start out of Pozos bunker while Ricardo Campello bears down on you doing thirty-five knots with a look in his eyes that would, in any other circumstance, have men in white coats trying to fit him for a mens size large straitjacket.The waves are not scary. The rocks are not scary. The wind is not scary (until your towel blows off you in the car park and you find yourself chasing it down in the nude past Philip Koster and his very lovely wife and children). The PWA World Tour competitors warming up, on the other hand, are frankly terrifying. Pozo in early summer is exceptionally fun for this reason because you can go out in very accessible wave sailing conditions and absolutely terrify yourself watching the best windsurfers in the world beat themselves to a pulp in the name of progression. These people should be medicated. But instead, they are encouraged. The atmosphere is electric.THE PLANAfter a good four months away from windsurfing with an academically beneficial injury (I went from a C or B student to an A student just in time for my honours year!), I felt the need to be around crazy people again. I like university, I like my books, and I like my quiet local pubs. But windsurfing is better! And so, I hatched a cunning plan to tag along with Britains world tour hope, Lucas Meldrum, who would be putting in the laps in Pozo ahead of the PWA World Cup in July. Its fun staying with Lucas on the UK tour, I get to flatter myself that were competitors, but the guy eats and breathes windsurfing, and it shows. I windsurf at the weekends and in my daydreams during mind-numbing epistemology lectures. Hes a real pro, is my point, and I admire his focus. I like sailing with him, trying to soak up a bit of advice that might help me get past him if he sails a properly bad heat at the next event, and I like filming him pushing himself on the water. Its fun to catch up with the various people Ive had the good fortune to meet and sail with over my time existing on the humble periphery of the pro windsurfing scene.THE LOCALSIve seen Liam Dunkerbeck here and there since I met him in 2019 when we were both tiny groms, played video games online with him during the Covid pandemic, and now cautiously approach him on the boardwalk as the Red Bull-fuelled heir apparent to windsurfing royalty. He carries himself with the confidence of the world-class athlete he is, yet he greets me with a humility and openness which contrasts with his status. I want to feel special from his cheery greeting, but the reality is hes just a nice person, friendly and welcoming. They all are: Marino Gil, Koster, Sarah-Quita, etc. Windsurfing exists in a rarefied position as a sport which requires a near-daily commitment to potentially lethal training, but which has almost none of the financial compensation such professionalism would normally involve. The only reason somebody might have to pursue a career in this is for pure, undying love for the sport. Nobodys in it for the cash, or for the fame and glory of it. And so, everybody is nice. And that, I think, is why Im drawn back to Pozo. If I wanted consistent wind to practice in, I could go to Morocco, or maybe Lanzarote or elsewhere. But I go back to Pozo, because my childhood heroes are there, and theyre nice.SCOTTISH CREWFor the uncultured among you, Willy Maclean is the owner of Wild Diamond windsurf school in Tiree and the organiser of the Tiree Wave Classic, and now the wider UK wave tour. I pinged him a WhatsApp a few days before I was due to go to Pozo, asking if his son Eddie might like to join us. Eddie is 14, a talented windsurfer, with several UK youth titles under his belt, and had never been to Pozo. Eddie spends his days daydreaming about getting married to Philip Koster, or something like that. He has all the same gear as Koster, rips like a young Koster, and I reckoned it was time he sailed with the bloke.My initial plan was to get Eddie out on his own for a lads trip with myself and Lucas, but Willy wisely pointed out I was two years older when I first went to Pozo on my own, and that I had gotten into enough trouble while I was there as it was. And so, father and son, the Hebridean Don Vito and Michael Corleone, hopped on the ferry from Tiree and stayed the night at my folks place in Lenzie, before joining me for the flight to Pozo. Upon hearing the news that he was about to be knitting baby clothes with Philip Koster and playing tennis with Bjorn Dunkerbeck, Eddie sent me around two hundred WhatsApp messages in block capitals expressing his excitement. I reckon inviting him out was a good shout.HEROESWe arrived in Pozo to a remarkably flat and windless day. I was starting to feel the pressure of having invited the two Tiree locals out on what I thought was an ok forecast, but clocking Eddies reaction to getting picked up from the airport by Marino Gils ever-lovely dad made me realise there was more than just good windsurfing at stake here. There was the realisation that your heroes are real, and I had forgotten how cool that was. I must admit to giggling a bit inside after shooting the breeze with Koster this trip. Hes got loads of world titles! And he asked me how my 4.2 was! Its enough to make a grown man blush.POZO SESSIONThe next few days the wind picked up, even if the waves didnt, and on Eddies final day, the fateful moment arrived. I spotted the iconic T6 transporter, emblazoned with G44 on the side, and soon enough a blood-red sail with Red Bull stickers was tanking it about the water. Not to be confused with the blood-red sail with Native Hebridean stickers flying right behind. Myself, Lucas and Willy watched the session with a similar level of stoke to Eddie, and it should be remarked that for the duration of a PWA heat or two, Scotlands most promising windsurfer was beating Germanys.Pozo was pretty flat, and Eddy had two backside hacks and an air, along with some slightly soggy forward attempts to Kosters solitary wave score and crashed back loop. Say what you will about the conditions, but our lad had Don Philipe beat for a good thirty minutes. Well forget about the tweaked push loop and one handed-goiter Koster pulled out later, because by that point hed already lost the heat and was out of contention for the title of Best Sailor With A Red Sail On Wednesday Morning. Scotland 1, Germany nil. We havent seen that kind of result since the SAS took on Rommel in North Africa. Koster retired from the water, no doubt to lick his wounds and sink into an existential crisis about his impending irrelevance in the face of total Scottish competitive dominance. Meanwhile, Eddie went for a few victory laps and topped off a successful mornings sailing with his first completed forward loop. A trip well spent for the lad, I reckon. I heard Ben Severnes latest in-office memo was titled Teuton out, Teuchter in, but that may be hearsay. You know how gossip can spread in small businesses.OLD FAVOURITEWe bade Eddie and Willy farewell the next day, and as it goes with windsurfing trips, their noble sacrifice brought some waves (okay, some chop), and Lucas and I got a bit of fun sailing in. My usual wave snobbery was replaced by sheer stoke to be windsurfing after so long hobbling about waiting for my ankle to heal up, and I had the added novelty of getting used to a new board. Well, an old board, actually. Id put a wee hole in my 74l Goya quad, and Id mistimed getting it fixed, leaving myself scrambling for a board for the trip. Thankfully, Willy had come to the rescue by bringing down my old 69l Quatro from the garage in Tiree. A 2012 vintage, not an old board in my head, but surprisingly alien compared to what Ive grown used to. Much longer, much narrower, and a lot more banana-esque than Keith Tebouls latest shapes. At least King Kong would be well fed. Admittedly the board was never meant for Pozo, with a down the line rocker, but at its size I reckoned it would still go pretty good in Pozos high winds. I screwed in some new foot straps, glued down the peeling pads and whacked a set of indestructible K4 Scorchers into the boxes, ready for a beating down the bunker. Thankfully I had all my nice shiny new Goya Banzai 11s, of which I only used 4.2 and 3.7 (the latter just once!) during the trip.I wanted to believe Pozo wasnt that windy for once, but the reality is Im not a skinny grom anymore! Too much Guinness and too many pies in the recovery process, I reckon. The combo of super stable, powerful Goyas and the knife-edged Quatro was pretty lovely, if a bit weird at first! Ive had the good fortune of getting used to modern wave boards and their ability to get on the plane with your feet already in the straps, or close to them. It really threw me to have my front foot right past the mast foot and my back foot tucked just behind the front straps to pump the board onto the plane, before carefully moving them backwards once I was up to speed.Its crazy how much the user-friendliness of hardcore wave boards has improved in such a short space of time. Once the board was on the plane though, it handled great! Hurtling down the bunker on a board I havent used since I was learning to bottom turn was a fun feeling, finally getting to put it through paces Id dreamed of as a kid. Maybe it was a welcome distraction from the rustiness of my windsurfing, recalling how much Id wanted to be able to sail at this level back then. A bit of perspective is healthy I think I was finding myself frustrated at having lost a bit of my windsurfing instinct and having gone backwards a bit post-injury, but reminding myself to be grateful for all the time Ive spent sailing since I last used this board dragged me out of the self-pity.GOYAAnother nice thought was thinking back to being around Eddies age, looking at the shiny KT logo on the board and imagining myself sponsored by a team like Goya/Quatro, sailing the same gear as Marcilio Browne and the rest of them. Ive gotten to meet and chat to Braw a few times, and each time he was friendly and kind. Ive been lucky enough to windsurf lots, to get better and be picked up by Goya/Quatro, which is run by friendly and kind people. Being in Pozo again, on my battered old board, getting to share the stoke with Eddie, despite twinges from the ankle, a few missing waves and a lot of sore crashes, really cheered me up. It might not be king, also might not be King Kong, but its a grand old place. A few good down the line days at home and I might even miss it soon!Lucas Meldrums Pozo training video!The post RUARAIDH SOMERVILLE: THE POZO FIX! appeared first on Windsurf Magazine.
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    DUOTONE FRANCE: EPIC RACE FOOTAGE
    DUOTONE FRANCE: EPIC RACE FOOTAGEDUOTONE FRANCE: EPIC RACE FOOTAGECheck out the French Duotone team racing along the stunning coast of Brittany. Enjoy the beautiful water, high speeds and the team having fun!The post DUOTONE FRANCE: EPIC RACE FOOTAGE appeared first on Windsurf Magazine.
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    New Summer SUPM available now
    Your essential read for SUP this summer! New June SUP Mag UK available nowPay by credit card with Stripe or Paypal. SUBSCRIBE HERE and receive your first issue of the full 2025 subscription of four magazines yearly starting with the April 2025 issue 44. Coaching and adviceQ&AsTravel and adventuresPaddle UK featuresRegularsSUPM supports and gives airtime to the UK SUP scene 100%. And were the only mag that does.The latest June 2025 issue of SUP Mag UK in print is available to purchase now Digital edition available @ https://joom.ag/CvsdFeaturing a huge array of SUP stories from across the planet and the crme de la crme of UK stand up stories, its a must have read for anyone into the art of propelling themselves forward on a board with a paddle.Available to order now.Any questions? Give us a call on 01480 465081 we will be glad to help.
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