Category: Water

  • WE LIVE UNBOUND.

    WE LIVE UNBOUND.

    There’s something inside of us. Blind to the forces that restrict our potential, it gives us the gift of unlimited ability. Via the folks over at Live Unbound.

  • Flow, from Live Unbound

    Flow, from Live Unbound

    Another kickass clip from the folks at Live Unbound. Highlights from the World Flowboarding Championship in San Diego.

  • INFINITYLIST Productions 2012 Showreel

    INFINITYLIST Productions 2012 Showreel

    In 2012, the INFINITYLIST Productions crew was busy. This short clip showcases some of their best footage.

  • Limitations are Optional, Folks

    Limitations are Optional, Folks

    Limitations are Optional, from the fine minds of the folks over at We Live Unbound.

  • Coyote Lost at Sea: Mike Plant’s Colorful Sailing Career

    Coyote Lost at Sea: Mike Plant’s Colorful Sailing Career

    coyote lost at seaWhen Minnesota native Mike Plant entered the Vendée Globe, a legendary around-the-world sailing race, he had already completed three solo around-the-world races. He had beat competitors with more experience and with far more funding. To win, Plant had sailed through hurricanes, navigated six-story waves and survived an Indian Ocean capsizing in 45-foot seas.

    In November 1992, Plant had registered for his fourth expedition and in two weeks time was to set sail from France with his competitors. When Plant’s boat, Coyote, went missing in the mid-Atlantic, the sailing world held its breath.

    Now, twenty years later, the mystery and tragedy is unraveled.

    In Coyote Lost at Sea: The Story of Mike Plant, America’s Daring Solo Circumnavigator, author Julia Plant exposes some of the underside of her brother’s hero worship. It’s a fascinating read. Her diligence to understand precisely what happened to her brother adds a deeply emotional layer to the story.

    Julia Plant walks us through her brother’s life, from a solo trip to South America to secretly thwarting authorities in the Greek isles. Mike Plant epitomizes fearlessness and risk-taking of the highest order.

    I had the chance to ask Julia some questions about her book. Thank you to her and to her publishing company for putting us in touch!

    Writing a book is a big deal. What compelled you to kick-start the process? Why now, twenty years later?

    Mike’s life, even when he was alive, was always worthy of a book. He started to write one several times. I have always wanted to write, and this seemed a perfect opportunity for me. I started writing it within a year of Mike’s death.
    The fact that the book has come out only recently has nothing to do with me; I tried to find a publisher for years. McGraw-Hill expressed interest in the book in 2011. They wanted to get it out to coincide with the 20th anniversary of his death, but missed by a couple months.

    When conducting research for this book, did you find anything about Mike’s story surprising?

    I never knew Mike was the one who actually lit the match that burned down Danceland, and that he knew Jeff (his friend) took the rap for the crime, while he went to Europe to buy a sailboat.

    Imagine someone has just finished reading your book. What big takeaways would you like him/her to walk away with?

    I admired Mike’s appreciation or love for nature, for the wild places in the world. It was as if he needed to be in those places to feel alive. To many, the southern ocean was/is a frightening place, and Mike understood that it was scary there, but he also wanted to be there, because it was wild, devoid of mankind, and beautiful. In some ways, the absence of man’s presence, allowed it to be beautiful. I think that if more of us felt that way the world would probably be a better place.

    The obvious takeaway is that Mike proved how much a person can do if they make up their mind to do it, and the reason they can make that decision in the first place, is because they utterly believe it is the right thing to do, and he/she is the person to do it.

    Perhaps, the third takeaway would be that sometimes we all need a second chance, and one of the best ways to find that second chance, is in a place where no one knows our past.

    ##

    Julia, thank you again for your wonderful book and for taking the time to answer my questions.

    In 1993, the Plant family launched The Mike Plant Memorial Fund, which honors Mike’s passion for sailing. It offers sailing opportunities for kids who are likely to spend their childhood without ever coming near a sailboat.

  • Kayaking in Chicago: Rain, Shine and Snow

    Kayaking in Chicago: Rain, Shine and Snow

    kayak chicago

    A line of kayakers bobbed like baby ducklings in the University of Illinois, Chicago pool, where just an hour earlier 10-year-old swimmers had raced each other, running laps through the lanes. The smell of chlorine was pungent in the humid air. Brian Westrick herded a group of five into the far corner of a pool. There, he demonstrated the lesson for the evening: slap, drop and roll.

    He smacked the water with his yellow paddle, sending drops flying onto his red, long-sleeved T-shirt and light brown hair. Next, he tilted his head away from the paddle in the water in a slow, dramatic movement. Finally, he rolled his hips, moving his weight away from his paddle and righting his tipped boat.

    The students, each sporting a life preserver and sea skirt, were there to master their kayaking skills. In Chicago, where Lake Michigan freezes during the long, winter months, kayakers head to the indoor pool to splash around. Some go to perfect techniques, while others just want to keep paddling. Dave Olson’s company, Kayak Chicago, has spent chilly months in the UIC pool for the last 15 years.

    On that April evening while rain poured outside, three separate organizations of kayak enthusiasts crowded the pool swarming together. Because all three were heavily involved in Chicago’s kayak community, many members from different groups spotted familiar faces across the pool. Olson’s Kayak Chicago students were there to learn the beginning moves of Eskimo Rolls. His instructors were also teaching Wounded Warrior kayakers, an organization that helps wounded members of the U.S. Armed Forces. Sharon Bloyd-Peshkin, a petite woman with big, blonde curls, helped lead the final group in the pool: the Chicago Area Sea Kayakers Association, a group dedicated to promoting safe paddling and protecting the waterways of the Chicago area.

    Chicago Area Sea Kayakers Association member Michael Taylor sat on the sidelines, watching members sign paperwork and zip into life jackets with a constant smile. Taylor, originally a boater, got hooked on paddling when he stumbled upon a kayaking magazine on a long plane ride seven years ago. “Girl, I couldn’t put it down,” said Taylor flashing his bright white teeth. “It was like a bug that bit me.”

    Since it was mid-October, a chilly time to launch a boat onto the Chicago rivers or lake, Taylor searched the web for indoor options. He came across Olson’s company and signed up for lessons at the UIC pool. In November, he bought the most expensive kayak the outdoor gear store Cabela’s sold, knocked down from $1,000 to $600 in the off-season.

    He never stopped kayaking. Today, he’s president of Calumet Waterway Stewards, a group dedicated to promoting Southland paddling and keeping waters clean for kayaking and canoeing enthusiasts. For his first time back to paddle the pool waters, he dressed in a bright blue shirt in thick black pants. He remembered how cold it was his first season in the chlorinated water seven years earlier.

    While Taylor’s fellow Chicago Area Sea Kayakers Association members exchanged greetings on the other side of the pool, Olson’s staff instructed Kayak Chicago and Wounded Warrior students. It was time for them to try the techniques Westrick demonstrated earlier. No one smiled or spoke for at least 10 minutes. One by one, they teetered back and forth, the sides of their boats barely dipping into the water.

    After several timid tips, one kayaker, a muscular man with a blue shirt, paddled to the center of the pool. His tattooed arms moved furiously. When he had as much space as he could find, a 10-foot circle of empty water around his yellow kayak, he began to tilt his boat with as much enthusiasm as he’d paddled. Swaying right and left, he dunked his yellow paddle into the pool over and over again. With a loud splash, he flipped his boat all the way over, forgetting to roll his hips away from his paddle as Westrick had demonstrated. Students around him stopped for a moment, watching as his bald head popped up from the pool lane. He glared at his up-side-down boat bobbing next to him.

    The onlookers returned to their cautious swaying, but Olson stayed still, watching. His lean body towered out of his bright yellow boat, his dark head of hair growing taller as he strained to see the bold captain of the overturned boat. A smile softened his angular features before he turned his boat and attention back to a middle-aged man splashing, on the verge of tipping himself.

    With summer finally here, the rivers and Lake Michigan have warmed up enough for kayakers to hit the outdoor waters. For tours, rentals and lessons check out kayakchicago.com.

  • Whoa. The Flyboard Water Jet Pack!

    Whoa. The Flyboard Water Jet Pack!

    I’ve got to get on this. Looks too fun not to try. Anyone been on a water jet pack before? I wonder how much this costs…

  • “Brett” Music Video with Big Wave Surfer Jeff Rowley

    “Brett” Music Video with Big Wave Surfer Jeff Rowley

    Big wave footage from a recent session with Jeff Rowley toying with Hawaii’s “Jaws” reef break. I think the video compliments the song well, no? Song is The Soundmen – Brett.

     

  • Pushing the Limits 2012 Trailer

    Pushing the Limits 2012 Trailer

    Thierry Donard and the Nuit de la Glisse team are proud to present the full trailer for this years feature film, Pushing the Limits 2012. The world premiere, will be at the Grand Rex in Paris on December 7th. This will in turn be a live broadcast to many other cinema halls across Europe.

  • Savage Films 2012 Reel

    Savage Films 2012 Reel

    [vimeo id=”46669683″ width=”600″ height=”350″]

    Savage Films, a video production company specializing in outdoor adventure media, has come a long way. This latest reel runs through their top footage in 2012. Kudos, Savage Films, for continuing to churn out ridiculously gut-wrenching videos like this.