Wednesday, December 8, 2010

How to brake on a Skateboard

It is sometimes said that there is no way to slow down a skateboard; it is also said that due to the absence of visible brakes that skateboarders can not brake or stop. I am here to tell you that is a myth. Watch the video and check Patrick Switzers technique for braking at high speed.....hmmmm around the 100 km/h at the Dipper braking for Forrests Elbow. Forrests Elbow, incidentally, is not related to the shape of the corner but the fact that Jack Forrest, a motorcycle racer scraped his elbow away after laying down his bike – it is a fast, descending left-hand turn that leads on to Conrod Straight. The video shows Kevin Reimer, James Kelly and Patrick Switzer having some fun on Mt Panorama. If that is fun, then adrenalin is brown....

Top Guns at Newtons 2010 - brake before Forrests Elbow


Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Newtons Nation Bathurst 2010 is over......

We were very lucky to have met and solicited autographs from some of the best Downhill skateboarders on the planet. The chicks were a real blast for Belle. Katie 'Skatie Katie' Neilson gave Belle a Sector 9 cap which now has the autographs of Katie, Dom and Bri which she wears with cool pride. I was fortunate to have been able to take an old but beautiful longboard for signing. Kevin Reimer, James Kelly, Patrick Switzer, Mischo Erban and Jackson Shapeira all legends, along with Skatie Katie, Brianne Davies and Dominique Vukorep put ink to board with best wishes to Belle. A special thanks to Hop for his part in bringing this talent to the country and rounding them all up in his shop for the locals. Hop, you and Robbo are unsung heroes....it does not go unnoticed. Respect.

One thing of note for the punters is a bit of video of a run involving the top men in the sport going off the top of Mt Panorama....check the smoke coming off Patrick Switzer's shoe as he footbrakes in anticipation of Forrests Elbow.

Legends take a run down Mt Panorama

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Belle meets the legend that is Skatie Katie.

With Newtons Nation happening on the weekend all of the World's Best are in town to take on the motor racing circuit that we know as The Mountain. Mount Panorama in Bathurst is the cauldron where the world's best will line up for a shot at the title. The top girls will be there. Brianne Davies (current World Champion) and Dominique Vukorep (World speed record holder) along with Skatie Katie Nielson. This is absolutely epic and the girls are happy to chat and sign autographs which will certainly allow the younger girls to draw inspiration and follow the cause. I know that Belle is in awe of these girls.

Belle's Custom Grip Job on the Nemesis


His life is going downhill seriously fast....

Today I met Mischo Erban (2009 World Cup Champion, Current holder of the World speed record 130 km/h). I got his autograph for Belle and Britt. He is a seriously fast dude.

The Downhill Skateboarding fraternity are in town for Newtons Nation where they will be skateboarding off the top of Mt Panorama. Check Mischo doing his thing in the Youtube clip - jeezus. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YvR3OReRTb4

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Saurus is not extinct

One of the Naremburn locals, drops into the Hopshop for a chat, bought his daughter a longboard for Christmas (what all responsible parents are doing this year). We started talking surfa sam, 70's skating and before too long the topic gets on to thong rubber and how he used it as a bushing in his trucks. I think every kid in Australia in the 70's spontaneously thought of thong rubber as bushings. However he said it like, I cut up my uncle's thongs to use as bushings in my Edwards trucks on my Saurus. Said it so casually like everyone has a Saurus in their garage. Of course I made him go home and get it, it is now on the hopshop wall !!!
DHD is dropping by next week to pick up some trucks, I wonder if he'll notice the new addition to the hopshop wall.

Bruce with his Saurus
 

The Goal is Mt Panorama



They say if you don't stand for something you'll fall for anything. So I have a goal. The pinnacle of Longboarding in Australia is to have a crack at Newtons Nation, an event held in Bathurst. Newtons Nation, so named as Sir Isaac Newton was the first to describe gravity. Skateboarding being a gravity sport finds it's ultimate home at the top of Mt Panorama.Yep - where the V8's go ludicrously fast.

It is a 1.3km course with an estimated top speed of 105km/h. I suspect that at Bathurst adrenalin is brown. So in terms of goals this is a big mother of an audacious goal which I will need to prepare for.

Here is the track.....jeezus.


Rayne Demonseed Complete


Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Skateboarding is not just for kids

I must have been around 9 when I got my first skateboard. White with a blue stripe, brand named BULLET with black rubber wheels. This was a far cry from the boards that were made of the old adjustable roller skates with the wingnut size adjustment. Separate the skate and nail it on to a piece of timber and voila - a skateboard. Surfer Sams came out but I never had one, it was only the rich or spoilt kids that had those bad boys. In about 1972, dad took us to the home of a guy he knew who had a son who was putting skateboards together. This mate of dad had a shed full of polyurethane wheels of all sizes and he had a special tool so that he could dip into a bucket filled with loose bearings. He would pick up exactly 9 bearings for each side of the wheel and then put the nut on. My brother Rob and I both got a set of Chicago trucks fitted with Apolloflex stokers. We made our own boards out of ply and fibreglass and we were the coolest things on 4 wheels. Skateboarding suddenly became the fad of it's era. The black rubber tyre had moved over and been replaced with urethane. It was fantastic. We were right in the middle of it. My brother Rob, cousin Mark and friend Michael would go up and skate around the Forest High School. It was relatively smooth concrete and there were some banked sandstone walls near the hall that we would ride up. In 1975 Russ Howell was the icon. He could ride in the handstand position down footpaths, off gutters and could do 360's forever. That was what we were all doing. 360's and Tic Tacs, a simple motion of lifting the front of the board to the left and right. Along with slowing down by stalling or dragging the nose up and sliding the tail on the ground. It wasn't particularly good for the board but it looked good. One of our neighbours was a fitter and turner and he cut me a piece of cast iron to put on the underside of the back of my board. Now when I stalled the board it would not be damaged, but it had the added advantage of shooting sparks at night. We were so cool. School was an interruption to each and every day and having to walk home was a drag. To accommodate this we cut our boards down so they would fit into the school bag but still had sufficient surface area to get 2 feet on. More boards, mucking around with ply and fibreglass and finally we settled on a different idea. Mark got his hands on a Saurus and Rob acquired a DHD board. I had a plastic board with the ever reliable truck and wheel combo. It was our form of transport. When we got cars, the skateboards were always in the boot. They had to be because you could not always be guaranteed surf but you could always have a skateboarding session.