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#surfing

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In the summer of 1956, 15-year-old Kathy Kohner Zuckerman learned to surf, and she recorded her experiences of riding waves and the people she met in a diary. Everyone had a nickname — Tubesteak, Lord Blears, Thrifty Phil — and Kathy wanted one too. Soon, she became Gidget, a portmanteau of "girl" and "midget." Her story went on to become a series of novels, a movie starring Sandra Dee, an ABC series starring Sally Field, a stage musical co-written by Francis Ford Coppola, and more. And, Defector's David Davis argues, it also was an inflection point in surf culture, turning it from "a sleepy pastime to a billion-dollar mainstream commodity." Kohner Zuckerman dipped out of the limelight in the 1960s before re-embracing it over the past couple of decades. Davis spoke to her about her early experiences, her unique place in American culture, her life as Gidget and beyond, and what she saved from the LA fires that razed her home of 60 years.

flip.it/lJhmOm

flip.it · Gidget The Survivor | DefectorKathy Kohner Zuckerman was at home in the Pacific Palisades, her husband Marvin working on the computer in his office, when a neighbor came pounding on their front door. “Kathy, get out! Get out now!” It was mid-morning on Jan. 7, and Kathy could see—and smell—the black smoke up in the hills above the home […]

For anyone using the @surf beta and enjoy the #WorldOfWallpapers posts that I do, you can now enjoy those via the Surf app itself by using the link below.

surf.social/feed/surf%2Fcustom

You can also contribute to that Surf feed by simply using the #WorldOfWallpapers hashtag in your posts and that content will then show up in the Surf feed.

If you haven't gotten an invite to the Surf beta yet, feel free to DM me as I have invite codes I can provide to get you invited quicker!

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@lclarke522

@donni

Chicago comedian in real life, Internet poster in posting. Proudly hatless. Suspicious of most squirrels. Only wrestles sea cows seasonally

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Still in that awkward pre-ghost phase
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Your Occasional Adequacy

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That girl...you know the one...
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Today in Labor History January 12, 1876: Working class novelist Jack London was born. As a kid, he was an oyster pirate in Oakland, along the shores of the San Francisco Bay. As a young man, he became a hobo, riding the rails from town to town, looking for handouts and sometimes work. He wrote about these experiences in his short novel, “The Road.” He was also a lifelong alcoholic, which contributed to his early death. In his novel, “John Barleycorn,” he wrote about both his alcoholism and his experiences as a laborer in numerous low-paid, backbreaking jobs. He was also a socialist and a champion of unions and working-class activism. With respect to strikebreakers, he famously wrote: "After God had finished the rattlesnake, the toad, the vampire, He had some awful substance left with which He made a scab. A scab is a two-legged animal with a cork-screw soul, a water-logged brain, a combination backbone of jelly and glue. Where others have hearts, he carries a tumor of rotten principles." London was also one of the first Haoles (non-Native Hawaiian, or white person) to learn how to surf in Hawaii.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #jacklondon #fiction #union #scab #socialism #hawaii #surfing #novel #alcoholism #oakland #pirate #books #author #writer @bookstadon

Looking for an alternative to Google Chrome or Safari?
@brave browser might be worth a try!
This privacy-focused browser has a build-in #adblocker so you can enjoy browsing and watching YouTube without distracting #ads. In addition brave makes sure you not are being #tracked by every move.

Visit the brave browser website here: brave.com/

Brave Software IncThe browser that puts you first | BraveBrave, the browser that puts you first. The Brave browser is a fast, private, and secure web browser for PC, Mac, and mobile.

I've been thinking about water and its impact on life lately. By accident I found myself watching Blackfish yesterday which just literally made me weep. Today I'm watching The Eddie Aikau Big Wave.

First whale sighting of the season was off Oahu just 8 weeks ago.

I am so amazed at the blessing of water -- of rain, of snow, of oceans, of the life that lives in it and because of it.

It breaks my soul to learn what we're doing to the planet we live on.

#water #edditwouldgo #life #hawaii #surfing

Eddie Would Go

The Eddie is about to begin, running for only the 11th time in the past 40 years, with 50–60-foot waves and barrels projected, and with women competing with men in the same heats, for the 2nd time ever. You can stream it live for free. Projected start time is 9 am Hawaiian time.

This contest is named for Hawaiian lifeguard and surfing legend Eddie Aikau. From the mid-1960s to the mid-70s he rode the biggest waves at the most dangerous breaks. However, he was also a working-class hero, saving over 500 lives as a lifeguard on Oahu’s north shore. In 1978, he tragically sacrificed his own life to save his shipwrecked comrades.

Early Life
Eddie Ryon Makuahanai Aikau, born May 5, 1946, was an indigenous Hawaiian, famous for his courage and solidarity. His Hawaiian name, Makua Hanai, means “feeding parent,” as in “one who nurtures those around him.” And he was well-known for the hospitality he showed toward friends and family, and his fearlessness as a surfer and a lifeguard.

Eddie grew up at a time when locals were not allowed near the tourist hotels and beaches in Hawaii. Racism was rife and Hawaiian culture was suppressed. Like many Native Hawaiians, his family had lost their land when the Hawaiian kingdom was overthrown in the 1890s by mainland business leaders known as the “Committee of Safety.” His family lived on a Chinese graveyard, which they cared for in exchange for free rent. Eddie left school at the age of 16 to work at the Dole pineapple cannery to help support his family.

Becoming a Lifeguard
The income from his cannery job allowed him to buy his first surfboard. Along with his brother Clyde, he began tackling the big waves of Sunset Beach and Waimea Bay. He went on to participate ten times in the Duke Kahanamoku Invitational Surfing Championship, the most prestigious surfing contest of its era. The contest was named for Native Hawaiian and five-time Olympic medalist Duke Kahanamoku. Eddie made the finals six times and won the event in 1977.

As a surfer, he was most famous for his prowess at Waimea Bay, which he surfed with the ease and casualness that others might have on a three-foot wave. In 1966, he surfed Waimea for the first time, spending six hours in the water and catching over a dozen twenty-foot waves. When the waves were 30-40 feet, he was one of the only ones riding them. Because there were no lifeguards in those days, Eddie and his friends would often rescue tourists who had gotten in over their heads.

People began to take notice, including the City and County of Honolulu, which hired him in 1968 to be the first lifeguard on the North Shore of Oahu, the seven-mile stretch of world-class surf breaks that include Banzai Pipeline, Sunset Beach, Haleiwa, and Waimea Bay. During his tenure as lifeguard at Waimea Bay, not a single person lost their life, even in surf that reached 30 feet or more. This was before jet skis, when lifeguards used only fins and a surfboard. In 1971, he was named lifeguard of the year.

Racism
In 1972, he was invited to participate in a surf contest in Durban, South Africa. He was supposed to meet fellow Hawaiian surfers Bill Hamilton and Jeff Hakman at a hotel (both haoles or European-descended), but management refused to allow him entrance because of his dark skin color. The racism infuriated him. But the experience inspired him to fight harder against the prejudice Native Hawaiians experienced at home.

In the mid-1970s, the “Free Ride” generation of Australian surfers began making a name for themselves on the North Shore of Oahu. They were talented, but also arrogant, and disrespectful of the locals. This hit the Native Hawaiian surfers particularly hard, in light of the years they were denied access to their own beaches and contests.

Da Hui, a gang of local enforcers, formed in response. They beat up Australian surfer Rabbit Bartholomew, knocking out several of his teeth. They supposedly made death threats against other Aussies. Ian Cairns began traveling with a loaded shotgun. Some of them barricaded themselves in their hotel rooms.

Eddie Aikau stepped in, forming a ho’oponopono (traditional Hawaiian parlay) at the Turtle Bay Hotel, which served as a tribunal to resolve the conflict and the racism. The resolution included apologies by the Aussie surfers, and acknowledgement of the injustices and racism that persisted against Native Hawaiians. And it also led to a growing awareness in professional surfing of the indigenous roots of the sport and acknowledgement of the indigenous inhabitants of the regions where its contests are held. To this day, professional surfers are identified by their national citizenship, except for those from Hawaii, who are identified as Hawaiians.

The Voyage of the Hokule’a
In 1978, the Polynesian Voyaging Society sponsored a 2,500-mile journey to re-enact the ancient route of the Polynesian migration between the Hawaiian and Tahitian island chains, using only the stars and currents as their guide. Eddie, who had become active in the renaissance of Hawaiian culture that was taking place at the time, jumped at the opportunity to join the crew on the double-hulled canoe Hōkūleʻa, a replica of the boats that first brought Polynesian settlers to the Hawaiian islands. They debarked on March 16, 1978, but the sea grew treacherous. One of the hulls developed a leak and they capsized off the island of Moloka’i.

The crew hung onto the capsized boat overnight. Neither their flares, nor radio signals, reached any rescue vessels. The next day, March 17, Eddie tried to get help by paddling the 12-15 miles to Lana’i on his surfboard. The Coast Guard eventually found the boat and rescued the rest of the crew. They launched the largest air-sea search in Hawaiian history to search for Eddie, but his body was never found. In honor of his courage and sacrifice, the state of Hawaii proclaimed March 17 to be Eddie Aikau Day.

The Eddie
The most elite big wave contest in the world is The Eddie Aikau Big Wave Invitational (the Eddie). It is held at his beloved Waimea Bay, but has run only ten times in its nearly 40-year history because of the preconditions that the open ocean swell holds at 20 feet or larger for the duration of the day, with favorable winds. This translates to wave faces of 30-40 feet, and sometimes larger. Eddie’s brother, Clyde, won the 2nd Eddie in 1986, the first time the Eddie was held at Waimea Bay.

During the very first Eddie, held at Sunset Beach in 1985, the waves were huge and conditions were treacherous. While the contest organizers were deliberating over whether to have the contest in these conditions, invitee Mark Foo said, “Eddie would go.” This was a reference to Eddie’s courage as a lifeguard, where he would jump into enormous and treacherous waves at Waimea Bay that no one else dared to, in order to rescue people. Soon after the first Eddie, bumper stickers started to appear throughout Hawaii with the phrase, “Eddie would go.” In 1994, Mark Foo died surfing at Mavericks, in Half Moon Bay California, about 30 minutes south of San Francisco, in surf that was 20-30 feet.