Tyler Warren's star is burning bright; his images feature prominently in magazines and his name's on everyone's lips right now, yet he pilots a steady course through the hype. Words: Chris Preston Photos: Kyle MacLennan

James Bowden kissed goodbye to Blighty and set off for Tasmania's wild in January this year. He shares some of his findings along the way with his own distinctive style.

Meeting a legend is something few people have the opportunity to do. During a short stay in California last winter Dave Muir created his own luck in finding Skip Frye at home. He was welcomed in to take a look around. Words: Dave Muir Photos: Dave Muir and Skip Frye

Tucked away at the top of a hill near Gwenver beach in Cornwall, Skewjacks was the definitive 1970s surf camp. Drift took four of its founding fathers - Dicky, Harvey, Jamo and Mickey - to the pub and reminisced about good times gone by. Words: Jamie Bott Credit & thanks to Graham Shephard & Mel Sedgwick

Richard James and his brother Andrew recently finished shooting their first film, a surf trip of 30,000 kilometres along the west cost of Africa. Words and photos: Richard James

...in the age of the programmable hand. San Diego's Josh Hall explains why he has chosen to tread the well-worn path of hand-shaping, in conversation with Andy Smith. Photos: Garrett Highhouse, T. Colla, Ryan Tatar


Stories from the North Sea

June 20, 2010 | Words By: Chris Mcclean

doggerlandThe North Sea has a rich if somewhat short and inconsistent surfing history. Like the inconsistent waves that grace our Northerly shores. From hidden world-class spots to thumping beach-breaks and from ex-world champs to heroic explorers. The North Sea has its fair share of varied landscapes, classic spots, characters, legends, and myths.

For most people the North Sea is a source of food, a source of fuel, a playground for catching waves or simply a mass of water that needs to be navigated. Few are aware that its cold grey waters cover a prehistoric landscape that once joined England to Europe. Yet between 18,000 and 5500 BC, global warming raised sea levels to the extent that this area – known as Doggerland – was engulfed by water and the plains that had been home to mankind disappeared. This entire land sank beneath the North Sea. Is it this former land that we North Sea surfers now surf.

We are the Doggerland groms, heavies, hippies and kooks.

scotland
Rain, snow, sunburn, hail - Scotland.

tynemouth
Snow, innovative shapers, heavy water and hairy cows… Tynemouth.

holland
Bikes, dykes, flatlands, endless beaches, dedication - Holland.

rob-royal
Royal Rob - surfboard artisan.

north-east
Ay-up’s, whippets, brown frothy stuff and left points -The North East.

spring-scotalnd
Paddling dogs and the birth of Springtime - Scotland.

Photos by Arthur Lavooy, Jez Goffin, and Chris McClean.

The Chronicles of Doggerland


1 Comments


  1. Blackwood says:

    NIce words and photos!
    Doggerland… good find!

    1


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