A sign on the 130-year-old pier at Saltburn-by-the-Sea warns people not to jump off it. On a big surf day surfers make their way to the end of the sturdy 206 metre structure and jump like lemmings into the cold, murky North Sea. Words: Simon Palmer Photos: Ian Forsyth

Chris Preston chats to Neil Randall of if6was9 about his radical take on traditional board design, Noosa's retro vibe, and his love of vintage style. Photos Dane Peterson

Mat Arney hooks up with some old friends to go feral on the Arabian Peninsula and hunt down some truly isolated swell. Words & photos: Mat Arney

A world away from the average commercial surf competition, pushy dads and nervous groms, generations share the stoke at a contest that celebrates the original Hawaiian spirit. This is truly a unique perspective in surfing. Photos: Yves S

Crime and punishment, it's all relative. A brush with the law is nothing more for most of us than a speeding fine or curt telling off, but we're a very privileged bunch... Words & photos: Carly Lorente

This isn't a shameless plug. This is an encounter with a British company doing something special with surfboards. While the industry is focused on the multi-buck movers and shakers parading their eco-wares, let's not forget our homegrown talent. Words: Howard Swanwick Photos: John Morgan and Jamie Bott


Board Shorts

November 29, 2009 | Words By: Mark

cornwall_film_festivalAn evening of surf-related short films by independent makers showing the rich variety in British surf culture went off in style down at Falmouth’s Tremough Campus Student Union earlier this November, while a frigid northerly wind blew a hoolie outside.

Gladly inside out of the cold, compere Christiaan Bailey (the Surf Screen) had a warm welcome for everyone and brought the evening to life, introducing each film with his customary enthusiasm and humour.

The first film of the evening was ‘5’ by Fion Crow Howieson, which documents the Carve readers’ poll top five surfers on a trip to the Mentawais. It’s a high-energy film featuring performance surfing cut to fast-tempo music in the world’s best waves. In contrast, next up was Ollie Banks’s ‘Board & Rider’. Again, this featured super surfing and incredible waves, but in a coldwater climate and shot on 16mm film – making for a slow-paced, artistic film that explores an entirely different side of surfing. Mr B had been busy, and showed two films: ‘Nightwaves’, a very slick ambient collage of waves set to an atmospheric soundtrack, and ‘Rhythms’, in which Sam Lamiroy talks about being in tune with the ocean.

There were also two documentaries on offer. Mark Roberts’s ‘Noises from the Shed’ documents the process he follows to produce his finely crafted unique EPS and wood surfboards, and Izzy Charman’s ‘The Beach Boys’ follows three children on the autistic spectrum as they learn to surf – a truly moving story. The penultimate film of the night, ‘Come Surf with Me’ by Rodney Sumpter, brought us flashbacks of surfing’s halcyon days in the 1960s and 1970s with classic footage from around Cornwall and the rest of the world, including Gerry Lopez at the Banzai Pipeline. The evening was wrapped up by ‘Surf Hog’, a fun-filled cartoon by Robbie McIntosh and my favourite film of the evening, all about a surf-loving Hog living the dream on a palm-fringed island surrounded by epic waves.

After much deliberation, the panel of judges (including Finnistere’s Tom Kay, Sarah Bentley and James Parry) declared ‘Board & Rider’ by Ollie Banks the best film of Board Shorts 2009 – a well-deserved accolade for a film that encapsulates the creativity and individuality evident in surfing today.


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