Friday, October 31

Guto Amorim Barreled - Shout Out To D.P.

Guto under the donkey patrol monument at Kandui
Guto Amorim of Brazil, one of our surf guides from Kandui Resort is the webcast announcer for the Hangloose Santa Catarina Pro, ASP stop #10 of the WCT. He gave a shout out to the donkey patrol during the webcast this morning, and as a return gesture... Here is a tribute to Guto.

Our trip to the mentawais would not have been the same without Guto and our ventures to Nokandui, Rifles, and Pistols aka "the last resort".

Here is sick sequence of Guto at Nokandui.

I will upload the heat video with his shout out to DP later if it is available on the hangloose website.

Sunday, October 12

Freediving Clearwater Beach Florida is my new life

Well,

Yeah I know that the surf has been going off in SoCal and the DP crew has been representing, I also know that Stefan rolled into SD just in time to connect with a small leftover swell and a new Arakawa. I still am adjusting to Florida, but I do have something new to be excited about.

FREEDIVING

It is the shit. It is my new deal. Scuba is cool, and spearfishing while scuba diving is cool, but free diving is unreal. It's gangster, it's raw, and it is physically demanding.

Me (Indian Rocks Beach) and the crew: Travis Ward (Belleair), Hassan (Clearwater) and Mike Cantonis (Tampa) rolled out to a reef off of sand key fl for what was originally planned as a kingfishing trip. When we got the boat all geared up we also threw some spearfishing gear on board just in case, god I am lucky we did. We set out on our journey with a visit to the mile marker off of clearwater beach to get bait with the castnet. After two big hauls of whitefish bait and one shredded net after a greedy toss, we headed out to one of the many offshore reefs of pinellas county. This particular reef is about 9 miles off the beach and it sits in about 42 feet of water. When we arrived, there were about 6 boats on the reef so I did not really expect to do much freediving. To me 42 feet seemed like an impossible depth to dive on my first freediving trip, and we were loaded down with bait and fishing gear.


We looked around for a few minutes and dropped a few lines in the water with little success, and decided to wander further over on the reef to get away from the crowd. Hassan (aka) Hoss jumped in with speargun in tow and was scouting from the surface and quickly landed a massive amberjack while just snorkeling. When we pulled it into the boat the rest of us were so amped to get into the water, but the thing about AJ's is, they just don't want to die, that fish roared back to life and gave cantonis and ward-o a good smackin before going in the ice box.

We anchored up: hoss, wardo and I got into the water and cantonis line fished off the boat.
I was nervous and excited as I swam around looking into the blue sapphire sparkling abyss.
Hoss and ward were disappearing into the depths for what seemed like an eternity and returning with all sorts of gilled prey at the end of their spears (more aj's, grouper, hogfish, some type of snapper). I could not get my ears to clear at first, and honestly my heart was beating so fast I could not hold my breath that long. I was hitting around the 18ft mark looking around and heading back to the top. I knew it was going to take allot more for me to make it down. I started to think about the hypnosis tracks that I listen to before bed, and tried to visualize what I would do at the bottom and how comfortable I would feel down there. I settled down emotionally. Now it was time to do some work.

Attempt after attempt I came closer and closer to the bottom meanwhile the boys were pillaging. After some effort I finally found my way to the bottom. I can't accurately describe how far the surface seems from that depth, but for me it looked like 400ft not 40. After a few more successful touch and go's I started to cruise down there and actually hunt for fish. The trick is to not look up while you are hunting on the bottom, because for me, as soon as I looked up I saw how far it was to the top, and then I dart for the surface. So I think you have to chill out, hunt, and then head for the surface when you body tells you to get air, not your brain.

At the end of the day I learned so much and was so tired I fell asleep at 6:30. I can't wait to get out there again. I'll update you all on my next expedition.



Thursday, October 9

Anna Misses the Donkey Patrol

Thursday, October 2

SL9ER


Today is looking good for 8 time asp world champion Kelly Slater, today he will be going to 9 world championships and will be officially renamed sl9er. Donkey Patrol had a chance to speak with Kelly this morning prior to his round 3 title winning heat against wildcard Eneko Acero. This is what he had to say.

DP: So Kelly, how have you prepared for this moment here in Spain?

KS: Well, I have been training with the smythe on my paddling and this new condor move, so I feel pretty confident.

DP: And what about your strategy going up against a wild card in round 3? Wild cards seem to have your number don't they?

KS: Surfing against wild cards is always a new challenge b/c in many cases I have never seen them surf before and they have nothing to loose going into a heat. I love being an underdog, so i envy their position.

KS: I have also been doing some paddle battle drills with the viper which could be good or bad, lets just say I hope I don't get an interference call for paddle jockeying.

DP: Are the rumors true about the 10 million dollar bonus from quiksilver if you win 10 world titles?

KS: I cannot confirm or deny that, I can tell you that surfing has never been about money for me. I love this game.

DP: What about Florida? what do you think of it now that you have traveled the world and can live anywhere you want?

KS: Florida and New Jersey are the two armpits of our great nation. I hate Florida, its hot, humid, buggy, there's no surf, the gene pool is missing chromosomes.. It would be great if I were a nascar driver or a professional hunter or wanted to advocate inbreeding but I am a surfer, so Florida blows.