Surfpolitik George Greenough, Concerned Citizen
In: Surfpolitik 0 Comments Sun 31st Jan '10
Tags: george greenough , pointed nose , surfboard design , ozzie wright
Stuart Nettle
January 22nd, 2010
Get out your jam jars!
By now most people would have heard about the young fella who was
cracked in the head by the nose of a surfboard at the Pass last week.
If not you can read the story here.
In the wake of the accident internet blogs lit up with varying
responses to the accident, everything from mandatory safety courses to
regulated board design to 'do nothing and harden the f*ck up' has been
proposed.
On Tuesday this week the Byron Bay Echo ran a letter to the editor from
none other than George Greenough with his response to the accident.
Greenough makes the claim that the pointed nose is a 'fashion
statement' and adds nothing to the performance of the surfboard. In
fact, he says that having a nose is detrimental to a boards
functionality.
The
solution he says it to get out a jam jar, twist the lid off and place
it on the nose of your board, then trace a line around the lid and saw
off the section that sticks out in front. Finally, glass the nose up.
Besides the increase in performance the round nose spreads the impact
and minimises the damage in the event of collision.
It's interesting to note that Greenough claims pointed noses are merely
a fashion statement. Going back five or six years Ozzie Wright caused a
fashion trend with round noses. Ozzie chopped a large section of the
forward section of his boards off - looking like he was using a bucket
rather than a jam lid - and rode his boards with no nose. Ozzie's
disciples promptly follwed suit lopping the noses off and crabbing
their way down the line aiming at the next crumbling section.
Arguments were issued about the improved performance characteristics of
the boards but these justifications proved hollow. Within a couple of
years Ozzie was riding pointed nose boards and his disciples also
reverted back. The arguments about 'performance' drifted away.
In the last couple of years Slater has raised the issue again riding
boards with rounder noses everywhere from big Pipe to tiny Trestles. Of
course it's nothing to do with safety but performance. Riding seriously
short and low-rockered boards, Slater has made up for the lack of
volume by pushing the foam forward into a round - or at least rounder -
nose. His performance on the boards show that the design is valid.
Lennox
Head shaper Chris Brock, ironically a contemporary of Greenough, has
been shaping boards with similar outlines for years. Brock must feel
vindicated now that the design has caught on. Recently we ran a series
of shots of Gold Coast surfer Chris Bennetts riding a Brock 'Bean'
which got a big response. The young Ibis was putting the short board
everywhere and people are starting to catch onto the fact that pointed
noses really are unecessary, at least when the waves are small.
So perhaps ol' George does, after all, have a point.
Read George Greenough's letter in full here.
stuart@swellnet.com.au
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