Do You Hate Wearing A PFD? This Could Be The Solution: An Inflatable Rash Guard. (Moving Pictures)

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=boh_JOCcFxQ&w=480&h=270]

Sup

Paddle

Surf

Bodysurf

Splash

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yCR1W7PqbMo&w=480&h=270]

The Aqua Life Inflatable Shirt is a close fitting shirt that is designed to be used in water activities where protection or buoyancy is required. The shirt is ideal for all water sports. The patented zip up front makes the shirt easy to wear and take off. Aqua Life inflatable shirts are designed for maximum comfort and support. The shirts are double lined eliminating itching, chaffing and scratching.

The embedded and adjustable waist band ensures the shirt stays snug to the body in all conditions. It won't fill up with water or ride up like a wet t-shirt, or even worse, be pulled off in rough surf conditions. Some of the more frequent uses of the shirt include: swimming, surfing, body surfing, body boarding, water skiing, surf skiing, snorkeling, canoeing and kite surfing. If it involves water, then a "Aqua Life" shirt should be considered. The shirt is available in all sizes and suitable for all ages from 2 to 92. Aqua Life inflatable shirts are available in a variety of colors and can be made with matching company logos and other options. Optional configurations include, but not limited to: short, long or no sleeves, strobe lights, whistles for attracting attention, and many many more.

Fuimos A La Playa Y Jugó En La Bahía.

Bay a

Bay b

Bay c

Bay d

Bay e

Bay f

Bay g

Bay h

Bay j

Bay o

Bay n

Bay i

Fun was had by all.

Joe talks to a Kiteboarder.
Joe to Kiteboarder: How long have you been kiteboarding?
Kiteboarder to Joe: I've been kiteboarding for 5 years. Before that, I windsurfed for 20 years.
Joe to Kiteboarder: Do you still windsurf?
Kiteboarder to Joe: No! My buddies and I sold all our gear. Kiteboarding is a lot more fun and less work.
Moral of the story: It's all about fun!

See you on the water!

The Dabchick: Is This The Best Sail Trainer For Groms?

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k554e8yvY2M]

Yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm wearing my sailing instructor's hat. The Dabchick is a sailboat (...board...scow) used in South Africa to train youths after outgrowing Optis (Oppis). I think it would make a great trainer and a wonderful way for the groms to learn some boat building skills. How cool is it to sail a boat that you've built.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OWyW_f1QQzA]

From Go Sail: "The Dabchick dinghy designed by Jack Koper of Cape Town, was launched in 1956 as a double handed junior class. The idea was a simple flat decked, no cockpit, scow with a planing hull that could be home built from a few sheets of ply.

Dab1

The Dabchick dinghy has found great popularity with some 4 000 boats having been built since then. Fairly quickly adept juniors found they could handle the two sail configuration single handed, and that has been its niche for most of the class existence. The sail plan is of a genoa, sheeted on a tracked fairlead, and mainsail. A dagger-board sits in an extended case allowing for it to be raked back in a breeze and on a reach.

Dab2

The broad scow hull gives the boat enormous stability for the ab initio sailor whilst also being exceptionally quick onto the plane. In comparison to similar junior classes of the Mirror and Topper it well out performs both boats on all points of sailing. Like all scows is prefers a slight heel when working to weather. Not drawing much water it is snappy through the tack, and quick off the mark once the genoa is trimmed in. On the reach they are exciting but kind, due to that beam again. It is not unusual to see youngsters going out in conditions over twenty knots to enjoy some screaming reaches. Down wind placing the hull on a slight heel, as on a beat, reduces wetted surface and the Dabchick dinghy scuttles effortlessly along like the wildfowl it is named after.

Dab3

The restricted class allows for different masts and fitting of control systems that feed onto either side of the deck, which is a great entry point for future performance dinghy sailors. The class has also recently allowed the introduction of Mylar sails as well as the adoption of a loose footed mainsail."

Hat tip to Tweezerman for the idea.

The Egg And I.

Exbury egg 01

What is this strange looking thing?

Exbury egg 02

Would you like your egg hard or soft boiled?

Exbury egg 03

She floats!

Exbury egg 03-001

I hope that Wooden Whale doesn't try to mate with her!

Exbury egg 04

Ah, she heard me.

Exbury egg 05

Will cocktails be served?

Exbury egg 06

Permission to come aboard the Egg, Sir!

Exbury egg shell

Reclaimed red cedar strip planking was used on the exterior shell.

Exbury egg shell 02

Exbury egg inetrior 01

Sleeping on a hammock like a real sailor!

Exbury egg inetrior 02

Exbury egg inetrior 03

Exbury egg inetrior 04

Exbury egg floorplan

Exbury egg sections

Exbury egg drawing 01

Exbury egg drawing 02

Now that's something you don't see everyday: A giant floating egg! Yes, Virginia. The British are a little different from you and me. Not only are they super competive, they're very eccentric. Thank God! We need a little more levity in this seemingly sour world.

"Created by Stephen Turner, the Exbury Egg will be  a temporary, energy efficient self-sustaining work space for artist Stephen Turner in the estuary of the River Beaulieu. It is a place to stay and a laboratory for studying the life of a tidal creek, a collecting and collating centre with integral storage & display areas. It will take on the patina of 730 daily tides below the water line, and 365 days of weathering by wind, rain and bleaching by the sun above."

Via Designboom.

Marine Life Monday. "A Wooden Whale?" Or "What David Put Together With Two Old Boats"

Woodenwhaler01

Woodenwhaler02

Woodenwhalerdrawings01

Woodenwhalerdrawings02

Woodenwhaler03

Woodenwhaler04

Wooden Whaler by David Kemp.
A fisherman friend helped me join these two derelict cove-boats together to make the WOODEN WHALER. Clinker boats and cove fishing are from a way of live that’s fast disappearing in Cornwall.

Looking at David's art concurs up memories of the wooden sculputers that populated the Emeryville mud flats of my childhood. It's great to see whimsy alive and well in the world, and an artist who shares his work with the public.

Via Recyclart.