Possibly the worst WIPEOUT at Jaws ever & tow-surfing GIANT JAWS for the January 2021 Super Swell! The biggest waves at Jaws in the last 10 years!
#IanWalsh #Jaws #Surfing #KitchenCaptain #Cooking
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Edit: Noah Andrews (@stoke.films)
Cover Photo: Cody Lang (@cody_maui)
Filmed by: Noah Andrews – Randy Sarrow – Tucker Wooding – Pacific Island Drone – Marc Chambers – Aquaite Drone
KITCHEN CAPTAIN
Learn To Cook At Home With Ian Walsh
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About KITCHEN CAPTAIN
Ian Walsh is an award and major event-winning professional surfer who enjoys scaring the sh!t out of himself in 50-70 foot surf. This also creates a unique opportunity to push himself. Which is what he is really after.
But let’s get to the real reason you’re here… KITCHEN CAPTAIN! On this channel, you’re going to be thoroughly entertained while learning how to cook at home. Weekly cooking episodes will be served up and there might be a sprinkle or two of high-quality surfing videos. This is not a Michelin star chef show. This is the everyman cooking show in your own kitchen. If Ian can learn to cook it, then so can you. Cooking doesn’t need to be hard, but it does need to taste good. There will be mistakes, there will be laughs, and there will be some damn good recipes learned! Put your helmet on, hit that SUBSCRIBE button, and buckle up! Let’s go!
Reblogged 2 years ago from www.youtube.comMarty Paradisis, Matt Bromley, Riley Laing and Ian Walsh talk about the swell of the century at Nias.
Reblogged 2 years ago from www.youtube.comA River begins to breach a steep sand berm and the flowing water carves a canyon on the beach. A very rare occurrence to witness! It is very easy to underestimate the power of flowing water. Many of the people riding these river waves are very experienced and know how to exit the river safely.
Big Thanks to @Jamie O’Brien for showing us the ropes of the Waimea River. Be sure to check out his channel for his river edit soon!
#River #hawaii #RAW
Reblogged 2 years ago from www.youtube.comTahiti (English: /təˈhiːti/; Tahitian [taˈhiti];[2] French pronunciation: [ta.i.ti]; previously also known as Otaheite) is the largest island of the Windward group of the Society Islands in French Polynesia. It is located in the central part of the Pacific Ocean, with the nearest major landmass being Australia.[3][4] Divided into two parts, Tahiti Nui (bigger, northwestern part) and Tahiti Iti (smaller, southeastern part), the island was formed from volcanic activity; it is high and mountainous with surrounding coral reefs. Its population is 189,517 inhabitants (2017 census),[1] making it the most populous island of French Polynesia and accounting for 68.7% of its total population.
Teahupoʻo (Tahitian pronunciation: [te.a.hu.ˈpo.ʔo])[1] is a village on the southwestern coast of the island of Tahiti, French Polynesia, in the southern Pacific Ocean.[2]
It is known for the surf break and heavy, glassy waves offshore, often reaching 2 to 3 m (6.6 to 9.8 ft), and sometimes up to 7 meters (23 feet). It is the site of the annual Billabong Pro Tahiti surf competition, part of the World Championship Tour (WCT) of the Association of Surfing Professionals World Tour surfing circuit and used to be one stop in the World Tour of the International Bodyboarding Association.[3] Bodyboarding pioneers Mike Stewart and Ben Severson were the first to surf Teahupo’o in 1986 and it soon became an underground spot for thrill-seeking bodyboarders. Few professional surfers rode Teahupo’o during the early 1990s and it was only in 1998, at the Gotcha Tahiti Pro, that Teahupo’o became widely recognized as having some of the heaviest waves in the world. On August 17, 2000 Laird Hamilton is credited with surfing the “heaviest wave” ever ridden,[2] documented in the film Riding Giants. In 2003 the late Malik Joyeux successfully rode one of the largest waves ever ridden.
Nathan Florence, younger brother of two-time World Surf League champion John John Florence, caught in May 2015 what some have considered to have been the biggest wave ever successfully paddled in Teahupo’o.[4] Keala Kennelly was the first woman to tow-surf Teahupo’o in May 2005, getting a 10-foot barrel ahead of the Billabong Tahiti Pro contest.[5] This challenging break has been conquered by many top windsurfers, including Jason Polakow, Ali Neil and Levi Siver. Yannick Salmon was the first kitesurfer to ride Teahupo’o; however, it was incorrectly written in publications that others had ridden it before him. Jeremie Eloy and Julien Sudrat kitesurfed the wave after Yannick
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