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How To Ignore Long Range Surf Forecasts...

If you try and calculate the probability of anything weather related happening with any certainty, let's just say will there be good surf a week from today the maths involved is so complex that you soon suck all the numbers out of the world and get a really big headache.

The weather is a complex beast made of water, air, heat, maths and chaos. Predicting what it will do next is next to impossible. It's like trying to punch smoke. No matter how many RAMs your weather centre's supercomputer has, even if you have on of them fancy double screen set ups and an iPad on the desk, it means nothing. If your supercomputer can do more calculations per second than the entire population of China with an abacus on each hand then well done you. But you might as well flip a coin. The coin flip operator will be just as accurate. He has a fiddy percent strike rate after all … and looks cool.

You see forecasting the weather, even with all our modern weather buoys, satellite data, Hadron colliders and string theories is just, at best, an educated guess. Add in trying to get swell predictions anywhere near accurate and it's a guess times a hunch times a thousand. All that happens is you chuck in the recorded data, press the big button that says 'GO' on the computer and watch it burp out a forecast.

A word which needs repeating a: forecast, not fact, a possibility based on the available evidence and similar looking prior events which becomes increasingly implausible the further it proceeds down times unfaltering highway away from the known bit at the beginning. It's like those sci-fi fantasies where there are a million parallel universes all coexisting. From any set of data the weather machine could do whatever it pleases. The possibility of the computer generated result being anything like the actual weather in a weeks time is impossibly remote. In one of the million universes it will be cock on. In the rest you'll be staring at a flat ocean and wondering why you got so excited the week before.

It's hard enough for the weather bods to predict if it will rain the next day. Forecasting weeks ahead is a mugs game, especially in that most chaotic of systems the Atlantic, which doesn't play nice like its brethren the Indian and Pacific. But that doesn't stop the forecasts, now readily available on the Interwebs for up to 16 mind-boggling days ahead. Which people see. Then get all excited and start doing a jig about how the best surf ever is looming. Then they start making plans, booking ferries and flights. Then a week later everyone wonders what the fuss was about as the charts have changed wholesale and now it's going to be a few feet and onshore as opposed to 20-foot and best ever.

It's confusing for all. Where one day there's a red beast on the WAM charts that puts the red spot on Jupiter to shame by the next day it's wimped out and gone all green and ill looking. Long range forecasts are ephemeral things. Shimmering in our sight for the briefest moments until the models are run again and a fresh set of charts appear. The best ever onion ring that was there in the morning is replaced by an unsightly hag of a low with all kinds of unpleasantness by the afternoon and by the end of the next day it's a flipping high.

Looking at long range charts is like tossing a coin and basing your happiness on what's cast.  'Heads! Hurrah! Happiness reigns!' 'Tails? Arse barns. Best flagellate myself again.'

Long range forecasts are addictive because good surf makes us happy. Knowing that good surf is imminent makes us do smiling. Just the knowledge of an impending adrenalin and endorphin speedball shot acts like a drug. This is why we are drawn moth like to their digitised flame.

Older surfers will remember the four day weather fax of pressure maps: a badly printed piece of shiny paper that cost you £1.50 a pop. A thin sheet shared around like a religious artefact. But those four days of pressure gave you a perfect insight into how the surf was shaping up. We can learn lessons from the past. Try just looking at the charts for four days, like the kick-ass Met Office Atlantic maps online. We need to go cold turkey on anything longer. The probability is on your side, the models firmer, the likelihood of the desired good surf better if the charts are playing ball. You can dare to dream, to get excited and start waxing your gun.

Pressure systems aren't conformists. They don't do what anyone tells them. They're free spirits just cruising on the jet stream. They don't care if they crush your dreams of perfect surf. We just have to accept what they give us with good grace and maybe learn to just go surfing when there are surfable waves. Offshore, onshore, whatever. Just get wet. Howling onshore surfs can be hilarious, especially when it's so windy carrying your board down the sand is a right kerfuffle.

We need to not be so caught up in the future and concentrate on the now. If in any doubt about going for a surf try this simple routine:

Flowchart

Now stop wondering what the weather is going to do in a two weeks time and go surfing today.

Posted by Sharpy in Blog, Web/Tech, Words | Permalink

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Facebook Like Farms Can FB Off....

If you've seen the new issue of Carve then you might have read my Sharing Is Caring article on the ongoing death of professional surf photography. 

It's no secret I hate Facebook. The content farms (and or companies) that just steal photographer's work and post them for Likes with no credit or reference to the creator are a real issue. It's baffling when FB has an inbuilt Share button. So if these many pages, with fans in the thousands, want to share surf pics all they need to to do is Share from the respective photographers' pages. If they did this no one would mind. But they don't. They steal and post with no credit.

If you put your photos on Facebook or any network you are consenting to have it shared far and wide. I limit my unwatermarked online images to my 500px account, which at least has a basic download blocker on it, but still that's not screengrab proof. 

The only solution is ugly watermarks or not sharing at all. Which to be honest is the way I'm going. As sharing does nothing for your photography business. It does not bring surf photographer's new clients. The only paying clients: the magazines and brands actually push the other way. If a photo has been on FB then you've no chance of selling it. Likes and Fans do not equate to Income.

This post was inspired by a little ding dong the talented and extremely ballsy water photog Russ Ord had with one of these Like Farms. See the screengrab from my iPod.

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He simply asked for a credit on one of his awesome water shots of the Right in W.A. An image he risked his life to shoot. This is the response he gets from fucktard commentors and the actual admin of the page. 

I mean seriously? Total, utter, massive kooks. 

They have no idea how hard it is to swim, shoot and actually maintain a photography business. If this is the future then I want no part of it.

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15 Things That Are Law (Girl Version)...

I had a request from a friend to make the 50 Laws post below a bit less boycentric. So here's some handy lady specific surf laws:

  1.  Hairbands. Hairbands. Hairbands. Can't reiterate how much a good hairband is your friend while surfing. You'll need as many hairband spares as you do leash strings and FCS keys. No hairband equals swallowing your hair after duck dives and that's really grim as is getting it trapped under your hand as you pop up. Of course a sensible bob hair cut stops the issue. 
  2. Waterproof make up. Don't do it. Surfing is about being natural. It's about having fun, not looking hot. (Well maybe just a tiny bit of eyeliner). 
  3. Fake tan is useful for easing the gradation of the farmer/surfer tan poohead look that's an unavoidable factor of British surfing. Brown face and hands white everything else is tricky to pull off. On land of course. Fake tan in the sea is silly. 
  4. Simple fact: no one looks stunning in a wetsuit. No matter how perfect your figure a goofy rubber suit is still just that. It's function not fashion. 
  5. Surfing in a bikini is liberating and fun. But always do the three point check after a wipeout. Don't give the boys a free show. 
  6. Being a lady gives you a certain latitude in the line up. Men won't grumble so much if you paddle past them or snake them as if you were a fella. But take it easy. Rule breaking is still a crime no matter how pert your bottom. 
  7. Bikini's under wetsuits. Not needed but it does make getting changed easier. As things can fly out when you're not concentrating. 
  8. Were all equals here so don't expect the boys to tie your board on the roof. A woman that knows her way round a roof rack strap is hot. 
  9. Your hair will hate you. End of. Conditioner is your friend.
  10. Don't be sucked in to the 'oh you're a girl you can cook thing' on surf trips. Boys will pretend to be useless and expect you to be their mother if you let them. They're just lazy.
  11. On surf trips abroad packing light means not bringing a litre of shampoo and a litre of conditioner and your whole bathroom of product. Buy what you need when you get there. 
  12. A good sunbathing bikini is rarely a good surfing bikini.
  13. Boardies are essential at the start of any tropical trip. otherwise you will burn your arse.
  14. Good sun cream, as in sticky fudgey stuff that stays on in the sea, will stop you looking 40 at 30. Protect yourself
  15. Long nails are nature's own wax comb.
If you've got any more suggestions fire them to me on Twitter.

@surf_photo dude this is 100% true haha it's perfect

— Grace (@Grace0crespo) May 1, 2013

@surf_photo 🔎 My extensive Global research revealed the thinner the bikini material the less it moves/falls down as not weighted with water

— Wendy (@Wendy_McG) May 1, 2013

Posted by Sharpy in Blog, Ladies, Words | Permalink

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Government Sanctioned Copyright Theft

England_Fistral_Stoker

If you follow me on Twitters (if not, why not?) then you might have seen a few exasperated tweets and links to a couple of stories on the Government's Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Act. The one that got a lot of photographers, including David Bailey's, knickers in a knot. 

The two articles linked below explain it in more detail but the short version is as the act becomes law it means your photos can be used and abused and there's nothing you can do about it. Even though as the creator/author of those images you have the copyright. If someone or some corporation does a 'diligent search' (in other words a quick Google search, which won't bring up any results from FB/IG etc as they aren't searchable) for the author and finds nothing then they can go ahead and use your work commercially. Reproducing it however they like, for cash, including sub-licensing.

Yep. Terrifying eh? If your work is watermarked or has the metadata intact you are okay. But obvs it only takes a screengrab to strip metadata and a quick crop/clone to take off the subtle watermarks most people use at the moment so as not to impede enjoyment of the image.

Welcome to the new era of content farms and wholesale image abuse. As if pages like Surf, Sex, Sea weren't bad enough when it came to blatant image theft now they'll be legalised.

I urge you to read the piece from the New Statesman:

The act aims to legislate a way for publishers to use copyrighted material which has no obvious author, or no way to track down the author. In the past, orphan works were typically older media, like out-of-print books, with little-to-no contact information available. Those works still cause problems, and are covered by the Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Act, which ought to aid plans to catalogue them, like Google's audacious attempt to scan every book in America.

But the reason why orphan works are kicking up such a fuss now is that more and more works are being orphaned shortly after creation, thanks to the internet. You can see it all the time online: a photo is tweeted, someone cross-posts it to Facebook, someone else reposts it to Twitter from there, it makes it over to Tumblr, and then is incorporated into a Storify which a media organisation reports on. In such circumstances, it can very quickly become nearly impossible to track down the original image. That's why the law has been nicknamed the "Instagram act". (Source: New Statesman)

And the one from The Register for a more complete look at this.

For the first time anywhere in the world, the Act will permit the widespread commercial exploitation of unidentified work - the user only needs to perform a "diligent search". But since this is likely to come up with a blank, they can proceed with impunity. The Act states that a user of a work can act as if they are the owner of the work (i.e. you) if they're given permission to do so by the Secretary of State, acting as a regulated body. The Act also fails to prohibit sub-licensing, meaning that once somebody has your work, they can wholesale it. This gives the green light to a new content scraping industry, an industry which doesn't have to pay the originator a penny. Such is the consequence of "rebalancing copyright," in reality. (Source: The Register)

Whichever way you look at it any photographer that works commercially will be giving away their rights if they leave decent size copies of their work online unwatermarked. So much for the protests from the NUJ and every other photography orientated organisation. Cheers Dave, Cheers Nick you berks.

(Another piece just popped up by the BBC).

Posted by Sharpy in Blog, Photos, Surfphoto School, Web/Tech | Permalink

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Honey, I Broke The News?

BananaSplits

There's too much news at the moment. I can't cope with it all.

If it's not Thatcher being very dead, North Korean nuclear brinksmanship or exploding fertiliser factories that register on the Richter scale. It's Boston. Leafy, quiet, nothing ever happens here Boston. There's not much Cheers there right now that's for sure. All hell is breaking loose in Boston again as I type. The police finally have a chase worthy of a Hollywood movie with gunfire, explosions and everything. A car will be driving through a fruit sellers market stall anytime now.

The news channels might as well just point their cameras at Twitter and YouTube as they are the news now. Admittedly unverified and open to all kinds of abuse. But they are the ultimate photo/video/on the ground witness crowdsource of information.

Then there's Rolf.  This mornings news of his long hushed up arrest and bail ... not conviction, let me be very clear on that, he's not been actually charged and hence is totally innocent until proven otherwise.

Everyone's favourite Australian artist  (admittedly it is a VERY short list) getting caught up in the investigation is another hammer blow to our halcyon memories of childhood. Admittedly everyone, even as wee bairn, knew there was something creepy about Savile.

I dread to think where it's going to stop. I'm just hoping the guys pictured don't get dragged in to the whole kerfuffle as that really will depress me... First live band I ever did see.

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The Cutest Godzilla Ever...

A near perfect short...

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Tahiti, The Comic...

Comic

Totes forgot about the comic series I did for the mags last year. Were super fun to do but a bit of a ballache to make involving firing shots back and forward from laptop to the comic app on an iPad and back again. Will try and round up the other ones. Click the pic for a big version so ya can reads it.

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Official Surfing Handshake Etiquette For 2013...

Handshake

The bigwigs at at the Surfer's Handshake International Treaty Symposium (SHITS) have come to a majority decision on the handshake that surfers must use to greet each other for the 2013 season.

Calls for simplicity were made by all countries involved leading into this year's conference as the past few years combination of hand clasps, fist bumps, shoulder nudging and overly long and complex hand slaps have grown wearisome.

So it's with much pleasure we can announce the official inter-surfer hand greeting for this year is the humble, proper, old-school British hand shake.

No slapping, no forearm grips, no cuddles, no kissing, just a simple, solid handshake. They're bringing it back to the source so to speak.

To perform the PBH (Proper British Handshake) simply:

  • Ensure your hand is not sweaty or damp; especially if you have just exited a bathroom.
  • Extend your hand horizontally at elbow height, ensuring the forearm and hand is kept on an even vertical keel. Avoid tilting the thumb over inwards to go palm down as this implies an unwanted degree of superiority.
  • Grip your fellows palm, not fingers, no lily-wristed feeble soft grips, that gives the wrong impression and no 'look I am Thor' hand crushers either, just a good solid grip. 
  • Give it one firm pump.
  • One shake is all you need, you ain't at the urinals now chaps! 
  • Handshakes are brief, should preferably be accompanied with direct eye contact and not to be complicated by other forms of touching. 
  • And that's your lot. 
  • If you want to add a little flourish then a discreet nod is always a welcome sign of respect for a peer and fellow waterman. 
  • If you are greeting a lady then the etiquette becomes terrifying. Wait for the ladies cue. If they proffer a hand you are in for a shaking. If they don't then lean in for the kiss, on the cheek cheeky! Go left, always seems to avoid that unwelcome headbutt scenario.
 So that's it get out and get shaking. Toodle pip!

Posted by Sharpy in Blog, Guides | Permalink | Comments (0)

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How To Piss Off A Surf Photog...

Screen Shot 2013-03-25 at 13.10.15

Pissing off surf photog's is astoundingly easy. Here's a quick and concise guide:

  • Steal an image off off the Interwebs. 
  • Brand it with your company logo.
  • Put it on your busy commercial online store website.
  • Share it on your social media (Facebook Like count: 274,888)
  • Enjoy the traffic and buzz a sweet image you have not paid for generates.
  • Wait for surf photog to inevitably notice you've stolen his work for commercial gain.
I'll be sending an invoice in presently. How about £1 per 'Like'? I think that's fair seeing as it's unauthorised usage by a large company.

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25 Things You Probably Didn't Know About Rain

Proper Bo' by Roger Sharp (Surfphoto)) on 500px.com

It never rains but it pours is an expression that doesn't make any sense. Here's some facts that do. Kinda.

Continue reading "25 Things You Probably Didn't Know About Rain" »

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