Está viendo la página Spain versión del sitio.
Le gustaría cambiar a su sitio local?
Última edición

Carve Magazine Carve 204 Edición anterior

English
11 Reseñas   •  English   •   Sport (Boards & Watersports)
Only €4,99
Stoke-ed
It’s a grey autumn day, raining cats and dogs, but out beyond the browning flowers, muddy puddles and flooding pavement, the sea is packed. The dulled brine occasionally moved by three-foot sets and a light offshore has drawn out large numbers of surfers right up the coast. Ordinarily sane people are up at dawn in torrential rain waiting to get their fix. Just one slide, one turn, maybe if there are lucky, a head dip to claim.
For years I have enthusiastically espoused the benefits of surfing, and questioned what makes the pursuit of ‘stoke' so addictive. I know some people claim there is no such thing. But I am a believer, and proof of my theory was laid out on beaches for hundreds of miles this morning. Everyone chasing their fix in what were less than perfect conditions on the global scale. 
I guess some people would love surfing to be just another sport, like football or tennis. Something you can pick up or leave. Dip in and out, wear the scarves, and chant on terraces. But for the majority us, it is way more than a sport will ever be. It is an addiction, our raison d’etre to get up in the dark, to explore the world, to educate ourselves, to fight to protect the environment, to raise our physical performance and fitness, and so much more.
We now have studies trying to understand why surfing makes us feel good in ways that go beyond standard endorphin release provided by jogging, and senses of achievement greater than rolling about in mud with 29 other blokes and an odd-shaped ball. When journalists were asking about Olympic inclusion, my go-to answer was always: “On any day, any surfer or any ability can feel like a gold medallist.” Is it cold water reflex? Is it ozone? Or is it something more. I have no idea. Being a product of a tight and committed surfing community I never questioned why. We all just felt it and we're all hooked from day one. 
read more read less
Carve Preview Pages Carve Preview Pages Carve Preview Pages Carve Preview Pages Carve Preview Pages Carve Preview Pages

Carve

Carve 204 Stoke-ed It’s a grey autumn day, raining cats and dogs, but out beyond the browning flowers, muddy puddles and flooding pavement, the sea is packed. The dulled brine occasionally moved by three-foot sets and a light offshore has drawn out large numbers of surfers right up the coast. Ordinarily sane people are up at dawn in torrential rain waiting to get their fix. Just one slide, one turn, maybe if there are lucky, a head dip to claim. For years I have enthusiastically espoused the benefits of surfing, and questioned what makes the pursuit of ‘stoke' so addictive. I know some people claim there is no such thing. But I am a believer, and proof of my theory was laid out on beaches for hundreds of miles this morning. Everyone chasing their fix in what were less than perfect conditions on the global scale.  I guess some people would love surfing to be just another sport, like football or tennis. Something you can pick up or leave. Dip in and out, wear the scarves, and chant on terraces. But for the majority us, it is way more than a sport will ever be. It is an addiction, our raison d’etre to get up in the dark, to explore the world, to educate ourselves, to fight to protect the environment, to raise our physical performance and fitness, and so much more. We now have studies trying to understand why surfing makes us feel good in ways that go beyond standard endorphin release provided by jogging, and senses of achievement greater than rolling about in mud with 29 other blokes and an odd-shaped ball. When journalists were asking about Olympic inclusion, my go-to answer was always: “On any day, any surfer or any ability can feel like a gold medallist.” Is it cold water reflex? Is it ozone? Or is it something more. I have no idea. Being a product of a tight and committed surfing community I never questioned why. We all just felt it and we're all hooked from day one. 


SELECCIONAR FORMATO:
Acceso instantáneo

Ofertas digitales disponibles:

Ejemplar digital único Carve 204
 
4,99 / issue
Este número y otros números atrasados no se incluyen en un Carve suscripción. Las suscripciones incluyen el último número de la revista y los nuevos números publicados durante el periodo de suscripción. €3,60 por número . Si desea suscribirse, consulte nuestro Opciones de suscripción
Los ahorros se calculan sobre la compra comparable de números sueltos durante un periodo de suscripción anualizado y pueden variar respecto a los importes anunciados. Los cálculos son meramente ilustrativos. Las suscripciones digitales incluyen el último número y todos los números regulares publicados durante su suscripción, a menos que se indique lo contrario. El periodo elegido se renovará automáticamente a menos que se cancele en el área Mi cuenta hasta 24 horas antes del final de la suscripción actual.

Issue Cover

Carve  |  Carve 204  


Stoke-ed
It’s a grey autumn day, raining cats and dogs, but out beyond the browning flowers, muddy puddles and flooding pavement, the sea is packed. The dulled brine occasionally moved by three-foot sets and a light offshore has drawn out large numbers of surfers right up the coast. Ordinarily sane people are up at dawn in torrential rain waiting to get their fix. Just one slide, one turn, maybe if there are lucky, a head dip to claim.
For years I have enthusiastically espoused the benefits of surfing, and questioned what makes the pursuit of ‘stoke' so addictive. I know some people claim there is no such thing. But I am a believer, and proof of my theory was laid out on beaches for hundreds of miles this morning. Everyone chasing their fix in what were less than perfect conditions on the global scale. 
I guess some people would love surfing to be just another sport, like football or tennis. Something you can pick up or leave. Dip in and out, wear the scarves, and chant on terraces. But for the majority us, it is way more than a sport will ever be. It is an addiction, our raison d’etre to get up in the dark, to explore the world, to educate ourselves, to fight to protect the environment, to raise our physical performance and fitness, and so much more.
We now have studies trying to understand why surfing makes us feel good in ways that go beyond standard endorphin release provided by jogging, and senses of achievement greater than rolling about in mud with 29 other blokes and an odd-shaped ball. When journalists were asking about Olympic inclusion, my go-to answer was always: “On any day, any surfer or any ability can feel like a gold medallist.” Is it cold water reflex? Is it ozone? Or is it something more. I have no idea. Being a product of a tight and committed surfing community I never questioned why. We all just felt it and we're all hooked from day one. 
Seguir leyendo leer menos
CARVE is Britain’s most popular surfing magazine. The App version is the same as the print version but adds video clips, ultra rich photos and simple navigation to CARVE’s popular mix of awesome photography, features, travel, interviews and news from around the surfing world.

omo abonado recibirá las siguientes ventajas:


•  Un descuento sobre el PVP de su revista
•  Su revista en su dispositivo cada mes
•  Nunca te perderás un número
•  Estás protegido de las subidas de precios que puedan producirse más adelante en el año

Recibirás 5 problemas durante un año Carve suscripción a la revista.

Nota: Las ediciones digitales no incluyen los artículos de portada ni los suplementos que encontraría en los ejemplares impresos.

Su compra aquí en Pocketmags.com puede leerse en cualquiera de las siguientes plataformas.


Puedes leer aquí en el sitio web o descargar la aplicación para tu plataforma, sólo recuerda iniciar sesión con tu nombre de usuario y contraseña de Pocketmags.

Apple Pocketmags Online Pocketmags Google Pocketmags
La aplicación Pocketmags funciona en todos los dispositivos iPad y iPhone con iOS 13.0 o superior, Android 8.0 o superior y Fire Tablet (Gen 3) o superior. Nuestro lector web funciona con cualquier navegador compatible con HTML5, para PC y Mac recomendamos Chrome o Firefox.

Para iOS recomendamos cualquier dispositivo que pueda ejecutar el último iOS para un mejor rendimiento y estabilidad. Los modelos anteriores con especificaciones de procesador y RAM inferiores pueden experimentar una renderización de páginas más lenta y fallos ocasionales de la aplicación que están fuera de nuestro control.
4,8
/5
Basado en 11 Opiniones de los clientes
5
10
4
0
3
1
2
0
1
0
Ver comentarios

Carve

Best ever !! Revisado 14 abril 2020

Thoroughly entertaining

Very emotional and and interesting Revisado 18 julio 2019

Beautiful! Revisado 06 julio 2011

Artículos de este número


A continuación encontrará una selección de artículos en Carve Carve 204.

Carve Issue 220 Issue 220 Comprar por €4,99 Ver | Añadir a la cesta
Carve Issue 219 Issue 219 Comprar por €4,99 Ver | Añadir a la cesta
Carve Issue 218 Issue 218 Comprar por €4,99 Ver | Añadir a la cesta
Carve Issue 217 Issue 217 Comprar por €4,99 Ver | Añadir a la cesta
Carve Issue 216 Issue 216 Comprar por €4,99 Ver | Añadir a la cesta
Carve issue 215 issue 215 Comprar por €4,99 Ver | Añadir a la cesta
Carve issue 214 issue 214 Comprar por €4,99 Ver | Añadir a la cesta
Carve issue 213 issue 213 Comprar por €4,99 Ver | Añadir a la cesta
Carve issue 212 issue 212 Comprar por €4,99 Ver | Añadir a la cesta
Carve issue 211 issue 211 Comprar por €4,99 Ver | Añadir a la cesta
Carve Carve 210 Carve 210 Comprar por €4,99 Ver | Añadir a la cesta
Carve Carve 209 Carve 209 Comprar por €4,99 Ver | Añadir a la cesta
Carve Carve 208 Carve 208 Comprar por €4,99 Ver | Añadir a la cesta
+
Ver todos