Vous consultez actuellement le France version du site.
Voulez-vous passer à votre site local ?
Dernière édition

Carve Magazine Carve 191 Retour à l'édition précédente

English
11 Critiques   •  English   •   Sport (Boards & Watersports)
Only €4,99
Who was the first surfer? What drove them to stand on a plank hurtling shoreward?
The first woman, or perhaps even a man, bored of the prone belly-boarding frolics on rough-hewn wood or reed craft* decided to say ‘hold my beer’ one day and stand up.
Which leads to the obvious point: at that moment in history they were the only surfer. Can you imagine the reaction?
“What the?”
“Mabel, what the fork are you doing? We’re riding the waves not walking on water! Get down right now! It’s ungainly, and possibly an insult to whichever deity we currently believe controls the sea.”
Change is always regarded with suspicion. Boards getting shorter, fins going from one to three, performance going into the air, surfing becoming mainstream. For a supposed counterculture surfing can be deeply conservative when forced in a new direction.
So the prone to standing paradigm shift must have been a doozy. Campfire gossip about this new fangled way of riding the ocean-going rollers must’ve been heated. Will it catch on? Is it an insult to the proud culture of flopping around on belly boards? What happens next? Is it too damn hard? And how the hell do you decide which foot goes forward?
The forethought and skill to ride a board carved out of a log (or bundled reeds) with stone tools would’ve been immense; especially as it was pure recreation. Our ancestors engaged in finding food, shelter and safety. Leisure time wasn’t a consideration. So surfing was one of the early, selfish for sure, hobbies or pastimes.
“Can’t believe he’s riding the breakers again instead of tending the crops or hunting boars!” Maybe this is why the Easter Island culture failed. Chopped down all the trees to make kick-ass big olos to shred the gnar didn’t they?
We are, of course, far removed from such matters. Change still happens. We can never put the genie back in the lamp. ‘Unspoilt by progress’ is a slogan merely on antique mirrors in old-school pubs. We are the now.
read more read less
Carve Preview Pages Carve Preview Pages Carve Preview Pages Carve Preview Pages Carve Preview Pages Carve Preview Pages Carve Preview Pages Carve Preview Pages

Carve

Carve 191 Who was the first surfer? What drove them to stand on a plank hurtling shoreward? The first woman, or perhaps even a man, bored of the prone belly-boarding frolics on rough-hewn wood or reed craft* decided to say ‘hold my beer’ one day and stand up. Which leads to the obvious point: at that moment in history they were the only surfer. Can you imagine the reaction? “What the?” “Mabel, what the fork are you doing? We’re riding the waves not walking on water! Get down right now! It’s ungainly, and possibly an insult to whichever deity we currently believe controls the sea.” Change is always regarded with suspicion. Boards getting shorter, fins going from one to three, performance going into the air, surfing becoming mainstream. For a supposed counterculture surfing can be deeply conservative when forced in a new direction. So the prone to standing paradigm shift must have been a doozy. Campfire gossip about this new fangled way of riding the ocean-going rollers must’ve been heated. Will it catch on? Is it an insult to the proud culture of flopping around on belly boards? What happens next? Is it too damn hard? And how the hell do you decide which foot goes forward? The forethought and skill to ride a board carved out of a log (or bundled reeds) with stone tools would’ve been immense; especially as it was pure recreation. Our ancestors engaged in finding food, shelter and safety. Leisure time wasn’t a consideration. So surfing was one of the early, selfish for sure, hobbies or pastimes. “Can’t believe he’s riding the breakers again instead of tending the crops or hunting boars!” Maybe this is why the Easter Island culture failed. Chopped down all the trees to make kick-ass big olos to shred the gnar didn’t they? We are, of course, far removed from such matters. Change still happens. We can never put the genie back in the lamp. ‘Unspoilt by progress’ is a slogan merely on antique mirrors in old-school pubs. We are the now.


SELECTIONNER LE FORMAT :
Accès instantané

Offres numériques disponibles :

Numéro précédent numérique Carve 191
 
4,99 / issue
Ce numéro et d'autres numéros antérieurs ne sont pas inclus dans un abonnement à l'UE. Carve abonnement. Les abonnements comprennent le dernier numéro régulier et les nouveaux numéros publiés pendant la durée de l'abonnement. €3,60 par numéro . Si vous souhaitez vous abonner, veuillez consulter notre rubrique Options d'abonnement
Les économies sont calculées sur la base d'un achat comparable de numéros uniques sur une période d'abonnement annualisée et peuvent varier par rapport aux montants annoncés. Les calculs sont effectués à des fins d'illustration uniquement. Les abonnements numériques comprennent le dernier numéro et tous les numéros réguliers publiés au cours de l'abonnement, sauf indication contraire. L'abonnement choisi sera automatiquement renouvelé s'il n'est pas résilié dans la section Mon compte jusqu'à 24 heures avant la fin de l'abonnement en cours.

Issue Cover

Carve  |  Carve 191  


Who was the first surfer? What drove them to stand on a plank hurtling shoreward?
The first woman, or perhaps even a man, bored of the prone belly-boarding frolics on rough-hewn wood or reed craft* decided to say ‘hold my beer’ one day and stand up.
Which leads to the obvious point: at that moment in history they were the only surfer. Can you imagine the reaction?
“What the?”
“Mabel, what the fork are you doing? We’re riding the waves not walking on water! Get down right now! It’s ungainly, and possibly an insult to whichever deity we currently believe controls the sea.”
Change is always regarded with suspicion. Boards getting shorter, fins going from one to three, performance going into the air, surfing becoming mainstream. For a supposed counterculture surfing can be deeply conservative when forced in a new direction.
So the prone to standing paradigm shift must have been a doozy. Campfire gossip about this new fangled way of riding the ocean-going rollers must’ve been heated. Will it catch on? Is it an insult to the proud culture of flopping around on belly boards? What happens next? Is it too damn hard? And how the hell do you decide which foot goes forward?
The forethought and skill to ride a board carved out of a log (or bundled reeds) with stone tools would’ve been immense; especially as it was pure recreation. Our ancestors engaged in finding food, shelter and safety. Leisure time wasn’t a consideration. So surfing was one of the early, selfish for sure, hobbies or pastimes.
“Can’t believe he’s riding the breakers again instead of tending the crops or hunting boars!” Maybe this is why the Easter Island culture failed. Chopped down all the trees to make kick-ass big olos to shred the gnar didn’t they?
We are, of course, far removed from such matters. Change still happens. We can never put the genie back in the lamp. ‘Unspoilt by progress’ is a slogan merely on antique mirrors in old-school pubs. We are the now.
en savoir plus lire moins
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.

En tant qu'abonné, vous bénéficierez des avantages suivants :


•  Une réduction sur le prix de vente conseillé de votre magazine
•  Votre magazine livré sur votre appareil chaque mois
•  Vous ne manquerez jamais un numéro
•  Vous êtes protégé contre les hausses de prix qui pourraient survenir plus tard dans l'année.

Vous recevrez 5 pendant une période de 1 an Carve abonnement au magazine.

Remarque : les éditions numériques ne comprennent pas les éléments de couverture ou les suppléments que vous trouveriez avec les copies imprimées.

Votre achat ici à Pocketmags.com peut être lu sur l'une des plateformes suivantes.


Vous pouvez le lire ici sur le site web ou télécharger l'application pour votre plateforme, n'oubliez pas de vous connecter avec votre nom d'utilisateur et votre mot de passe Pocketmags.

Apple Pocketmags Online Pocketmags Google Pocketmags
L'application Pocketmags fonctionne sur tous les appareils iPad et iPhone fonctionnant sous iOS 13.0 ou plus, Android 8.0 ou plus et Fire Tablet (Gen 3) ou plus. Notre lecteur web fonctionne avec n'importe quel navigateur compatible HTML5, pour PC et Mac nous recommandons Chrome ou Firefox.

Pour iOS, nous recommandons tout appareil pouvant exécuter le dernier iOS pour de meilleures performances et une meilleure stabilité. Les modèles plus anciens avec des spécifications de processeur et de RAM inférieures peuvent connaître un rendu de page plus lent et des plantages occasionnels de l'application qui sont hors de notre contrôle.
4,8
/5
Sur la base de 11 Commentaires des clients
5
10
4
0
3
1
2
0
1
0
Voir les commentaires

Carve

Best ever !! Révision 14 avril 2020

Thoroughly entertaining

Very emotional and and interesting Révision 18 juillet 2019

Beautiful! Révision 06 juillet 2011

Articles dans ce numéro


Vous trouverez ci-dessous une sélection d'articles dans Carve Carve 191.

Carve Issue 220 Issue 220 Acheter pour €4,99 Voir | Ajouter au panier
Carve Issue 219 Issue 219 Acheter pour €4,99 Voir | Ajouter au panier
Carve Issue 218 Issue 218 Acheter pour €4,99 Voir | Ajouter au panier
Carve Issue 217 Issue 217 Acheter pour €4,99 Voir | Ajouter au panier
Carve Issue 216 Issue 216 Acheter pour €4,99 Voir | Ajouter au panier
Carve issue 215 issue 215 Acheter pour €4,99 Voir | Ajouter au panier
Carve issue 214 issue 214 Acheter pour €4,99 Voir | Ajouter au panier
Carve issue 213 issue 213 Acheter pour €4,99 Voir | Ajouter au panier
Carve issue 212 issue 212 Acheter pour €4,99 Voir | Ajouter au panier
Carve issue 211 issue 211 Acheter pour €4,99 Voir | Ajouter au panier
Carve Carve 210 Carve 210 Acheter pour €4,99 Voir | Ajouter au panier
Carve Carve 209 Carve 209 Acheter pour €4,99 Voir | Ajouter au panier
Carve Carve 208 Carve 208 Acheter pour €4,99 Voir | Ajouter au panier
+
Voir tous