U bekijkt momenteel de Netherlands versie van de site.
Wilt u overschakelen naar uw lokale site?
Laatste editie

Carve Magazine Carve 191 Vorige editie

English
11 Beoordelingen   •  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.


FORMAAT SELECTEREN:
Directe toegang

Beschikbare digitale aanbiedingen:

Enkele digitale uitgave Carve 191
 
4,99 / issue
Deze editie en andere oude edities zijn niet opgenomen in een Carve abonnement. Abonnementen omvatten de nieuwste reguliere editie en nieuwe uitgaven die tijdens uw abonnement zijn uitgebracht en beginnen vanaf slechts €3,60 per uitgave . Als je je wilt abonneren, kijk dan op onze Abonnementsopties
Besparingen zijn berekend op de vergelijkbare aankoop van losse nummers over een abonnementsperiode op jaarbasis en kunnen afwijken van geadverteerde bedragen. Berekeningen dienen alleen ter illustratie. Digitale abonnementen omvatten het laatste nummer en alle reguliere nummers die tijdens uw abonnement verschijnen, tenzij anders vermeld. De door u gekozen termijn wordt automatisch verlengd, tenzij u tot 24 uur voor het einde van het lopende abonnement opzegt in de Mijn Account-zone.

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.
meer lezen minder lezen
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.

Als abonnee ontvang je de volgende voordelen:


•  Een korting op de verkoopprijs van je tijdschrift
•  Je tijdschrift elke maand op je apparaat
•  Je zult nooit een editie missen
•  Je bent beschermd tegen prijsstijgingen die later in het jaar kunnen plaatsvinden

Je ontvangt 5 edities gedurende een periode van 1 jaar Carve abonnement op een tijdschrift.

Opmerking: Digitale edities bevatten niet de omslagitems of supplementen die je zou vinden bij gedrukte exemplaren.

Uw aankoop hier op Pocketmags.com kan op elk van de volgende platforms worden gelezen.


Je kunt hier lezen op de website of de app downloaden voor jouw platform, vergeet niet in te loggen met je Pocketmags gebruikersnaam en wachtwoord.

Apple Pocketmags Online Pocketmags Google Pocketmags
De Pocketmags-app werkt op alle iPad- en iPhone-apparaten met iOS 13.0 of hoger, Android 8.0 of hoger en Fire Tablet (Gen 3) of hoger. Onze webreader werkt met elke HTML5-compatibele browser, voor pc en Mac raden we Chrome of Firefox aan.

Voor iOS raden we elk apparaat aan dat de nieuwste iOS kan gebruiken voor betere prestaties en stabiliteit. Eerdere modellen met lagere processor- en RAM-specificaties kunnen te maken krijgen met een langzamere paginaweergave en incidentele app-crashes, die buiten onze controle liggen.
4,8
/5
Gebaseerd op 11 Beoordelingen van klanten
5
10
4
0
3
1
2
0
1
0
Bekijk beoordelingen

Carve

Best ever !! Beoordeeld op 14 april 2020

Thoroughly entertaining

Very emotional and and interesting Beoordeeld op 18 juli 2019

Beautiful! Beoordeeld op 06 juli 2011

Artikelen in deze editie


Hieronder vindt u een selectie van artikelen in Carve Carve 191.

Carve Issue 220 Issue 220 Kopen voor €4,99 Bekijk | In winkelwagen
Carve Issue 219 Issue 219 Kopen voor €4,99 Bekijk | In winkelwagen
Carve Issue 218 Issue 218 Kopen voor €4,99 Bekijk | In winkelwagen
Carve Issue 217 Issue 217 Kopen voor €4,99 Bekijk | In winkelwagen
Carve Issue 216 Issue 216 Kopen voor €4,99 Bekijk | In winkelwagen
Carve issue 215 issue 215 Kopen voor €4,99 Bekijk | In winkelwagen
Carve issue 214 issue 214 Kopen voor €4,99 Bekijk | In winkelwagen
Carve issue 213 issue 213 Kopen voor €4,99 Bekijk | In winkelwagen
Carve issue 212 issue 212 Kopen voor €4,99 Bekijk | In winkelwagen
Carve issue 211 issue 211 Kopen voor €4,99 Bekijk | In winkelwagen
Carve Carve 210 Carve 210 Kopen voor €4,99 Bekijk | In winkelwagen
Carve Carve 209 Carve 209 Kopen voor €4,99 Bekijk | In winkelwagen
Carve Carve 208 Carve 208 Kopen voor €4,99 Bekijk | In winkelwagen
+
Alles zien