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Briton Surfs Tsunami, Survives
reuteurs ^ | 12/31.04 | na

Posted on 12/31/2004 4:52:11 PM PST by Flavius

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To: Flavius
Snake might manage, but nobody else could ;)

21 posted on 12/31/2004 5:32:45 PM PST by 45semi (Man has only those rights he can defend...)
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To: RightWhale

the waves at wiaimia bay on the North Shore of Oahu in Hawaii were on average 40 ft high about six weeks ago. They staged an international surfing championship to ride those waves. There were plenty of entrees.


22 posted on 12/31/2004 5:36:35 PM PST by ckilmer
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To: zlala

Does Mr. Markwell need a bra?


23 posted on 12/31/2004 5:37:23 PM PST by decimon
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To: decimon
Does Mr. Markwell need a bra?

He does look a bit bigger than Mrs. Markwell and she probably wears one....

24 posted on 12/31/2004 5:40:06 PM PST by zlala
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To: DGray
Lucifer's Hammer,

Fun book. So was "The Mote in God's Eye."

25 posted on 12/31/2004 5:44:21 PM PST by Fatalis
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To: Wage Slave

***Yeah, and how did he jump off if the board was tied to his ankle?***

Oh you darn non-believers! Didn't you hear? A sword fish arrived on the same tsunami and through the greatest of coincidences happened to saw off the 8-inch rope around his ankle.

sarc/off


26 posted on 12/31/2004 5:47:06 PM PST by kitkat (Happy New Year, everyone)
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To: RightWhale
Surfing the face of the tsunami would require moving nearly horizontally across the wave at a high subsonic speed. Something like 140 mph and you wouldn't be hanging ten.

Please. Some of you people need some a dose of tsunami reality.

On the beach, the guy would have to surf on churning whitewater in the front part of the wave, which would be about 15 feet high and moving about 20 mph. That's obviously doable. If you look at the videos, you can see that riding in the front part of that wave wouldn't be much different from coming in on the foam after the break of a larger ordinary wave-- the ride would just last a lot longer, and carry you farther up the beach. I see no reason to doubt the guy's story.

The story says that the *next* wave was 30 feet high, but the surfer didn't ride that wave. He had met his family and moved to higher ground by that point. Still, 30 feet is almost surely an overestimation. Even if it weren't, there's no reason a person couldn't ride in front of that wave, either.

Tsunamis are very dangerous, but not for the reasons that many of you seem to think: they hit the land at enormous speeds, or they're incredibly high. They're dangerous because they're like giant, ten-foot deep flash floods that suddenly appear everywhere. That much water floats cars, knocks people over, smashes buildings, etc., but not because the wave is moving at 100 mph or something. The water's devastating because even a large volume of slow moving water can move just about anything. Look at the videos. The water's only moving 10-15 mph. Still, that's enough to wreak havoc. But a person could easily swim or paddleboard in the water. The problem is that there's no place to get out, the water's cold, you get slammed into debris or something, or you get pulled back out to sea.

27 posted on 12/31/2004 5:47:58 PM PST by Timm
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To: zlala
Women give floral offering for 'Yemanja' the Goddess of the Sea, at the Copacabana beach, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Friday, Dec 31, 2004. People dance, sing and carry flowers into the water, giving them to Yemanja, asking for good luck for the New Year 2005. Yemanja is the Goddess of the Sea, African slaves from the Yoruba region brought their beliefs of Yemanja to Brazil. (AP Photo/Douglas Engle)
28 posted on 12/31/2004 6:06:07 PM PST by BenLurkin (Big government is still a big problem.)
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To: Flavius

Yeah I agree it smells. Besides how is it possible to surf a wave that does not even form a curler at all but acts more like a flash flood?


29 posted on 12/31/2004 6:13:45 PM PST by Paul_Denton
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To: Wage Slave
Yeah, and how did he jump off if the board was tied to his ankle?

Details, details. Don't you know every surfer carries a pocket knife in his PJs?

30 posted on 12/31/2004 6:24:23 PM PST by Fester Chugabrew
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To: Wage Slave

Pull the velcro tab.


31 posted on 12/31/2004 6:39:22 PM PST by SouthTexas
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To: Fester Chugabrew
Surfers are not tied to their board. The rope goes from the ankle to the skeg so that when they fall off the rope yanks the skeg out of its socket so it doesn't gash the fallen surfer in the head. That wasn't the orginal design. It took a couple of head gashes to come up with that improvement.

I'm still skeptical of this account.

32 posted on 12/31/2004 6:41:39 PM PST by Procyon
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To: Paul_Denton

If you have seen much of the footage, and have some knowledge of surfing, you would understand that this could very well have happened. I have seen numerous clips from this horrible event that showed very survivable waves hitting the beach. Most of the wave shots show them after they have broken in deeper water but two clips stick in my mind as very ridable, open faced waves that could actually be fun, up until the point they slam into the palm trees and buildings. The leash attached to his leg is held in place by a velcro band and would definely be a pure b**ch to remove in the huge wall of soupy whitewater that would be bouncing him towards shore.

My confidence in the above statements comes from the 30-plus years of surfing that I have experienced, and my surf travels in the affected part of the world. The people affected by this terrible event are some of the most honest and hard working people in the world and deserve all of the support that we can provide.


33 posted on 12/31/2004 6:53:24 PM PST by ExpatGator
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To: 45semi

That's the same scene that came to MY mind when I heard this...[g]


34 posted on 12/31/2004 6:54:06 PM PST by mhking
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To: Flavius

Can we get a Dick Dale guitar riff ping for this guy? Awesome, Doooooood!


35 posted on 12/31/2004 6:54:58 PM PST by Jimmy Valentine (DemocRATS - when they speak, they lie; when they are silent, they are stealing the American Dream)
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To: Flavius


Hey, doncha like how the wave was thoughtful enough to bring him right to the very place he was staying. Also I heard there wasn't a whole lot of time in between waves for him to get the wife and kid (who just happened to see dad surfing in) and manage to run to safety.


36 posted on 12/31/2004 7:24:13 PM PST by SouthernFreebird
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To: Flavius

Beautiful story.

Hopefully we hear more of such stories.


37 posted on 12/31/2004 7:27:38 PM PST by Baraonda (Demographic is destiny. Don't hire 3rd world illegal aliens nor support businesses that hire them.)
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To: sully777

I don't think it is so far fetched if he was an experienced surfer.


38 posted on 12/31/2004 7:29:33 PM PST by Texasforever (It's hard to kiss the lips at night that chew your butt out all day long.)
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To: Timm
Some of you people need some a dose of tsunami reality.

The videos give me a totally different impression. I know what you mean. Surge marches onto shore with unforeseen power and grace, snatches 100,000 lives or more, and creeps back where it stayed for decades. Never thought I'd witness such a thing in my lifetime, even from a great distance.

39 posted on 12/31/2004 9:41:53 PM PST by Fester Chugabrew
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To: Fester Chugabrew

The problem with those children of Occam among you is an appalling lack of imagination, which evidently simplifies both memory and research.

Every surfer remembers that it was the legendary Peruvian, Felipe Pomar, who is the only surfer - before Markwell - known to have surfed a tsunami. That was in 1970. His ride was intentional, following an earthquake off the Peruvian coast. He said in an interview years later that he's never surfed again, but I don't know whether the terror he reported eventually subsided.

http://64.233.161.104/search?q=cache:y6H5paVEPXUJ:www.wavehunters.com/peru/peru.asp+tsunami+peru+surfer&hl=en&ie=UTF-8


40 posted on 01/01/2005 11:47:33 AM PST by osullivan
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