Good work Stu

gannet's picture
gannet started the topic in Friday, 6 Nov 2020 at 9:27am
stunet's picture
stunet's picture
stunet Friday, 6 Nov 2020 at 10:04am

Cheers mate. 'Twas a long talk that had to get whittled down but the editing team kept it all in context.

gannet's picture
gannet's picture
gannet Friday, 6 Nov 2020 at 10:16am

Some nice insights and ideas from all concerned. You did us proud!

I'll have to add Bluebird to the reading list.

By the way, any idea where we can find the Kev the Head doco by Johan?

stunet's picture
stunet's picture
stunet Friday, 6 Nov 2020 at 10:33am

Yeah, it's here: https://sverigesradio.se/avsnitt/307162

However, it's in Swedish...well, Swedish mixed with English delivered in a broad Aussie accent for the interviews, such as with Damien Lovelock who sounds impossibly Aussie.

gannet's picture
gannet's picture
gannet Friday, 6 Nov 2020 at 11:33am

Cheers
Pity about my Swedish...

Will check it out for the interviews though.

I focus's picture
I focus's picture
I focus Friday, 6 Nov 2020 at 1:39pm

Hey Stu long been a big fan of your writing and insightful view of the world you set a very high bar, great to hear you can speak at the same level, cheers.

frog's picture
frog's picture
frog Saturday, 7 Nov 2020 at 8:06am

I heard that on the radio and did not twig it was Stu. Good to have his perspective.

The number one thing that gets missed in mainstream media and even in Home and Away type depictions of surfers is that surfing has peak intensity experiences and swell cycles that influence life and mood.

Surfing comes across as having all the excitement of drinking a cup of coffee.

The Bluebird book seems the same - no hint that magic days happen that can be peak life moments remembered forever.