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James Bowden recently explored the farthest shores of the British Isles, taking nothing more than his van, good friends and good expectations. He recounts his journey through the lens...

Dane Peterson and Belinda Peterson-Baggs recently travelled to Indonesia with aid supplies that are still much in demand nearly four years after the tsunami... Words: Belinda Peterson-Baggs Photos: Dane Peterson; Adam Kobayashi

Flitting between awesome waves at Aileens and Nelscott Reef is all in a week's work for Ireland's big-wave master Al Mennie. Words: Al Mennie Photos: Al Mennie, Gary McCall, Larry Jansky, Richard Hallman

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Chris Brunt chats to west Penwith's prodigal son and professional journeyman Sam Bleakley about his thirst for adventure and love of longboarding. [All photos by Chris Brunt.]

They're trained to defend their country and protect our freedom and liberty, but when active service is over, many soldiers find themselves struggling with personal and mental problems that the army just doesn't want to know about. Could surfing provide some answers? Words & photos: Russ Pierre


Test tube surf boards

July 04, 2009 | Words By: Rhiannon

pic-credit-robert-liu

Eco-friendly scientists in Hawaii embed test tubes into their boards.

We all know that there’s nothing more frustrating then being stuck at work on a good wave day. An ingenious bunch of scientists in Honolulu have found a way of taking their work to the beach by embedding their test-tubes into their boards!

They fill up the test tube, paddle out, catch a few waves then catch a wave back in once the chemical reaction has finished.

The chemists at the University of Hawaii use the “surf reactor” to harness sunlight to create versions of the vitamin A molecule with unusual geometries. They say the ocean is perfect for harmlessly soaking up any excess heat made by the chemical reaction in the test tube.

Experiments like this usually need cool water pumped around them to keep them cool, so this “simple floating solar reactor” is the eco-friendly option.

The scientist who built the board says it would be easy to scale up the reaction by just using a bigger surfboard.

I’m impressed.

A few more pictures here (plus the paper if you can stomach it).


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