
Where is kneeboarding going?
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- Local (More than 25 post)
- Posts: 28
- Joined: Tue Jan 23, 2007 1:45 am
- Location: New zealand, Dunedin
hey hey im from the bottom of nz and have been kneeloing for 12 years.
when i started there were 2 exelent competative locals out every day.
now im almost the only local kneelo, well the only one who surfs every day, i see the other two maby twice a year in the water.
but i love being the only one in town because every one knows who i am,
'hey your that kneelo dude aye' i hear in town on the piss with mates.
but still no one is starting up kneeboarding here, we have heaps of learners standing and longboarding(which has a pro circuit in nz now).
up north tho its a different storey the have heaps of youngsters (under 20) starting up and winning in aussie.
and the uk seems to have a healthy population of kneelos.
we need more to push the boundaries tho, how many are doing manouvers that are fresh different from 15, 20 years ago?
just look at where stan ups are going .. kickflips backflips...
we do need major sponsors to come on board so that we can quit our jobs and surf all day all over the world. but in order for that to happen we need to make our sport look more spectacular.
if more people could make videos of comps that would help
maby if we had a best trick of the year comp on this site too!
video proof needed, kind of like the kustom 50,000 best trick comp on right now.
when i started there were 2 exelent competative locals out every day.
now im almost the only local kneelo, well the only one who surfs every day, i see the other two maby twice a year in the water.
but i love being the only one in town because every one knows who i am,
'hey your that kneelo dude aye' i hear in town on the piss with mates.
but still no one is starting up kneeboarding here, we have heaps of learners standing and longboarding(which has a pro circuit in nz now).
up north tho its a different storey the have heaps of youngsters (under 20) starting up and winning in aussie.
and the uk seems to have a healthy population of kneelos.
we need more to push the boundaries tho, how many are doing manouvers that are fresh different from 15, 20 years ago?
just look at where stan ups are going .. kickflips backflips...
we do need major sponsors to come on board so that we can quit our jobs and surf all day all over the world. but in order for that to happen we need to make our sport look more spectacular.
if more people could make videos of comps that would help
maby if we had a best trick of the year comp on this site too!
video proof needed, kind of like the kustom 50,000 best trick comp on right now.
san pedro+srooms=funtimes
- Sparrow
- Legend (Contribution King!)
- Posts: 316
- Joined: Fri Aug 29, 2003 3:37 pm
- Location: Sth Coast of NSW Australia
- Contact:
What is the answer you are wanting with this post?
Ask yourself this question. Why do you do what you do
How about everyone one just go out & be the happiest people in the water having the best time, surfing the best you can. If you want things to change then do something
If you want to show kneeboarding as an exciting sport then get off your arse & charge it
Take it on & test yourself.
Its happening everyday by kneelo`s around the world & we are being noticed but if you need to venture into your own minds on the reasons why kneeboarding has not flurished or where will it be in the future, good luck. Some questions just dont have answers or maybe answers we just dont like
Just dont winge about the sport dying or declining. We need the youg guns like you Nov to get out and charge perfect waves. Just winning comps wont bring the interest into the sport. Kneeboarding is so much more.
Trying to be like the mass production line is not such a good thing & why is it that we would want that
is it the riches, the fame, the self glory that mainstream surfing rolls in that would fix things or help kneeboarding
Kneeboarding just is not mainstream & people just will not look unless you can show someone who is maybe iconic. An idol.
Get out there & do what you do
not someone elses way & inspire, maybe someone may look & say sh-t that was cool 
Ask yourself this question. Why do you do what you do

How about everyone one just go out & be the happiest people in the water having the best time, surfing the best you can. If you want things to change then do something

If you want to show kneeboarding as an exciting sport then get off your arse & charge it

Its happening everyday by kneelo`s around the world & we are being noticed but if you need to venture into your own minds on the reasons why kneeboarding has not flurished or where will it be in the future, good luck. Some questions just dont have answers or maybe answers we just dont like
Just dont winge about the sport dying or declining. We need the youg guns like you Nov to get out and charge perfect waves. Just winning comps wont bring the interest into the sport. Kneeboarding is so much more.
Trying to be like the mass production line is not such a good thing & why is it that we would want that


Kneeboarding just is not mainstream & people just will not look unless you can show someone who is maybe iconic. An idol.
Get out there & do what you do


- RMcKnee
- Legend (Contribution King!)
- Posts: 597
- Joined: Fri Jul 25, 2008 4:15 am
- Location: Gold Coast Australia
Well said Sparrow, most sense yet on this topic. What I was trying to point out earlier is that
As with most success, the only true kind stems from doing something for its own sake, not for the sake of some perceived benefit that follows on from being successful.
Being "not mainstream" has nothing to do with being "underground". Pot-holing is really about the only "underground sport" I can think of. "Underground" is a term that's loaded with all sorts of meanings to all sorts of people.And for people, money remains an almost irresistible temptation, like it or not. Those of us who remember when hip-hop was "underground" can also remember the unseemly scramble that began in that "movement" when the money arrived, and which continues to this day. DJ Shadow's first album, "Endtroducing", has a tune ("What's Wrong with Hip-hop in '96") that says it all very succinctly.
Tom Waits, (not a mainstream artist, but recognised by many in the music business as an undisputed genius), said in 1988
In 2002 Waits wrote
No matter how you feel about the man's music, you can't fault Waits's logic. You can re-read the above, substituting the words "waves" or "surfing" for songs, and his statement suddenly becomes very relevant to where surfing/kneeboarding is going/has gone.The very fact that kneeboarding has not gone mainstream may well have been its saving grace. It's the independence of kneeboarding that allows it to be what it is today, something that's truly close to the hearts of those few freaks who continue doing it.
The future of kneeboarding should and will grow organically, from each individual according to his ability, and to each according to his need.
Kidrock and others...Sorry,
I'll get off my soapbox now.
Trying to be like the mass production line is not such a good thing & why is it that we would want that is it the riches, the fame, the self glory that mainstream surfing rolls in that would fix things or help kneeboarding
As with most success, the only true kind stems from doing something for its own sake, not for the sake of some perceived benefit that follows on from being successful.
And the iconic people in the kneelo world have always been there, doing what they do because they want to; Greenough, Lis, Crawford, Parkes, Farrer. Who's next...that's up to you younger crew, as it has always been.Kneeboarding just is not mainstream & people just will not look unless you can show someone who is maybe iconic."
Being "not mainstream" has nothing to do with being "underground". Pot-holing is really about the only "underground sport" I can think of. "Underground" is a term that's loaded with all sorts of meanings to all sorts of people.And for people, money remains an almost irresistible temptation, like it or not. Those of us who remember when hip-hop was "underground" can also remember the unseemly scramble that began in that "movement" when the money arrived, and which continues to this day. DJ Shadow's first album, "Endtroducing", has a tune ("What's Wrong with Hip-hop in '96") that says it all very succinctly.
Tom Waits, (not a mainstream artist, but recognised by many in the music business as an undisputed genius), said in 1988
He don't get played on the radio that much. See, for him too, it ain't easy being "not mainstream"."You hope that you'll be on radio, but radio is so changed now. It's like mainstream network stuff, the demographics of it. Except for a few struggling stations with a limited range and format. I mean, you can glue decals all over your head that say "Coca-Cola" and "Pepsi" and advertise cigarettes and underwear. That's one way to get across. You know, like race drivers that have every product known to man tattooed across the side of their car. And a lot of groups choose to align themselves with big companies to underwrite their tours. I hate that sh*t."
In 2002 Waits wrote
Any of that last para sound familiar?Songs carry emotional information and some transport us back to a poignant time, place or event in our lives. It's no wonder a corporation would want to hitch a ride on the spell these songs cast and encourage you to buy soft drinks, underwear or automobiles while you're in the trance. Artists who take money for ads poison and pervert their songs. It reduces them to the level of a jingle, a word that describes the sound of change in your pocket, which is what your songs become. Remember, when you sell your songs for commercials, you are selling your audience as well.When I was a kid, if I saw an artist I admired doing a commercial, I'd think, "Too bad, he must really need the money." But now it's so pervasive. It's a virus. Artists are lining up to do ads. The money and exposure are too tantalizing for most artists to decline. Corporations are hoping to hijack a culture's memories for their product. They want an artist's audience, credibility, good will and all the energy the songs have gathered as well as given over the years. They suck the life and meaning from the songs and impregnate them with promises of a better life with their product.
Eventually, artists will be going onstage like race-car drivers covered in hundreds of logos. John, stay pure. Your credibility, your integrity and your honor are things no company should be able to buy.
No matter how you feel about the man's music, you can't fault Waits's logic. You can re-read the above, substituting the words "waves" or "surfing" for songs, and his statement suddenly becomes very relevant to where surfing/kneeboarding is going/has gone.The very fact that kneeboarding has not gone mainstream may well have been its saving grace. It's the independence of kneeboarding that allows it to be what it is today, something that's truly close to the hearts of those few freaks who continue doing it.
The future of kneeboarding should and will grow organically, from each individual according to his ability, and to each according to his need.
Kidrock and others...Sorry,

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- Ripper (more than 100 posts)
- Posts: 190
- Joined: Mon Aug 15, 2005 12:22 am
- Location: West Coast South Oz
[quote="RMcKnee"]
Being "not mainstream" has nothing to do with being "underground". Pot-holing is really about the only "underground sport" I can think of. "Underground" is a term that's loaded with all sorts of meanings to all sorts of people.[quote]
So for you "being not mainstream" has nothing to do with being"underground" but that terms loaded with all sorts of meanings to all sorts of people!!
Being "not mainstream" has nothing to do with being "underground". Pot-holing is really about the only "underground sport" I can think of. "Underground" is a term that's loaded with all sorts of meanings to all sorts of people.[quote]
So for you "being not mainstream" has nothing to do with being"underground" but that terms loaded with all sorts of meanings to all sorts of people!!
getting there is often as good as getting there