Category : Skateboarding

Extreme Sports Skateboarding

The Painful Life

Yesterday I was reminded how I’ve always spent most of the days of my life in some sort of pain. As a skateboarder, a snowboarder and just a flat out athlete growing up I was always getting injured, and still am, but I just learned to live with it. I’m sure many of you can relate. It’s funny when you think about it how we sprain an ankle so bad and just limp around putting most of our weight on the other leg until it heals, or you break your wrist and 3 days later you’re out there skating again, just with a bit more caution. As skateboarders, we must expect to get injured and must always be prepared to deal with it. That’s just part of our painful life…

Injection

So yesterday I showed up to continue renovations on the new skate shop and my 1 finger was just growing and growing in size. It had started the day before and I had hoped it would magically heal while I slept but that did not happen. So I knew that it must be infected and called the doctor. Now I’m a self-healer and don’t visit the doctor for too many reasons. Even when I blew my MCL and couldn’t walk for months I never even went to the doctor, I just rehabbed it all myself. So I worked all day framing and getting some drywall started and then off to the doctor’s I went not knowing what he was going to do for me. This was the first time I ever met this particular doctor since it had been so long, and he walked in looked at my finger and just started squeezing it as hard as he could. Then he looked at me and said, “I was trying to save you from the incision but it looks like we will have to cut it open.” I asked what caused this and he said it didn’t matter, it’s an infection and needs to be drained out. So after telling me how the numbing solution he was about to inject into my finger was going to hurt 10 times more than what it already feels like and explaining that if he has one of these infections he won’t even freeze it because of that, he injected it. Holy F#%@!! I couldn’t believe it. I always consider myself to have more pain tolerance that anyone could imagine but this was ridiculous. I was swearing, started sweating and actually wanted to throw up from the pain. I’ve had dislocations, herniated discs, internal bleeding and much more, but this might have been the most pain I ever felt. He sliced my finger open and squeezed out what he could and then sent me on my way with a band-aid. The worst part was that the pain stuck around in full affect until the numbing solution wore off 2 hours later. It was insanity, I couldn’t even function, but it’s all good now and I’m glad that I went. But now I know why the doctor won’t even use that technique on himself.

It was just a reminder that no matter how much we train our bodies for pain and injury, you never know what is going to happen next. I was lucky that this wasn’t a bad one in the end and glad I went to the doctor when I did. But next time I get an infection I’m gonna think twice about how to fix it…

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Extreme Sports Hey Japan Man Skateboarding

The First of Many

First Demo of many-crowd

Last week I was invited by Moichi Suzuki, a top professional skater in Japan, to do a demo in Odaiba Japan. I was absolutely stoked as this would be my first demo in Japan, something I really wanted to do. As I was walking to the where the demo would be held, I was taking in the amazing views and site of this incredible country. Everybody is nice, the food is amazing (I’m on the most incredible food journey of my life right now), and of course I finally get to use the Japanese I was studying since I was 13. As hard as it is, I’m incredibly happy I stuck with studying the language. Studying another language has opened up so many doors for me and allowed me to meet amazing people I would have not been able to have otherwise and really get to know people that we might see as quiet foreigners back in Canada on a whole different level.

When I got to the site of the demo, I was greeted by Masahiro Fujii and Moichi Suzuki. I know, these might look like a bunch of random Japanese names to you, but you should really get to know these guys, they are seriously some of the best skaters ever and definitely worth watching.

Ryan-Masahiro-Moichi

When we did the first demo, the ground area was quite full and I was ready to do demo’s today, which I thought would be no problem as I have done over 80 demo’s back home in Canada. I was wrong. For the first time in years I actually started getting nervous. Maybe it was the fact that this was my first one in Japan or maybe it was the fact that I stood out as the only foreigner doing this show and the crowd had some kind of weird expectation, I don’t know, but man was I ever nervous. After the first set, the other one went by more smoothly for me for sure, but I was quite surprised with myself. Moichi, Masahiro, Tomo and the 2 street skaters that showed up did great though and we all had a fantastic time. Definitely a fun memory and a good start to my life in Japan. Looking forward to the other adventures and more awesome skaters I meet here. I’ll keep you posted, so please stay tuned.

Check out the video from the demo. From handstands and 360’s to crazy ledge combos and a few ollies over people from the audience, this one was very insane

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Extreme Sports Skateboarding Upcoming Events

Vans opens in Surrey

Kaelen Faux & John Cardiel - Surrey

Vans opens a retail store in the newly renovated and expanded Guildford Mall in Surrey, BC. The store has been open for a little bit but finally celebrated it Grand Opening last night. With the legendary John Cardiel spinning reggae vibes on the turntables and Greg Galinsky doing paint pen art on hats it was a nonstop party for 3 hours straight. And in amongst it all people could get free gear like backpacks, sunglasses and cupcakes. The only thing missing was a skateboard demo but little Kaelen Faux took care of that one ripping back and forth in the store on his mini board and trying to bust out ollies for Cardiel.

Surrey is blessed to have the original Authentic shoe brand supporting the city and we are welcoming them with open arms. The skateboard industry is finally recognizing our city as a serious point on the world map.

It was a great event – same thing happens today 2-5pm at the Granville location. Get there…

Thanks for the love guys – Vans for life!

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Extreme Sports Hey Japan Man Skateboarding

Just the Beginning

It’s been 3 weeks now since I came to Japan, and so far it’s been fantastic. The people are amazing, I’m having fun speaking the language, eating the best food of my life, and of course skating with some amazing skaters. When I first got off the plane I couldn’t believe that I finally made it. I had worked part-time at some places as well as doing lots of skateboard demos  for the past few years to fund this adventure and I can already say it’s been worth it. Right now I’m going to Yokohama Design College where I am continuing my Japanese studies. To me, Japanese is equally as important to me as my skating, it’s just different. I love skating on using my body to do a bunch of incredibly fun tricks and then when it’s down time, hitting the books and studying. I don’t know, maybe it’s the nerdy side of me that comes with being a freestyle skater, but I love studying and reading as well as the spoken aspect of the language.

Ryan in Japan

I decided to come a few weeks before starting school to have some fun and check out the place as well as find out where some good parks are before I started school. One my ventures, I found Shin-Yokohama skatepark. Built right under a bridge, this place is huge! The concrete is also the best I have ever skated on and best of all, it’s less than an hour away from my house. After skating there for a couple of weeks, I started to meet a bunch of locals and make some new friends. One day when I was skating, I was practising a bunch of 360 spin variations, when this Japanese guy came up to me and said “You spin like Kevin Harris“. I was stunned! Not Rodney Mullen, but Kevin Harris. I was stoked to hear that, especially since Kevin was the one who taught me how to do 360’s. We talked and he told me that when Kevin Harris was in Japan, he did a demo at his school and he was blown away. He introduced himself as Kojima and then introduced his wife Saori to me who also skates. I found out from him that he owns a skateshop called Fabric, and when I looked it up, I found out that is was only 3 minutes away from my house on foot. I went to his shop and he showed me some boards from his collection. Amongst them was a deck signed by Kevin Harris. It was really interesting making that connection with one of the locals.

Right now this is the just the beginning and what a beginning it is. I’m hoping to learn a lot from the experiences that will come with this adventure. I look forward to keeping you all posted, stay tuned…

– Ryan Brynelson

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Extreme Sports Skateboarding

Awesome Friends

I was always a very social person in the sense that I loved adventure and would always just talk to anyone anywhere. That’s how you meet people and how you expand your mind by listening to random people’s stories. It’s great to meet someone new and only know them for a few minutes but remember them forever. In skateboarding this happens all the time.

Nana - Hippie - Yuya

Earlier this year I was on Facebook and saw a photo of one of my distant friends Yuya Ishikawa posted and he was at the Plaza and I wasn’t sure if the photo was recent or not. I new Yuya from a visit he had made in the past to BC but knew he was back in Japan. Next thing I knew Bam, there he was at Chuck Bailey Skate Park the very next day. I was so stoked to see him as he is such a rad dude, and sick ledge skater. Yuya had a girlfriend with him named Nana Kunugi and she was very happy to meet me. I gave them both Protest Stickers and told them to check out the website as there were lots of upcoming events that I was posting about and wanted to make sure they knew about them. These 2 hardcores started coming out to every event I was running in Surrey, they would bus all the way from North Burnaby out to Cloverdale or South Surrey just to be a part of these events which takes hours, and I thought it was so cool. It showed how much they enjoyed the atmosphere at the events. I considered them real friends and was super happy at how much they appreciated the skate scene out here, so I would try to give them rides to save them travel time and they would come back to my house and hang out whenever they could. It is so great when you can overcome a language barrier and still just hang out with others because you have things in common. So many people visit here from Japan to skateboard and they are all so amazing, super friendly and inspirational. We had some great times this summer together and created some awesome memories. Now these 2 friends will be flying out of Canada on Monday to spend a year in Australia and I wish them the best. I know I will miss seeing them around.

People come and people go, some are forgotten and others are always on your mind, and with today’s technology we can actually stay connected forever.

To Yuya and Nana
Thanks for coming to Canada and sharing your smiles, spreading your joy, and displaying your happiness. I can’t wait until we meet again. Good luck on your journey

Hippie Mike

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Extreme Sports Skateboarding

Changing the Laws of Life

“Being a skater most of my life, I was naturally drawn to the event. The energy of the event felt much like how it was when I was a kid skating. I was leaning over the railing when I ran into and met a local Surrey skate legend: “Hippie Mike,” founder of Protest Skateboards. I asked Hippie Mike if I could try his skate. He of course was more than willing. So there I was, in full uniform, my duties for the moment forgotten, skating. I was trying old tricks, as much as I could do with the 30 extra pounds (of uniform). Within a short time, people were all around, filming and taking pictures. It was foreign to me, as I am not the smoothest skater around (especially in full uniform), but I recognized I was in a position of my duties and a Mountie. The skate high dropped back down to reality. People noticed I had tattoos and asked what they were. I pulled up my sleeve and they immediately recognized the Skull Skates logo on one arm and then the Harris graphics on the other. Hippie Mike was floored by the idea of a skating cop with tattoos like that and immediately called Kevin over.” 

  • Troy Derrick

 Concrete Wave cover - Troy Derrick

Somehow I always end up being part of historic events and this is truly one of the most historic articles that has ever been published in a skateboard magazine. It started out at World Round Up contest last May while I was interviewing Freestyle Skateboarders for the website and a cop in full uniform came up to me and asked if he could ride my skateboard. I said sure and handed it over. He was with another officer that I knew from working in the City of Surrey and he let me know that he worked closely with my events DJ Jordan Wiebe all the time and knew all about me. I’m not sure if I was more impressed by that statement or the fact that he jumped on my board in full uniform and started manualling and popping ollies and nollie 180’s. My first thought was “Jesus, don’t let him fall on his gun…” but my second thought was “Who is this guy?” I was straight up surprised and he pulled up his sleeves showing me that he was pure to the core with a Skull Skates tattoo on one arm and a Kevin Harris Mountie graphic on the other. Right away I called Kevin over and got them to pose for a photo. Little did I know that photo was going to make history. When Michael Brooke from Concrete Wave Magazine caught a glimpse he was instantly attracted and wanted to know more and it ended up becoming something amazing. Kevin and Troy started hanging out together and conversing about so much life and we all realized that there had to be an article to teach that cops and skaters don’t have to separated anymore, and show the world that they can actually unite and be one. When I grew up I was a cop hater in my own senses and part of that came from being a pure street skater and having to deal with them on negative terms all the time, but another part came from always being prejudged by the police by my appearance and believe me I have been through some serious uncalled for harassment from these so called “Peace-Makers”. I hated on Police for a long time and always dealt with any situations myself instead of ever calling on them for help. My opinions of cops changed when I started working with the City of Surrey Parks and Rec and worked tightly in the community. I started meeting all kinds of members and found out that some of them were into being police officers for different reasons than just going out there and throwing there weight around. Some people become cops to work in community development and support those who need help and put all their concentration and focus towards providing positive opportunities for kids and other people in need. I’ll always be weary of Police because of the way I grew up but I learned over time that they aren’t all bad, and cops are people too. So this was a great experience to see a cop who had skateboarding in his blood and still itched for it, and once I knew there was going to be an article about it I couldn’t wait to read it. The crazy part about it was we were totally focused on the aspects I had just talked about – a cop that skateboards, and how skaters and cops can get along, and just all about the persona – but the article turned into so much more. As Officer Troy Derrick began to spill his guts to Michael Brooke about his upbringing and the abuse he went through as a kid and the hard times he lived out growing up as a First Nations person he kept coming back to one thing – skateboarding. Skateboarding basically kept him alive, and kept him happy through the toughest of times, and no matter where he went and how he got there all he cared about was his freedom to skate. This tear jerking story that Troy wrote sparked some serious memories in Michael Brooke and he began to write his story of how skateboarding guided his life to where he is today,  and that created a whole new article involving so many amazing Canadian Legends who all had one thing in common – they found a skateboard to be the key to a successful and happy life.

This article is so historic, from the uniformed Mountie on the cover of the Magazine, to the different yet so similar life stories of multiple skaters that are all considered mentors, to the sole facts that skateboarding can change anyone’s life forever….

It took 13 pages to tell this story with write ups from Troy Derrick, Kevin Harris, PD, Les Robertson, Bricin Lyons, Ryan Theobald, and Michael Brooke himself. Articles like this do not get written often, as they only happen when they write themselves.

This article is a must read for anyone who believes in their freedom to be who they are without being judged, and especially for anyone who has ever called themselves a Skater for Life

Read Karma, Police and Connections

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Extreme Sports Skateboarding

Never Stop Creating

Skate Barn Teaser

As most of you have learned over the years I am definitely what you call a creator. And every creator comes up with tons of ideas, but needs a special thing called motivation to bring these creations to life. Another key is to collaborate with lots of people along the roads we travel who also like to create and have the same type of motivation. Partnership is a key to success in many situations, especially when creating events for an entire community. We bring you tons of awesome competitions and community events all the time, we provide things to do with your friends and families that are fun and safe, and we try our best to ensure that everyone is welcome to whatever we create. But every winter there always seems to be the same old issue that comes up, nowhere to go when it’s cold and wet. Even with these awesome skate parks Surrey is creating lately with covered areas in them it’s still not always sufficient. I personally will always look for more ways to bring the skateboard community together and will always provide the next generations with anything I can that helps them to learn and grow and be strong. Together, we can do anything.

There’s something in the works right now, a place to stay warm and dry, a place to learn from awesome people, and just a place to hang out and have fun being yourself.

I can’t tell you what’s happening yet, but I can tell you this – it’s happening soon…

Stay tuned

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Extreme Sports Skateboarding Video Reviews

Island Storms

Every summer Shadd Trepp always hits me up and tries to get some of the Protest Crew to head over to Vancouver Island with him and some of the Tsawwassen Crew. This year was super busy all summer and the only time we could make it happen was the last weekend of September, with by the way the weather went all summer long should have been beautiful, but it totally wasn’t. All week on the The Weather Network there were warnings about the storms coming on the weekend, 50+ mm of rain each day Saturday through Monday, and lots of wind warnings in affect. Did that stop us from going, hell no.

Andy Anderson - Pivot Fakie - SixSide

Shadd had a sweet deal on a TimeShare Condo that was only gonna cost us $5 each and we knew there would be covered options. As soon as Friday hit and I finally believed that the storms were definitely coming I booked some time at One Six Ramp for right when we got off the Ferry Saturday morning. One Six is a shop on Quadra Street in Victoria about 20 minutes from Schwartz Bay, it’s a half skate shop, half BMX shop and has a sweet 3′-4′ mini ramp with a spine and wallride. Needless to say we spent a few hours there over the weekend. Super fun, super fast and totally dry.

We had to go peep out Six Side too of course which is the DIY spot under the 6 mile Pub bridge in Colwood/Langford area. This spot puts Leeside to shame for gnarlyness because it is built so compact. The bottom section is insane with wallrides, waterfall slides and a bunch of pillars to smack your face on, but it was wet from the abundance of rain being dumped from the sky so the only skateable portion was the little bowl at the top. This bowl is tough, super tightly built with zero flatbottom anywhere, impossible lines, and a parking curb spine that drops you into a 7′ bowl that’s built like a capsule. Little Andy Anderson dropped in and began the demo, wowing the locals. It was a killer sesh and everyone who wanted to skate it did.

Sunday was clearing up but the wind was coming in hard. They had announced by 9am that Ferry’s in the evening were most likely going to be cancelled. After another sweaty session at One Six, the smart half of the crew headed off to catch the 3 o’clock boat back to the mainland while the jonesers all followed the sunshine to Vic West Skate Park. James Steele dove right into the huge lake in the flatbottom there to open up the drains and the whole park dried up quick. The 80km/hr wind gusts probably helped a bit. We had a solid skate session there but the rain was coming back and the wind was blowing hard, it was time to leave. But guess how many Ferry’s were still running – that’s right, zero.

The trip was all good even with the rain, we had fun together as a group the whole time, but it did make it tough to get any street footage

Check the video of the stuff we did skate featuring Hippie Mike, Andy Anderson, Cisco Gooding, Jay Mykyte, Tyler Burke, James Steele, Shadd Trepp and Little Kaelen Faux

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Extreme Sports Skateboarding

Take a Chance on Me

I’ve known about the company Chance Skateboards pretty much since it started and I always liked it because it reminded me of my own company Protest. The graphics were simple but seemed to have a message behind them, and I appreciated that they never looked like they were trying to grab your attention or sell something that meant nothing to the company. I brought Chance on as a sponsor for all my events a few years ago and had a good first “real meeting” with the owner Matt Holdsworth. I had know Matt from skating over the years and we knew who each other were but had never actually sat down together or hung out really. After chilling with him for a little bit I knew that my initial instincts about him were right – he was a family man who had positive dreams he wanted to fulfil and a real passion for skateboarding, not just for promoting himself but for promoting skateboarding in general as a positive activity that anyone could participate in – I was glad to help promote his business. I’ve gotten to know Matt a little closer lately and have partnered with him a few ways, I’ve watched his company grow and get more recognized in the skate world and I’ve seen his vision stay exactly the same. I love that about Matt, and I’m stoked for his company. Everything about him reminds me of myself. It’s great to see a man’s dreams come true…

“The Chance you take in life as a skater and the blood sweat and tears you put into your passions; Chance is not just about one guy doing something, but about creating something that is large enough to allow and enable others to pursue their dreams and passions” – Matthew Holdsworth

Check out this sweet article on fromthefeetup.ca about Chance Skateboards, how it began, what it stands for and why you should support it

http://fromthefeetup.ca/2013/08/chance-skateboards-interview/

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Extreme Sports Skateboarding Video Reviews

A Little McCauley

Anyone who knows Mathew McCauley knows he’s got skills. At 13 years old he is really starting to step up his game and hit bigger obstacles. Mathew can lay down sweet kickflips and frontside popshovits within a few attempts over pretty much any gap he rides. And that’s just the warm up. He’s got lots of rail skills, and his ledge tricks are expanding. We put McCauley on the Protest Wheels Team at the start of summer and he’s been working hard ever since. Give it a couple more years and everyone in the Lower Mainland should know his name. Can’t wait to watch this kid grow.

Here’s some one off tricks that Brandon Giesbrecht put together, check it out

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