Wednesday 12 January 2011

Stolen Board - Can You Help?

Sad news via the Surfing Dirt forums and discussions via facebook that *WiL* from Remolition has had his TK Pro stolen from his garage last week.

Like many boarders, WiL has customised his board to an extent that it should be recognisable by anyone familiar with the details:


Point being, if anyone tries to sell you a TK Pro, or if you spot someone on a relatively new TK Pro deck who wouldn't normally spend a considerable amount of money on a board, or if you spot one on sale via ebay or craigslist etc then send info@remolition.com a message - I'm sure they would love to hear from you.

Edit, looks as though it has turned up through Cash Converters on ebay!  Fingers crossed WiL gets his paws on it soon but follow the story on the SD thread here:
http://www.surfingdirt.com/forum/showthread.php?t=4155

Slow Motion.....

Lovely video found via the Surfing Mountains website, a site dedicated to mountainboarding in Spain with lots of information thanks to Google Translate.
Their latest offering is their find of a short video showing various freestylers shot at 1000fps.

Tuesday 11 January 2011

Want to plan your daytime (or night -time) riding?

This time of the year is quite limiting for daytime riding, for those of us with regular jobs anyway - the options being: get up early for a pre-work ride, ride during the weekends, or to take a day off.  It'd be nice to know when the daylight will be sufficient for a nice evening, post-work ride.

Thankfully, there is a website I use to help you out! http://www.gaisma.com/en/


Click the pic, select your continent, select your country and select your city, and you'll get the following information:

...detailing sunrise, sunset, dawn and dusk times along with how this will change over a period of time.  Whereas this graph...


...shows the data graphically.  Don't worry about the apparent shift in the lines - this is due to the effect of British Summer Time and the +/-1hour where we all change our clocks.

...Not sure what this graph means, but it looks scientific!

So now you know what daylight you have available and when, so there's no excuse to get planning!  Alternatively, give night-riding a try - it's what all the cool kids are doing!

Friday 7 January 2011

If TV is this bad, I don't want to be on TV...


When I was a young lad, to be on TV would top everything.  You could be as good as you like, but unless you had been on the telly, was it quite so good?  If it wasn't on TV, how were my mates going to discuss what I had achieved?  How would random people in the street know about what I did?

These days the thought of being recognised in the street terrifies me and the prospect of having to deal with today's inane and inappropriate presenters would bore me.  Thankfully, I don't have to worry about any of these things happening to me because as it goes, I have no chance of appearing on TV - I am not a celebrity.*

TV I enjoyed when younger would include a variety of stunts and action, preferably at the same time with some good humoured injuries thrown in for good measure, some examples including:

Run The Gauntlet: Bit hazy on this one but involved large teams of 30+ people driving go-karts, climbing rope bridges and generally hanging off things;
You Bet: ordinary people trying to do extraordinary things for no reason whatsoever;
Takeshi's Castle: No winners this time, folks!
Kickstart: Kids on bikes having too much fun.  Why aren't I allowed a motobike mum?!

The entertainment came from either the constant stream of lots of games or races, or the variety element -  if I didn't like a particular game, a different one would be on in a bit.  In retrospect, perhaps they weren't so good, but as a kid, I loved it all.  I particularly didn't care that the contestant was 'Brian from Barnsley' rather than 'Her from Emerdale' or 'Him who used to be in Casulty'.

Unfortunately these days we have programmes like 'Famous and Fearless' to look forward to.  For those lucky enough to miss this car crash of a show, the premise being that every night this week, four male and four female 'celebrities' (the 'famous' part of title) take part in some incredible races despite the risks that they face in doing so (the 'fearless' part of the title).  I'll not bother having a go at just how terrible this programme is; plenty of people have done it in spectacular fashion here or here, and it'd be hard to argue with the hundreds of forum posts who feel mislead by the title stating that the shows participants are neither famous ("who are they?") nor fearless ("my teenage son does that everyday on the way to school").  The Digital Spy forums if you can be bothered to search appears to be particularly brutal.

Over the course of the week, the races these 8 celebrities are involved in include BMXing, Streetluge, Mini Moto, Micro Powerboat Racing, In-line speed skating, hovercraft-ing, Power Skateboarding, Enduro, Karting, Abseiling, Powerboking and Dirt Buggy-ing.  Sounds fun, no?  Unfortunately not.

Lets take the sport of BMX racing, a very popular sport made into a full medal Olympic sport for the 2008 Summer Olympic Games in Beijing, China.  So popular there's even a National Series track in Derby didn't you know?!  Away from the TV cameras, every week there are several competitions taking place all over the country, each with several races take place every hour.  Talented individuals who have trained quite a bit to be there or have at least put in a lot of time and effort and with several competitors per race leading to guaranteed exciting racing.  It doesn't matter if one race is a bit dull - there'll be another one in a few minutes.

Using this as a basis for a TV show sounds fair enough.  But then why strip the competitors down to 2 people racing at once?  Why only have 6 races spread over a 2-hour long show?  Why pit 'middle-aged biker' against 'young son of business tycoon'?  Why film the action from overhead so that the built in jumps and rollers appear to be around 2 foot high?  Why then get very excited over what were very clearly very dull races?

Other F&F complaints include the long build-up (approximately half an hour getting to know the celebrities), the long (2-hour) running schedule, the lack of action (6 races in total plus two car rolls), the presenter choice (Chris Evans and Claire Balding), the inclusion of Jack Osbourne ('Yes, I've done this before') and David Hay ('I've not done this before, but as a boxer...') to provide insight and endless replays of some quite boring racing - typically first to the first corner won.

Viewing figures were appropriately low with approximatley 2 million tuning in on Sunday night and (at present) figures dropping through the week so it would seem that further F&F events would be unlikely.

All things considered, I think F&F have missed a huge opportunity and essentially made overcomplicated what should be a very simple thing to do.  These competitions are already set up round the country.  The infrastructure is in place already.  There are talented individuals who would love to be stars for the day.  I don't know what the overall F&F budget is, but with a reported fee of £1 Million purely to pay Chris Evans to host, this money could have been much better spent on televising exciting stuff that is going on already.

My big TV programme pitch idea that I mention quite a lot, but never do anything about is 'Gravity Tuesday', essentially a Summer version of Ski Sunday.  Every week, the programme would show coverage of various events taking place round the UK, be it cyclocross, downhill mountain biking, downhill mountainboarding, BMX racing, longboarding etc, etc, etc.  Perhaps I should write to Ed Leigh?  Some people seem to think he's a bit of a plonker but he could be the right person in the right position with the right power to make something happen.  But personally, I'd push to have Christian Stevenson do the actual presenting - anyone old enough to remember the TV show Rad?

But then you have to wonder, why aspire to be on TV when you can do it yourself on the internet?  If I can film it, I can upload it, send people the links, be my own star!  Technology has made it a very exciting time to be around and we're lucky that we have so much more opportunity to document ourselves doing what we find fun and to share with like-minded individuals who will love you for it.**

So in the words of another show from days gone by, 'Why Don't You Just Switch Off Your Television Set and Go Out and Do Something Less Boring Instead?'  Just make sure you tell us all about it afterwards...


* Though I did go to school with the son of Tosh Lines from 'The Bill'....

** Though I'd love a go on Total Wipeout - looks ace fun!

Thursday 6 January 2011

News in brief.....

A couple of bits and pieces worth making a mention of this week, but in the meantime, welcome to the all-new shortened addressed T-D-B!  After coming top of the recent poll with a staggering 64% of the vote, the change was made, along with lots of little tweaks here and there to make sure all the links were all working.  I'm sure there are one or two that I've missed, or bits that don't quite work yet and for that I apologise, although I'm sure the search box down the right hand side never seems to find stuff correctly.
A new title picture as well, again in the form of find a reasonable photo from the archives and stick 'The Dirt Box' in big letters across it.  Perhaps this one represents a passing from the old, to the new....hmmm.

I'm still not sure that it's very obvious sometimes that this is supposed to be a mountainboard blog for the UK specialising in stuff happening in the Midlands.   I'm not being paid for this so hey ho, on with the updates!

Freeride Sessions: Mam Tor, January16th

The recently started Freeride Sessions Blog has posted details of a freeride session taking place
a week Sunday at the (in)famous Mam Tor.  This disused length of road has been popular with boarders over the years keen to get a bit of quiet road riding, along with a couple of drop-offs - sections of road that have collapsed, hence the lack of vehicle activity.  Not a huge amount of details known at this point though there is a Surfing Dirt thread about the subject here.


View Mountainboard Ride Guide in a larger map

Not sure if I'll be able to attend due to the wife breaking her foot on Tuesday night, but hopefully we'll get to see some words, pictures and videos afterwards.  However, I am loving the 'Freeride Sessions' philosophy of getting peoples interest in a place to then get them interested in a big old session there and hopefully with something happening on a monthly basis, there'll be opportunity to attend something near to all of you in the near future.

December Freeride Revisit: Macclesfield Forest 2010 Rem Write-Up


As hinted about previously on this blog, I was really, really keen to have a repeat of last years visit to Macclesfield forest, a series of trails set in a beautiful setting only around an hours drive away.  A small but select group of us overcome the early mornings and illnesses to ride for a good proportion for the daylight hours and all have a thoroughly good time, despite me loosing my hat somewhere along the way.  I took photos (that came out blurred), and a video as linked to below....




...but for the full monty, you're best off checking out the Rem Report by clicking the big link below...Enjoy!

http://www.remolition.com/features/field-reports/286-macclesfield-forest-dec10-field-report.html

Monday 3 January 2011

New Year from the-dirt-box.blogspot.com

Happy New Year 4 x4 offroad wheely boarders!

We've got a new web address (assuming the settings work), new articles in the works covering lots of aspects regarding mountainboarding in the East Midlands (and further afield), lots of news covering exciting people doing exciting things on-line and plenty of opportunities to meet-up with like-minded individuals in your area.

Lots to be excited about and it all starts soon...watch this space!