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January 9, 2012 Photo: J. Chandler

Friday, April 11, 2008

Bob Miller Bluecoil 6'8" DT5

I stopped by the Bluecoil showroom/factory/shaping bay in Santa Cruz last Tuesday after my SUP surf, met with Bob and bought the 6'8" DT5 I had taken to demo on Saturday. I'm excited about this board and looking forward to some fun summer waves at the beaches. I can see lot's of SUP/shortboard dual sessions coming up.

Bob currently has an inventory of demo boards for sale that are very reasonably priced. The boards are in almost perfect condition (I could only find one very small dent on the bottom of my board, along with the minor "usual suspects" heal dents on the deck), and they come with a full set of fins. For $345 I got the board and an FCS Quad Vector fin set as well as a super fine 5.5" Miller designed center fin which I've already used on my SUP. I think this is a great deal...even for folks who aren't fin freaks like me.

Here are a few pics. The test ride post is here.

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Warm Air; Cold Water

A Spring heatwave is headed our way starting tomorrow. Air temps warmed today under clear and sunny skies. A high pressure trough is welded to the California coast and winds will be turning offshore later today and tomorrow. Meanwhile the northerly winds that are a hallmark of our Spring weather have participated in the "upwelling" phenomenon that brings deeper, nutrient rich cold water to the surface, while mixing out or moving the warmer surface water. Ocean temps are 50 degrees and have been that way for the last several weeks. The image (upper right) clearly shows the colder coastal water temps in NorCal during the upwelling activity as compared to the much warmer waters of Southern California and Baja.

No real swells of interest are in the water, local windswell is creating the only available surf which is small and weak. Some reports of good low tide sandbars are coming in. There's always something for those who are willing to look for it.

Tomorrow should be a fantastic day for checking out all the exposed rock reefs and tide pools mid morning, as we will be experiencing morning minus tides (another Spring hallmark) and crystal clear and sunny weather.

I hit the tide pools this morning and finally discovered why there is so much kelp out there. More on that tomorrow with pics...

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Cold Spring Day

Joined up with MikeyB and Mash for an early surf at the reefs on a cold and overcast day with glassy conditions and a very low tide. The SUPS turned the small knee slappers into easy pickin's and everyone got their fill (besides, no one else was out but us).

M&M left after about an hour and a half for grinds but I wasn't done yet. I thought a few breaks further north looked pretty good. On the way over Firefighter/Medic Paul stopped by for a quick chat, heading for home on his Eaton paddleboard. Short paddle today, just a six miler.

I picked my peak and surfed it alone for about a half hour before being joined by Brandon and his friends along with a couple other guys on shortboards and a kneeboard. The rising tide gave the wind swell a little push and we were treated to some pretty consistent waist to chest high waves that were pretty speedy until the once beneficial rising tide took the energy right out of the quick peelers.

I swapped out the 2+1 fin set (9" Future cutaway with FCS GL sides) on the Angulo for a thruster setup using FCS Occy sides and a Bob Miller designed Bluecoil 5.5" center fin. The thrusters glided over all the kelp and was as easy turning as the 2+1 cutaway fin configuration. There is a good discussion about SUP fin configs on the Stand Up Zone. I posted a lot of info re the thruster and 2+1 setup. Click here to read it.
April 8, 2008 (Tu)
In: 0755

Out: 1100
AT= 44 - 57 degrees
WT= 50.5 degrees at the farshore buoy
Wx: Broken overcast with cold front moving through
Tide: -0.74 Rising to 2.2
Wind: Calm to light NE then freshening northwest to southwest
Sea Surface: Mostly glassy to increasing light wind texturing
Buoy: NWS
Sporadic buoy data
0700: No data
0800: No data
0900: 9.1 feet @ 11 seconds NW
1000: 9.2 feet @ 11 seconds NW
1100: 9.3 feet @ 11 seconds NW
10'4" Angulo SUP with Infinity paddle
Fin set-up: Thruster with Bluecoil 5.5" center fin and FCS Occy sides
Bathymetry: Rock reefs
CDIP: 9.9 feet at 12 seconds from 330 degrees and .9 feet at 12 seconds from 190 degrees

Monday, April 7, 2008

Summer Board Demo

I demo'd one of Bob Miller's boards in very small and very glassy beach break this morning. With summer coming, the NorCal "small wave" season is almost on us. After this next little pulse of swell that is coming later today and for the next few days, most the forecasters are predictging a major slowdown in the NPAC jetstream with the concomitant slowdown in northerly swell production. The plan is to take the SUP and the shortboard to the beach and paddle and/or surf as the muse moves me.

I perused Bob's website last week and checked out his boards after seeing one of his Fish shapes on Craig's list. His DT5 series (Diamond Tail five fin slots) has the plan shape, thickness and dims that looked just right for me and for what I want to do with the board so I headed over to the warehouse/shaping bay/sales room on Saturday for a better look. Bob wasn't there but had a good conversation with Nesh, who answered all my questions and set-up the demo.

I took the 6'8" DT5 after cogitating over it, or the 7'. At my age I just don't have the energy, strength or (most importantly) the flexibility to ride a shortboard that isn't more like a "big boy" shorty than a board that is more thinned out for younger folks. The cool thing about this board is that it has the dims that I think will work for me, and also the EPS core is a little more floaty than it's polyurethane kin. Also (and this is a big plus) it's got five, countem', 5 fin slots. I can play with more fin configurations than I'll ever remember and I love that kind of stuff!

As a matter of fact, Nesh gave me five fins to play with: a set of Future Quad vectors and a 5 1/2" in center fin, so I could surf it as a quad and as a thruster. I had my own Future Quad Scimitar 451's which I really liked on my (now sold) 6' Quad Fish (too small for me to surf well) so I used those for my maiden surf on the DT5.

I took it out in stunningly bad surf at Platty's. It was low tide and most waves were breaking almost right on the shore, but there is enough swell in the water that sporadic closeout sets came through with an occasional wave that actually had a shoulder. But it was good enough to find out what I needed to know.

How does it paddle? Incredibly well for a 6'8" board, no problem catching waves. Is it stable? Yes, a nice wide diamond tail (14') and 21 1/4" wide, quite sufficient. How does it float me? Perfect. The entire board is just barely underwater when I straddle it. How does it take off late? Beyond my expectations. I thought it would be squirrely but no, very stable, holds in well, and gets up to speed pretty quickly. How does it turn? Like a goose on Exlax...very, very loose...and again, very stable.

So we may have a winner and a very fun option for the small summer beach break that is almost upon us.
April 7, 2008 (M)
In: 0840
Out: 094515
AT= 45 - 51 degrees
WT= 51.1 degrees at the farshore buoy
Wx: Clear with a big fog sitting offshore
Tide: 0.8 Rising to 2 feet
Wind: Calm to light southeastly
Sea Surface: Glassy in a light rolling sea
Buoy: NWS
Sporadic buoy data
0900: 3.6 feet @ 10 seconds WNW
1000: 3.9 feet @ 9.1 seconds NW
1100: 4.3 feet @ 10.8 seconds NW
Bob Miller Devolution 6'8" DT5
Fin set-up: Future Quads: Scimitar 451's
Bathymetry: Sand bars
CDIP: 6.3 feet at 8 seconds from 320 degrees and 1.5 feet at 14 seconds from 190 degrees