12 June 2007

Mountain Designs


I am a bit of an anti-logoist but a total brandist. This means I generally have high brand loyalty but I don't think that means I should be a billboard for them. Unless I want to. If I buy a sport shirt, I have already supported the brand by buying it so if they want me to display the logo, which is essentially an advertisement, they should either pay me or sponsor me with the stock. I have a Hugo Boss suit but that doesn't mean they get to put "Hugo Boss" all over the back of the jacket; and they don't. I don't mind a little discreet logo above the pocket or a little patch like on Levi's jeans but Nike and Reebok can get stuffed if they think I'll be their sandwich board boy. Bogans who put a big "Commodore" sticker across the windscreen of their Commodore are a bit sad really. I CAN SEE IT'S A BLOODY COMMODORE YOU WANKER!

Anyhow...this pointless diatribe is leading up to my endorsement of a brand. Now, considering I have nothing to offer and largely no talent in the kayaking world, any endorsement I make is an exercise in futility but being the brandist that I am, I feel I should at least go on record to say that my new Mountain Designs gear is bloody marvelous. I don't know if it's the best you can get and really don't care. The fact is, it's far superior to any other clothing I own except for the $6 flanno I got from Target which is a masterpiece in versatility and cost-effectiveness. I think I mentioned my Wentworth jacket previously. It's the second echelon of MD technical wear so it's pretty cheap compared to hard-core outershells you could buy but it is light, breathable and comfortable and kept me bone dry and snug during our recent killer storm.
The revelation is in the Icebreaker Merino 190g/m2 T-Shirt I got on sale. It's made from some New Zealand super-merino wool and woven by a process retrieved from Area 51. The upshot is that you can wear this for days at a time, never taking it off, and it doesn't stink or get clingy or uncomfortable in any way. I wore it as a base layer for days under the aforementioned flanno and I felt very sexy indeed. Samantha preferred it without the flanno. So Mountain Designs, consider yourself officially endorsed. (BTW, that's not me in the pic).

10 June 2007

A city drowned


In the hours since my last post, the city of Newcastle and all the towns in the region have been devastated by extreme weather caused by a violent low pressure cell. This produced winds up to 106kph and unbelievable torrential rain. An hour after I went to see the stranded ship at Nobby's my own car was flooded and the city centre was submerged. It happened real quick and there was madness as people tried to get out. I live about 20km south of the city and it took an hour to get home. Everywhere I went there was devastation and blockages. Fortunately, my house and suburb were safe but we were like an island in a sea of floodwater.

That night the wind went to a new level and we tried to sleep it out but we were worried about losing the roof or the windows. We had no power and it took two days to get it back. At this time, 100,000 houses in the region are still without power and the floodwaters in the Hunter Valley are still rising. My friend Scott Simpson at Singleton is in real danger of inundation and that town is now isolated.

Australia is used to extremes. We have just spent years in the worst drought on record only to cop this. It's normal but this time it's shocking in it's ferocity. So, you sea dogs out there, spare a thought for the people of one of the great surfing and watersport destinations in the world.

8 June 2007

Bulk Carrier runs aground on Nobby's Beach


I haven't done much paddling of late for a variety of pretty lame reasons but today the weather in Newcastle went nasty. I mean very nasty. Last night the news gave severe weather warnings and this morning we got winds up to 100kph. By the time I got to work in Newie we got the news that a bulk carrier had beached itself at Nobby's so at lunch time I went for a walk to see. When I got there with Jason,one of my staff, we were amazed to see the ship right on the beach. Emergency services people had a cordon around the area and two resuce helicopters were struggling against huge winds. The beach was a mess and on buoy measured a 17m wave. We then found out two other ships nearby were struggling to stay off the coast and another in danger at Stockton. Fortunately, there appeared to be little danger to people so far as the rescue services are very good but anything could happen. Jason and I were walking at 45 degrees and the rain was like needles. He had a Driza-Bone on which gave great protection and I had my new Mountain Design Wentworth jacket which was brilliant. My canvas jeans got drenched so my next purchase will be some waterproof trousers. You can't have too much gear and I now live by the mantra "there's no such thing as bad weather, just a bad choice of clothes".