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At long last, arrived in Portland!  So far, my favorite place is Gabriel park.  One awesome flowbowl.  Will get pics and stories up soon!

Have also started new site with my best skater buddy friend. Northwest specific. Details soon!

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Wow, it’s really cooled off in the deserts of AZ.  Finally getting out to ride again.  Took a little trip to Oregon finally.  The Lincoln City skate park is amazing.  And saw plenty of skaters just riding around Portland.  They build what they call “rain boards,”  just big soft wheels on smaller decks, for cruising the city even when it’s wet out.  Hopefully pictures and new adventures soon.

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Coming up August 6-8, with a live web feed on go211.com  Should be fun to watch!

Links here:

Oregon Trifecta

Go211.com

Here’s a clip from some of the 2008 sessions:

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I’ve been wanting to interview Patti Hurst for a while now because it’s not every day you find someone who goes from complete beginner to riding bowls and ramps in their late 30’s/early 40’s. Patti also takes the time to help out other skaters who are just starting out when the opportunity arises and is proof that skateboarding is so much bigger, so much more, than a sport for young kids in high school. Skating will grow with you, will give back as much as you put into it, and Patti is a beautiful reminder of this. Also, she’s just plain badass and has so much style.

Here’s what she shared with us:

1. How old are you and where do you live?

I’m 42 and I live in Arlington, Virginia, just outside of Washington DC.

Patti over the light!

2. How did you get into skating? How long ago?

I watched Shaun White win his gold medal on the halfpipe at the winter Olympics in Nagano. He looked like he was having so much fun! He was always laughing and joking around, even during the stiffest competition of his life.

I was 39, and I was tired. I had spent my whole life working 60-80 hours a week, volunteering in my off time, and raising my kid. I rarely laughed, and I yelled at my 6-year-old daughter more than i wanted to admit. I wanted to have more fun, and be silly like the Flying Tomato! I thought about learning to snowboard, but there’s no snow here. Then I saw Shaun do a McTwist on a skateboard, and that’s all it took! I wanted to know what it was like to fly in the air like that. I knew I’d have to work hard. I figured it would take about a year to learn to skate like Shaun White.

One day, I asked my dad to take care of my daughter, and drove to the local skate shop. I parked the car and took a deep breath. I prepared myself for ridicule. I didn’t know anyone who skated, and I was sure there were no adult skaters in my area. I walked in and told the 17-year-old street skater behind the counter that I wanted to learn to skate ramps and bowls. I had no idea what to buy, I had never set foot on a skateboard. The store clerk stared at me for a good minute (or what seemed like it), and then went to work. He showed me different boards, trucks and wheels. He explained the virtues of each, and let me choose after narrowing the selection down to two or three. An hour later, I had a really nice first setup. He suggested that I buy a helmet and some pads, as well as some special shoes. I thought all of that might be unnecessary, but followed his advice anyway. The store owner rang me up. He said that i’ll fall a lot at first, and that most women prefer longboarding.

I took my shiny new board home, and stood on it for the first time in the living room, on the carpet. I fell almost immediately, and my dad laughed. My wrists hurt! I laughed too.

See? It was already working.

Patti carves at the park.

In the last three years, my job has been on autopilot, I’ve quit most of my volunteer work, and I’ve suffered more injuries than I have in all my other years put together, all the direct result of skating. It makes me sad sometimes when I think of what’s gone, but I can’t say that I regret any of it. For the first time, I’m being true to myself. I’ve laughed more, learned more and loved more than I have in all my other years put together. And I don’t yell at my daughter anymore.

3. Were you intimidated, or was it no big deal?

I had no idea how difficult it would be to learn. I figured I’d have all the basic skills in about a year. If I had known then how challenging it really is, I don’t think I would have started. But, now, I’m hooked. One of my best friends says, “skating will ruin your life, but it’s so fun, you should do it anyway.” That’s sort of how it’s turned out for me. Almost every aspect of my life is different now, but better.

Patti in the bowl.

4. Do you have a crew of friends you skate with? Men, women, a mix? What’s the crew like if you have one? Do you ever skate alone?

I skate with anyone and everyone who will skate with me! I travel a lot for my job, and I take my board with me wherever I go. I’m really lucky to be a part of OldKookSkating.com, an online forum for adult skateboarders who never take themselves too seriously. There are men and women there of all skill levels, and they are my skate family. I’m also a member of the Skateboard Moms, which is a forum for women who dare to skate. I’ve met some really cool people through both forums, and session with them whenever I can.

At home, I have a regular group of guys I skate with, they range in age from 21 to 57, and they’re all much better than I am. They push me to try new things, and I benefit from their years of experience. We have early morning weekend sessions at our local park, and we get together to skate my miniramp when the weather isn’t cooperating.

5. What kind/style of skating do you prefer? What kind of terrain do you usually skate?

I skate anything and everything! Sometimes a parking block can be the best place on earth, you know? But, I’m most fond of concrete bowls. They send my heart racing, and I seek them out, over all other terrain. I love to carve fast and flow. I like the grippy feel of my wheels digging into the concrete. My goal this year is to take my skating to the next level: lip tricks.

6. How do you fit skating into the rest of your life? What’s a typical skate day or skate week like for you?

I skate whenever I have a minute. Sometimes it’s just a run or two at the park on the way home from the grocery store, or a quick ollie session in my office parking garage during lunch. I keep a board under my desk and manual on the carpet in my office to relax. I have a board in my kitchen, and I skate while I make dinner and load the dishwasher.

I try to preserve as much of Sunday as possible for skating. I meet up with friends at my local in the early morning, and we inevitably head out after a couple hours for other spots. Sometimes I head up I-95 to New Jersey to skate with the rad Skateboard Moms who live up there.

7. What’s your preferred set-up?

In the bowls, I ride a 9″ X 32″ old school style deck with Indy 169s, 59mm 100A Rainskates Stinger IIs, Rockn Ron ceramic bearings, and a strange combination of red, blue and orange Khiro bushings that works for me.

8. Tell us about that ramp in the house?

My miniramp is sooo fun! It’s the best home improvement project ever! We built it in a storage room in my basement; it’s 2 feet high, 8 feet wide, 20 feet long, with 2-foot wide decks and 7-foot transitions. The surface is masonite, and it has steel coping. When it’s cold and rainy out, you can bet that there’s a session going down, complete with ice cold beer, really good tunes and lots of silly fart jokes. The door’s always open to new skaters, come join us anytime!
Patti\'s Indoor Ramp

Thank you Patti. Now I want to go skate instead of to work!

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So I was over at the Skirtboarders site, just seeing what they’re up to and hoping for a new full length DVD to come out soon.  And they’ve got this awesome link to a group of Swedish Skater Girls.  Go check it out, really really inspiring.  And if you haven’t seen the Skirtboarders DVD, you should.  You just should.  Here’s the No Limit trailer.  The actual video is here.

And you can find great Skirboarders clips on You Tube too.

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Okay guys, if ever there is someone we’d all like to meet, it’s got to be Laura Hatwell of Happy Skater.
She was nice enough to answer a few questions about her life, skating, and her projects for us via email.  Check out her site, contribute to it, and keep an eye out for whatever she does next!  Thank you Laura!

Bath-Bristol-Bath with Skate Further.

1. How old are you and where do you live?

I’ve been fortunate enough to reach the grand old age of 27, and I currently live in Plymouth. This is a small concrete jungle in the South West Of England, which rocks for skating! This is because during World War 2, Plymouth was destroyed by the Nazi bombers, and rebuilt to look like a 1950’s future dream. So out of sadness, comes skating stoke!

2. How did you get into skating?

I was working in a really hectic job in television up in Scotland, where I worked in a room for 12 hours a day that was filled with screens, no daylight and no fresh air. Nightmare. So I heard about this guy who was skating the length of the UK for charity, and then the width of Australia. Distance skating? Wow! I asked his advice and got a board, taught myself to skate as there was no one else around to play skating with, and that was that. I quit my job, joined his support crew in Australia (the journey was called Boardfree), and raised money for kid’s charities in the process. I’m now fully addicted to using my board as my new method of fitness training, transportation and happy-making!
Laura after a long race!

3. What kind/style of skating do you prefer? What kind of terrain do you usually skate? What is your preferred set-up?

I would label myself as a distance skater. This is someone who sees the board as not just a sessioning tool, but a way to see the world, a whole lot of it! I push mainly with my right leg, regular stance, although I do use my left leg a lot now on the uphills. I’ve also started pumping recently, and a hybrid of the two is how I’d describe my style: flowy, curvy, fun - just like me! I was lucky enough to become the first woman to skate over 100 miles in a day last October, and ever since then I’ve been psyching myself up for the next big skate!

Terrain wise, I’m one of those sick individuals who prefers to skate UP a hill than down it. That’s how I know I’m a distance skater - the hill bombers are completely confused by me unless I’m with my own kind, then they just avoid us altogether…haha! I’ve skated smooth, rough, up, down, along - it’s all the same to me, so long as I’m skating, I’m happy.

I’ve skated many decks, but at the moment my preferred setups are: Rayne Demonseed with Randal 180’s (Black) and Randal Bushings (experimenting though!), and Orangatang In Heat 75mm Purples on the front for speed and drive, Orangatang In Heat 75mm Oranges on the rear for grip. I also use G|Bomb, who I’ve been fortunate enough to work with to see if their Cambiar deck and bracketing system will work for a smaller, lighter rider who wants to pump. It does! Check them out!
Laura and the wheels

4. Do you have a crew of friends that skate with you? Are there other women, a mix of men and women, mostly guys, etc?

In my personal group of friends, there are a few girls who skate - none quite as crazy as me when it comes to distance, but they do exist. In Plymouth, we seem to have quite a lot of good gutsy girl skaters, which is awesome to see. I do find it funny when I’m with a crowd of people talking about skating and the guys just ignore everything I have to say, until they realise I have a clue about things. It’s an education for us all, I reckon.

5. Were you intimidated when you first started skating? Or was it no big deal?

I was very scared when I first started skating because I didn’t know how to footbrake. Once I learned that, I’ve been fine ever since. I know how to handle myself on hills, what I can do and what I should avoid. In terms of any negative attitudes I encountered, pah - you just ignore them and get on with it. They’ll grow up! I’m a 5 foot 3 inch girl, with small feet - how could I ever compete with a 6 foot man with massive shovel feet? The answer is: I don’t. I just say, “Run your own race, girl, do your own thing.”. I’m not as quick because my body is different, but my mind is just as strong, and that is what matters most. It’s all in the mind. I think 102.7 miles in 12 hours at an average speed of 8.7 miles an hour, with a top speed of 25 mph on the flat is fine by me!

6. How have you learned so much so fast? What’s a typical skate day or skate week for you? How do you fit it into your life?

Practice, fun, practice, fun. I skate my heart out as much as possible, and really enjoy it to the max. No point if it’s not fun! In an average week, weather permitting, I’ll skate pretty much every day. Into town, into work, around the local area, anywhere really. Just so I’m keeping active. I don’t really like watching TV! I work at an ice rink, so I’m always skating in some way. Strapping on a pair of hockey skates is actually really good cross training if the weather is bad! Of an evening, I like to hit up the local park opposite my house, where there are some killer runs and smooth spots which no one seems to really know about…

7. Can you tell us a little about your other projects (the skate websites etc) that you’re working on. How did those come about?

Oh my goodness! The last year has been massive for me. The internet is where my skate community activity really comes to life. I started Happy Skater (http://www.happyskater.org) to bring longboarders together to share stories and pictures of times when they felt the real buzz that longboarding gives them, and that’s an ongoing project - all content submissions welcome! I also write on Skate Further (http://www.skatefurther.com), a UK distance longboarding website which rocks! Finally, I’m proud to be the web designer for Adam Colton, Paul Kent and Aaron Enevoldsen’s longboard journey around South America, Long Treks On Skate Decks (http://www.longtreksonskatedecks.com). Other projects will follow!


8. What are you skating plans for the future?
Ooo, there’s a lot on! You’ve caught me at a really busy and exciting time! I’ve just recently become sponsored by Stoked Skateboards (http://www.stokedskateboards.com), who are excellent at helping me out with equipment, despite the international divide. This comes after the Ultraskate event that I set my record at. I’ve got another Ultra in the next few weeks which I’ve been preparing for as best I can, despite the British weather! I’m doing a journey up in the North of Scotland in the summer, 800 miles-ish (you can never be sure of these things!) to raise money for some good causes. I’m also trying to organise a skate festival here in Plymouth, to promote longboarding as an awesome way to have fun and get fit. Lots of things on, but mainly, just getting out there and skating before I start training to become a teacher in September!
Skate happy, y’all!
L xxx

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Huntington Beach, CA July 25-27! Go if you can!

More info: S3 Supergirl Jam

Live Streaming: Go211.com


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