Happy New Year
Wednesday, December 31st, 2008To all you peeps around the world… Freebord wishes you a happy 2009!
To all you peeps around the world… Freebord wishes you a happy 2009!
You have a little more than two weeks to get your subs in. Follow the directions below:
Freebord is now accepting submissions for the 2009 Pro Team. If you would like to be considered, you have until December 31, 2008 to submit.
Here’s how it works:
- Put together a 2 minute edited highlight reel that shows us what you got (make sure you highlight all aspects of your riding). We want your best raw riding clips sequenced together into a 2 minute max video. You can use clips we have already seen from this year or new footage.
- We will be looking 100% at the quality of your riding, not your editing - so your video should showcase your best riding clips. Period. This is not a concept video. You can add music if you want or keep the audio raw - your call - but no effects otherwise.
- For reference, check out this year’s rookie/rider nomination video: http://vimeo.com/2081877. This video is a little more polished than what we want from you, but the segments are in line with what we’re looking for.
- Upload your video to any video hosting site (Vimeo, Youtube, Dailymotion….) and email the link to kent@freebord.com.
- We will only accept one video per rider.
- All videos are due by December 31, 2008. No late submissions will be considered.
We will announce the 2009 team sometime in January. If we select you to the team, your team submission video will be the first video that we use for your team section on our website.
Good luck and let us know if you have any questions.
Compilation from the Freebord Sweden crew. thanks Johan…
From today’s Wanganui, NZ Chronicle:
Skateboarder claims rough handling by police
11.12.2008
by Lin FergusonA young Wanganui skateboarder plans to complain to the Independent Police Conduct Authority after what he described as “rough, over-the-top treatment” at the hands of Wanganui police officers.
Daniel Blackman, an avid freeboarder (a snowboarder on wheels), was arrested and charged on November 14 with resisting arrest, disorderly behaviour and threatening behaviour after boarding down Portal St.
However, he was given diversion by Judge Michael Radford in the Wanganui District Court on Monday.
Mr Blackman, an assistant dairy farm manager in Palmerston North, is now writing a complaint to the police conduct authority because his treatment by police that night was too harsh and way out of line, he told the Wanganui Chronicle.
Around 8.15pm that Friday night, he’d sat at the top of the Portal St hill with his mate, who was going to drive as back-up behind him in his car, he said.
“We sat there until there was no traffic and we could see the road was clear all the way down.”
They set off with Mr Blackman travelling on his board about 35kph in front of the car, which had its hazard lights flashing. Halfway down, a police car coming up the hill saw them, swung around and drove down, pulling in alongside Mr Blackman on his board.
“He yelled at me to stop and kept yelling because I kept going. He wasn’t giving me any room to swivel and stop, which is what you have to do on a board.”
When he was finally able to roll into a stop at the bottom of the hill, the officer demanded to be given the board.
“I held it to my chest with both arms and told him no way was I giving him my board, because I wasn’t doing anything illegal. Boarding is legal on the roads.”
Mr Blackman admits that he enraged the officer by not handing over his board, but he wasn’t prepared for what happened next.
“He said he was going to set his dog on me, and I told him he better not try . . .”
It became a total stand-off, but he wasn’t giving in and the exchange did get “fairly heated”, he said.
“Well, then he lunged at me, got me in a choker hold and pushed me on the ground. I heard him ringing for back-up.”
By then, three patrol cars had arrived and more officers were helping to restrain him, he said.
“. . . you know, they even asked me if I was on drugs. I mean, as if when you’re riding a board at 35 kph downhill . . . no chance, ever.”
Then another three patrol cars rolled up, he said.
“There were officers everywhere. Then they pepper-sprayed me. I won’t repeat what the officer, the one with the dog, said. I made sure I shut my eyes and my mouth, but it still really burnt.”
Wanganui District Council bylaws prohibit skateboards being ridden in Victoria Ave (the CBD) only, he said.
With his complaint he was enclosing photos of his helmet covered with dents from struggling while he was held down, and pictures of the bruises across his arms and chest where he was holding on to his board.
Mr Blackman defended himself in court because he had wanted the judge to hear what he personally had to say.
“The judge was really great. He asked me what had happened, and I was able to explain it all, and he listened to me.”
Area Commander Duncan McLeod said there was nothing he could say or do until the authority had made its decision.
“It’s out of my hands. It is entirely the authority’s investigation and decision.”
Dan, let us know how it goes…
It’s back now, thanks for your patience folks. We’ll be continuing to perform some updates so please bear with us…
Yep… you read it right. Freebord Basic setups are now only $169.99. Limited stock available (sorry, no more Faders).
Plus - All tshirts on sale for $15 or less
Also, special for the Holidays - buy a G3 complete package and get a tshirt of your choice for only $10.
Congrats Adam and Freebord Poland for securing this feature in a major Polish newspaper, Gazeta Wyborcza. Read below for the translation…
Snowboard that doesn’t need any snow
by Agnieszka DrabikowskaThey love snowboarding and they were looking for something which could substitute it in the summertime. They’ve found it.
Widoma Mountain, 392.3 meters above the sea level, Swietokrzyskie Province. Good asphalt, almost no traffic, numbers of houses end on 20. From the distance they look like they’re sliding on the snow. Because the Freebord board, though it resembles a skateboard, has nothing in common with it. Four wheels placed on long trucks replace snowboard edges. Owing to them they can carve. In addition to these there are two wheels in the middle which rotate by 360 degrees.
“They work as a base in snowboard. Therefore we can control the speed, go down in unlimited directions and stop exactly in the same way as on snowboard. Perceives and feeling of freedom are the same. Even one day some elder lady accosted me and astonished she said: - You look like you would ride on the snow, but there is summer indeed! - Andrzej Gadkowski from Kielce explains with passion.
His friend from Los Angeles told him about this new sport. - “One day I was grumbling to him about Polish short winters, there is no snow and no place to ride. He responded that he had seen there on TV some guys riding on the streets as on the snow. I brought the board from the USA and it just began.” - he says fastening the board.
Robert: “Freebord gives me so much freedom. It doesn’t depend on weather conditions, you needn’t to pay for any lifts and you can ride practically everywhere.”
Tomek Kuzmierz is a manager of information technology in a big bank in Cracow. On June 4th he came to Widoma together with his wife in order to take the first steps in Freebord. They were looking for a sport which would give them as much joy as their beloved snowboard. They tried surfing, but they agreed that it won’t substitute snowboarding.
In Widoma, Tomek has caught the bug: “This board won’t get outside of my car boot so far. Now I can go somewhere with out my wife, but never without my Freebord.”
Tomasz Urbanski, the President of Polish Snowboard Association, has heard about riding on Freebord. “Snowboarding emerged just from skateboard, and Freebord is like a successive stage of the snowboard’s evolution. If this sport makes snowboard fans happy we should only be glad of that, by all means we support such initiatives. I haven’t tried Freebord myself, but if I have a chance I will do it for sure” he declares.