In Profile: UK Surfer Will Bailey

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  • čas přidán 5. 09. 2024
  • Those of you with your ear to the ground, your finger on the pulse of the UK surf scene, will be familiar with the name of Will Bailey.
    A North Devon native, Will grew up in the seaside town of Woolacombe, home to the long, gently sloping, eponymous beach we all know and in some cases even love. Here he studied hard, mastering its vagaries, honing his high-performance attack, and developing an impressive array of transferable skills.
    Woolacombe may lack the punch and definition of Croyde to the south - its dank low-tide caverns, its chiselled A-frames - but it still has its moments. And with Croyde just a short drive away in any case, and numerous adjacent options in either direction, Will enjoyed a well-rounded education in the ways of the beach break, the point break, the reef.
    In this short profile film presented by etnies and directed by Pete Cox, he whacks a succession of softly feathering lips, he swoops and slices with swift precision, he worships at Croyde’s murky inner sanctum. He also goes to South Africa, volunteers for the epic Surfers Not Street Children organisation, and, back home in Devon, sessions a mini ramp. That frontside flip at 1:35, amply popped and perfectly caught, is a lovely thing, channelling a young, floppy-haired, etnies-clad Tom Penny circa ’95.
    Courtesy of our pals at Surfdome. Additional footage from Calvin Thompson and Mikey Corker.

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