Tracks3 min read
Unearthed: Photos From The Archive Of Stephen Cooney
Uluwatu, Bali 1973 Having travelled to Bali in August 1971, playing the grommet for the filming of ‘Morning of the Earth’, I was blessed to surf Uluwatu as an undiscovered jewel. The unusual visual surrounds, the people and their customs, the sounds,
Tracks4 min read
George Greenough Is The 'Crystal Voyager'
Long before John John Florence and Torren Martyn set sail, George Greenough took viewers on a transcendent journey aboard his yacht, the Morning Light. The film ‘Crystal Voyager’ charts that experience from the construction of the Morning Light to it
Tracks4 min read
The Economics Of Stoke
My family adopted a stray cat when I was a kid. We found him emaciated, begging for scraps to eat on our back deck. Within a year, though, he had become obese, with his belly swinging back and forth as he waddled around the house. I remember the vete
Tracks3 min read
Masters Of Renewable Energy
As surfers our whole lives evolve around the quest to utilise the power of a renewable energy source – waves. Indeed, the fundamental buzz from surfing is derived from being propelled by a force of nature. We didn’t have to create or manufacture it,
Tracks4 min read
Shape Shifter
There is a certain way Matt Biolos looks at a surfboard. It’s the same way he looks at life. As a perfect opportunity to eliminate the bullshit. And he doesn’t just hold a surfboard, he grabs it. He spins it. Weighs it. Slaps it as if he wants to see
Tracks1 min read
01 Lightbox
The surfing world delivered its equivalent of a standing ovation when Caitlin Simmers won the 2024 Pipe Masters. To claim surfing’s most coveted event, the diminutive Californian, who’s barely a nudge over fifty kg’s in a wet jersey, had surfed Pipe
Tracks1 min read
Tracks
Editor Luke Kennedy: [email protected] Creative Director/Deputy Editor Ben Bugden: [email protected] CEO Peter Strain - [email protected] General Manager/Director of Marketing & Advertising Damian Martin: [email protected] +
Tracks5 min read
The Ecology Page
They're dumping shit in the sea. I live at Whale Beach. In the Municipality of Warringah. Most of this area isn't sewered. The government in it’s wisdom has plans to supply this essential service. It’s going to collect the collective excretia and dum
Tracks3 min read
Green Tracks
Anyone who had doubts that by the end of the 1970sTracks had strayed somewhat from the path of righteous indignation about the environment we live in and the poison we put in our bodies need only look at the bumper 100th issue, published in January 1
Tracks6 min read
Are Coastal Tradies The Solution To Nailing Climate Change?
Here’s an interesting statistic for you. According to Dr Saul Griffith at Rewiring Australia, Australia’s 10 million households are responsible for around 42% of our domestic carbon emissions, 33.5% of which is attributed to home energy and personal
Tracks9 min read
The Indo Motorcycle Diaries: Chapter VI
Webby wants to turn to back. His repaired bike tyre is leaking air again, and he says he doesn’t want another ordeal like the one we’ve just had. I suspect, though, there is a little more to it than that. I mean, we’re out a long way from anything we
Tracks1 min read
02 Lightbox
Maybe it’s the fact that most the waves of the world have been discovered, or maybe it’s because surfers like Mason Ho and Dylan Graves and Ben Gravy are seeking out the joyous and bizarre anomalies of wave riding. I mean really, Ben’s effort of havi
Tracks9 min read
Notes From Tasmantis
In 2012, Australia’s network of marine protected areas covered over 3,000,000 square kilometres of ocean. But in 2018, the Australian government downgraded protections to these marine ecosystems by more than 30%, opening huge areas to offshore oil an
Tracks4 min read
The True North Of Surfers For Climate
We aren’t here to whip people into a frenzy about climate change (although, it’s totally worth being frenzied about). Neither are we about stopping traffic in order to make an activist position on the need for urgent action (even though it really is
Tracks6 min read
The Line In The Sand For Our Ocean
When is enough, enough? In life, everything has its limits – jeans fray and the buttons give way; wetsuits leak like a sieve one last winter morning before meeting a recycling bin; the compressions in your surfboard result in it feeling like a moon l
Tracks30 min read
Portugal – I Wish I Could Stay But I Have To Go
This much we’ve garnered in broken English from Paulo, our affable Portuguese driver. The contest is sponsored by a restaurant and we must go there for lunch. At Paulo’s insistence we dump our bags at the stylish Evolution Hotel, which over-looks the
Tracks3 min read
Do Surfers Love An Offshore Wind?
Surfers for Climate polled their members to find out their level of support for the shift to renewables generally and to see what they thought about offshore wind specifically. The results from this survey showed an astounding 98% level of support fo
Tracks7 min read
The Sounds Of Surf
As a kid surfer, Peter Howe, learned to read the wind and watch for the southerly swell at The Farm near his hometown south of Wollongong. As a singer-songwriter he wrote our most memorable surfing lyrics with his close-up imagery of a magic morning
Tracks2 min read
03 Lightbox
Despite being 95% blind Matt Formston claims that for him there is no better feeling than carving across the face of a solid wave “It’s the most pleasurable thing that I do. So if I’m walking through a car park, I roll my ankle, there’s like kids run
Tracks11 min read
Blowing In The Wind
I started having concerns about wind farms when I realised I didn’t know much about them. Turning endless free wind into cheap reliable energy seemed a smart modern idea, something that most Australians would eventually embrace. After 10 years of pol
Tracks7 min read
Can Love Save The Ocean
Rain falling on the tin roof, wind howling through the valley, trees tapping on the window with every gust… I feel the pull of the offshore breeze. It’s a call that’s hard to resist, even in the chill of a two-degree sunrise surf. Bundling up in 4mm
Tracks2 min read
Water Coloured Waves: The Great Surf Tease
SINCE ITS FIRST APPEARANCE IN 2018, THE SURF LAKES WAVE POOL, A PROTOTYPE LOCATED NEAR YEPPOON IN QUEENSLAND, HAS TORTURED US WITH ENDLESS ONLINE CLIPS OF STARTLINGLY FUN LOOKING LINEUPS. It is a bizarre juxtaposition of surreal, steam-punkish machin
Tracks6 min read
Code Blue: Our Oceans In Crisis
The ocean. The big blue beating heart of our planet. As Australians, it is core to our very being. We paddle on it, camp by it, swim, and dive in it. Every day we are awed by its beauty, soothed by its rhythms, nourished by its bounty. For the millio
Tracks4 min read
Head Dips
I wait patiently for moments like this all year. It hadn’t rained for days, so the river wasn’t running brown and the ocean was clear. There wasn’t one cloud in the sky and no wind, so the surface of the water was glassy and allowed me to see through
Tracks2 min read
R.i.p Geoff Mccoy (1945-2024)
One of the first shapers to appear in Tracks in the early 70s, Geoff McCoy was as a titan of surfboard design for over half a century. McCoy originally trained as a pattern maker, a meticulous process in which patterns were hand made out of blocks of
Tracks3 min read
Tales Worth Re-telling
Turn to page 94 and you will see a re-print of Phil Jarratt’s classic Hawaiian story, ‘Half a Winter’s Tale’. One might be moved to ask why an editor would reprint a 7000 word story that first ran in the Jan 1977 issue of Tracks. The simple answer is
Tracks8 min read
A Different Pace
Sometimes a particular wave has you under a kind of spell. If you know it’s breaking you feel a compulsion to be out there that’s almost impossible to ignore. For Asher Pacey, P-Pass is that kind of wave. Pacey has been to the world-class Melanesian
Tracks4 min read
Four Point Surf Club 1976-79
“We used to surf Day Street all the time…” However, majority rules, and the young up and coming surfers from the *Four Point Surf Club were over the relatively gentle beach break waves of Day Street. Even though we had the only surf club shack on the
Tracks11 min read
Appetite For Destruction
There can be no denying the phenomenon that is Robert Kelly Slater. Few will argue with the notion of greatest competitive surfer of all time, and a quick google search of the stats of Jordan, Tyson, Bolt, etc. will reveal a compelling argument for g
Tracks1 min read
Watch: Artisans Episode 04, With Cait Miers
On family holidays to Coolangatta as a teenager, Cait Myers would borrow her mum’s camera to take surf photos. The hobby soon evolved into a career, which has seen Kate emerge as one of the pre-eminent photographers in the surfing world. Cait’s indus
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