A site about water women of all disciplines including kiteboarding, windsurfing, surfing, SUP and more
Thursday, March 22, 2012
Paige Alms Rippin' it at Jaws
Labels:
Paige Alms,
surfing,
surfing jaws,
women surfing,
women surfing Jaws
Monday, March 19, 2012
Girls Tackle Tricky Margaret River Telstra Drug Aware Pro Bethany Hamilton
MARGARET RIVER, WA/Australia (Monday, March 19, 2012) – South west W.A. is swarming with the world’s best surfers who are in town for the 2012 Telstra Drug Aware Pro Margaret River. The event got underway today starting with the Women’s Round of 60, in blustery 3 foot (1.5 meter) conditions at Surfer’s Point.
Tuesday, March 13, 2012
Tuesday, March 6, 2012
Monday, January 30, 2012
Michelle Crompton Rips!
Sunday, January 22, 2012
Whoa, this girl is amazing!
Blue Peter presenter Helen Skelton has completed a 500-mile (800km) trek to the South Pole - on skis, kite skis and an ice bike.
The TV star battled for 18 days through severe snow storms, temperatures as low as -48C and a bad bout of dehydration.
She said her body hurt in countless places, but finishing the challenge for Sport Relief felt "incredible".
The 28-year-old also set a new world record for the fastest 100km by kite ski - in seven hours 28 minutes.
"The environment is so harsh and on a day when you can get sunburn, you can also get frostbite," she said.
'Pure grit'"I could fell my ears burning through my helmet because of the wind.
"This has been a massive adventure and at times it felt like it was never going to end.
"My body hurts in so many different places, mentally I'm exhausted and I've only washed once in the last 30 days, so to be finally standing at the Pole feels incredible."
Skelton became the first person to use a bike - with specially adapted wide tyres - as part of an expedition to the Pole.
She covered 329 miles by kite ski, 103 by bike, and 68 by cross-country ski.
She pulled a sledge containing her supplies that weighed a total of 82kg (13 stone).
The adventurer suffered numerous blisters, a hacking cough, and ongoing stomach troubles during the trek with Norwegian explorer Niklas Norman, a small BBC team and a logistics crew.
British explorer Sir Ranulph Fiennes said: "I take my hat off to Helen Skelton. I have to admit when she first told me that she was going to cycle part of the way to the South Pole, I laughed.
"But through pure grit and determination she has got there and shown that, yes, you can use a bike to reach the Pole. Her incredible efforts are a great example of willpower."
Her latest adventure follows her successful high-wire walk between the chimneys of Battersea Power Station, in London, and a solo kayak voyage down the length of the Amazon.
Helen's Polar Challenge for Sport Relief will be shown in a special nine-week series on Blue Peter starting on 23 January at 1630 GMT on BBC One.
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