The World Stormrider Guide Volume 2 (Stormrider Guides) | 
enlarge | Author: Anthony Colas Brand: Low Pressure Category: Book
List Price: $39.95 Buy New: $26.33 You Save: $13.62 (34%)
New (27) Used (7) from $26.33
Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 95658
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 264 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.3 Dimensions (in): 11 x 8.6 x 0.9
ISBN: 0953984028 Dewey Decimal Number: 797.32 EAN: 9780953984022 ASIN: 0953984028
Publication Date: June 30, 2004 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: SHIPS from 5 locations based on your Zip Code and availability! (PA TN IN OR SC) *-* Gift Quality *-* Orders Processed Immediately! - We get your book to you Very Quickly! -L2356.04321
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| Features:
| • | Provides overview of pollution, erosion, access, and hazards that affect surfers. | | • | Enhanced analysis of surf breaks by the addition of unique symbols, swell, and weather stats. | | • | Includes crucial travelling information. | | • | Detailed mapping and breathtaking photography. | | • | Paperback |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Part two of the the trilogy of World Stormrider Guides resumes the epic trip around the world's surfable coastlines. Exploring 80 entirely new surf zones across the nine contyinental and oceanic chapters. Volume two investigates the waves breaking on our expanding surfing frontiers.
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| Customer Reviews:
You better have it ! September 26, 2007 If you need to prepare a surf trip, you want to go at the best (known) spot, or you're just curious to see how it looks like 10 000 miles away, go for it !
This book is really well made, nice text, all the details you need to know, beautiful pictures. You can feel it was made by surfers for surfers.
The first pages will give a bit about wave creating system, weather forecasting and wind satelite map reading.
Really Nice book. But don't fool yourself, the best secret spots won't be in there !
The World Stormrider Guide Volume 2 (Stormrider Guides) May 31, 2007 This and all the Stormrider Guides are truely great sources of information about surf travel. Cleverly put together, have beautiful illustrations, and are packed with all the necessary information you need to start planning your surf adventure and travel. Every surfer (young or old) should have all of them on the shelves of their personal library. Go ahead and invest. You'll be stoked, dude!
Cowabunga, nos vemos en el agua!
The book is awesome.. but.... March 12, 2006 1 out of 4 found this review helpful
The book is awesome.. but.... the back cover is almost detaching fom the book.....
Great book September 11, 2005 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is a great guide with specific details and great photos would reccomend to anyone.
Useful, but could be better November 13, 2004 33 out of 35 found this review helpful
The first 'World Stormrider Guide' (Volume 1) to world surf spots was a little bit better than this one, primarily because both the pictures and quality of the surf breaks listed were consistently better.
In this edition, it seems some surf spots are listed to sell copies based on population, rather than surf quality (eg Texas, Perth-except Rottnest Island), or because of tourism (eg Venezuela -"waves are always small"), or because that is where the compilers thought they would like to have a holiday to research the information. And this leads to the second problem-some of the pictures are not up to the standard of a surf publication-many look like they were taken on a single day-stop on a surf trip, which were obviously not even close to the better days of surf at the spot. (Crumbling 2 foot beach breaks do not exactly make a publication). Everyone knows surf pictures are usually exceptional for a particular spot, but at least they know how good it can get.
The detail is as good or better than the first (ie water temperature, swell size, consistency, wind, costs, local stuff, spots highlighted in bold), but the pictures could definitely have been outsourced a bit more. (Hell, I've got better pictures on some spots on some of these-Lennox Head for example is rated as "one of the best right hand points in Australia" (in the top ten or so, along with the likes of Angourie, Burleigh, Kirra, Snapper, National Park Noosa, Winkipop, Bells, North Point, Mays)-yet the picture shows dribbly 3-4 footers-I've got pics which are better). And also, it isn't much value listing so MANY places which are at best average, or too inconsistent (eg like a number in the Carribean-obviously for the American market, the Seychelles-"very small", Northwest Phillippines and Vietnam-"always small"). A few average spots is ok, (or a really good spot but which is inconsistent), but there is too many spots which basically show you that it isn't worth going there (at least to surf, that is). Who wants to travel around the world to surf expensive 2 foot dribblers? (I can get that on an average day in Sydney). Quality, cheap, and uncrowded is what everyone wants-as well as the all-important consistency-ie often breaking!.(Hell, I know some spots in Australia that get absolutely epic, but only a couples of times a year!). In this respect a little more attention could be paid to details on consistency in general-it gives swell consistency/month, but a bit more detail here could be useful-something like actual number of good surf days/each month etc.
Particularly inviting were places like New Zealand (the place in general just gets better the more you look at it-like the first place shown after the inside cover-Mangamaunu Point-looks good), Peru/Lima area, Baja California (with the `seven sisters' stretch of pointbreaks), the `epic' Kumari Point in the Andamans (we'll have to their word for it, the pics look good, but not excellent), Rapa Nui, mainland Sumatra, Philip Island (I've seen better pics), Byron Bay (I've got better pics), Garden Route South Africa (poor quality pics, but there are some good waves on this coast), and the whole pacific side of Central America. Numerous other places like Madagascar, various Pacific Islands, Oman, Brazil, Venezeula, northwest Philippines, Vietnam, northern Spain, Angola, etc didn't exactly overwhelm with quality shots.
A final issue is that always difficult one, the "secret spot". I am one of those people who think the surf is for everyone, and you may as well show on the map where the spot or picture shown actually is. There are several spots described, some with pictures, but which are not shown on the accompanying maps (eg the Philippine Dream-pic looks good anyway, and "Secret Spot" South Africa). (They also say in Volume 1 that they are keeping some spots secret). There is also the annoying occasional picture which has no reference to where it is at all. Some people might like surfers to drive past `their' world-class spot, but it is pretty frustrating to go half way round the world, spend hard earned money, get home and find out you missed the best spot, and you can't go back. And there is always the paradox that others (eg businesses) might want the spot known. Who benefits from the secret? Not you, me or the local businesses-a small group of local surfers only. Also, the world is a big place, and more world-class spots might thin things out a bit, and moreover eventually they are going to find out anyway.
Hopefully the third edition will have some better pictures/surf spots- there are plenty around.
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