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The good evening thread

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Created by laceys lane > 9 months ago, 13 Dec 2012
laceys lane
QLD, 19803 posts
30 Oct 2014 9:39PM
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68surfwagon said..


laceys lane said..





68surfwagon said..
Hey Lacey,I can sympathise a bit there with ya mate.I had about 10 frozen out of my lips & forehead todayI was lucky they were'nt to bad like yours & had to get them cut out,got them in time,hopefully.Years of staying out for hours in the 70s & 80s with not much on except Zinc & I hated that stuff,did'nt wear it much,maybe I should have now,haha.hope you heal up quick....







ha, i've had more frozen then i care to remember.


best thing is to stay on top of them get them treated






Yeah, I will be doing that,the ones you've had frozen,how did they go,ok.I've got more to come soon!..btw.do you live at Currumbin,judging by your name,I lived up there for about 1 & half years,many moons ago!...used to have a few surfs with Hodgey(Brett Hodge)when he lived behind Elephant Rock & had he's old HQ holden!...



a white botch for a while but they seems to fade in after a while

he got really really good. i remember seeing him take apart lefts at d/bar. i edited just then i can't remember goofy or natural. it was really super vert and snapping hard off the top

a head for his time stuff

kinda knew him from other people - good bloke

Cobra
9106 posts
30 Oct 2014 8:18PM
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E T said..

boofy said..


laceys lane said..



boofy said..




laceys lane said..
evening. well another day donating 3 lots of skin to the doctors-ouch



they are smarting a bit now. ne winds arise






Geez mate your having a rough trot lately where did they cut these ones from





yeah, being a chippie /builder, surfer with my skin probably wasn't real smart. one the side of my pec, oneon lat, one on arm across from said lat.

unfortunately another doctor burn these off a couple of years ago when they should have been treated differently- stuff happens.


at the end of the day its got to be done.leg one healed nice




Hope it goes well for you mate Im having more and more burnt off and cut out over the last few years after 20 years on the tools in the middle of the road. I cant remember how many times I lost a layer of skin off my back growing up on the beach at Terrigal



A far to common problem for us lads as we get older.

Sounds like you are doing the right thing and getting regular treatment. There are some new creams around that are great products but very expensive they do work very well though.

Sad thing for us older dudes is that any damage we have happened years ago well before there was any such thing as sunblock.

Cant stay out of the sun if you are a surfer but you can take precautions.

Good luck with your treatment guys.

ET.




+1 on the creams ET
they have saved me lots a stitchers…saved my best mate from loosing his ear
you gotta watch some doc's, they don't believe that they work "especially plastic surgeons" puts them out of work .
i had one specialist say NO cream won't work,that SCC is to far gone,,went to my doc ,he said lets give it a go,saved me a zipper above the eye.that was five years ago..
hahaha got to love some of those QLD skin clinics, they must get their quoter of flesh

Al G
NSW, 7652 posts
31 Oct 2014 5:38PM
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boofy said..

68surfwagon said..



boofy said..




laceys lane said..





boofy said..






laceys lane said..
evening. well another day donating 3 lots of skin to the doctors-ouch



they are smarting a bit now. ne winds arise








Geez mate your having a rough trot lately where did they cut these ones from







yeah, being a chippie /builder, surfer with my skin probably wasn't real smart. one the side of my pec, oneon lat, one on arm across from said lat.

unfortunately another doctor burn these off a couple of years ago when they should have been treated differently- stuff happens.


at the end of the day its got to be done.leg one healed nice






Hope it goes well for you mate Im having more and more burnt off and cut out over the last few years after 20 years on the tools in the middle of the road. I cant remember how many times I lost a layer of skin off my back growing up on the beach at Terrigal





Just been down to Terrigal last weekend,surf wasn't much though,went to the Chromefest show at The Entrance,great day!..




Geez mate I havent been back there for maybe 20 years surfed the biggest waves in my life off Terrigal Haven in my early twenties on my Wayne Hutch kneeboards



laceys lane said..


68surfwagon said..



laceys lane said..






68surfwagon said..
Hey Lacey,I can sympathise a bit there with ya mate.I had about 10 frozen out of my lips & forehead todayI was lucky they were'nt to bad like yours & had to get them cut out,got them in time,hopefully.Years of staying out for hours in the 70s & 80s with not much on except Zinc & I hated that stuff,did'nt wear it much,maybe I should have now,haha.hope you heal up quick....








ha, i've had more frozen then i care to remember.


best thing is to stay on top of them get them treated







Yeah, I will be doing that,the ones you've had frozen,how did they go,ok.I've got more to come soon!..btw.do you live at Currumbin,judging by your name,I lived up there for about 1 & half years,many moons ago!...used to have a few surfs with Hodgey(Brett Hodge)when he lived behind Elephant Rock & had he's old HQ holden!...




a white botch for a while but they seems to fade in after a while

he got really really good. i remember seeing him take apart lefts at d/bar. i edited just then i can't remember goofy or natural. it was really super vert and snapping hard off the top

a head for his time stuff

kinda knew him from other people - good bloke


Yeah Boofy,I haven't been to the central coast for about 30 years,geez it's changed,it's like a small Sydney,roundabout city.My mates brother used to own the Forresters Beach Take away,we used to surf Forries when we were up there!...

Al G
NSW, 7652 posts
31 Oct 2014 7:19PM
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Yeah Lacey, he was a great surfer,big fella off memory he was about 6'2" & a good bloke,i went down to Blackrock,Cabarita,D bah with him A few times,he was a natural, I used to surf at the alley with him a few times,my mate & his Mrs where renting a house just on the start of the industrial estate next door to a small car yard & I lived with them for about a year & a half, hodgey used to come over a fair bit,my mate worked on the wharfs in Brissy at the time!...
I remember Hodgey telling me when he went to Hawaii,he surfed Sunset huge,he reckons he was Sh#@@#g himself sitting out the back listening to the rumble of the unbroken waves coming in!...

Ted the Kiwi
NSW, 14256 posts
31 Oct 2014 7:40PM
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68surfwagon said..
Yeah Boofy,I haven't been to the central coast for about 30 years,geez it's changed,it's like a small Sydney,roundabout city.My mates brother used to own the Forresters Beach Take away,we used to surf Forries when we were up there!...


Yes indeed some parts are like that - but there are still pockets of heaven I can assure you Next time you are down let me know and we can hook up for a wave.

Al G
NSW, 7652 posts
31 Oct 2014 8:01PM
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Yeah Ted,no worries mate.I was only down for 2 days it was a bit rushed,had to do the Mrs things to,haha.I met up with a bloke for the first time down there that I've talked to on another Forum for a while,Alby Jones he's a School teacher from Shelley Beach,dont know if you know him,real nice bloke.I'de like to stay down for a week or 2 when I get some holidays,maybe in Autumn next year!....

Ted the Kiwi
NSW, 14256 posts
1 Nov 2014 11:08PM
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laceys lane
QLD, 19803 posts
2 Nov 2014 9:51AM
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Al G
NSW, 7652 posts
2 Nov 2014 12:47PM
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Cobra
9106 posts
5 Nov 2014 7:46AM
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SP
10979 posts
12 Nov 2014 6:24PM
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92 years of fun. R.I.P Doc.

Macaha
QLD, 21882 posts
12 Nov 2014 8:54PM
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Thank you SP,he lived a life many of us could only dream of RIP.

Macaha
QLD, 21882 posts
12 Nov 2014 9:03PM
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Tab slow so I'll drop this in,if thats ok.

Ted the Kiwi
NSW, 14256 posts
12 Nov 2014 10:20PM
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I watched that today Mac and thought it was probably not the best of their short films to date. Lets hope its just a blip as I loved all their other ones.

RIP Doc - I hope this time they have got it correct

E T
QLD, 2286 posts
12 Nov 2014 9:24PM
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Thanks SP, fantastic post.

How is the last scene, he can hardly walk but he just got out of the surf. Amazing.


Macaha
QLD, 21882 posts
12 Nov 2014 9:26PM
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I tend to agree Ted

Ted the Kiwi
NSW, 14256 posts
15 Nov 2014 8:48AM
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Great read - give it a crack Scotty you will not be disappointed

SP
10979 posts
15 Nov 2014 5:58AM
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Ted the Kiwi said...
Great read - give it a crack Scotty you will not be disappointed


Yeah what a life , he was hipster before hipster was a word.

messy to read though and the middle bit was weird, hopefully easier to read now or the link is better.

www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-dorian-doc-paskowitz-20141114-story.html



By STEVE CHAWKINS contact the reporter
ObituariesObituary DatabaseSurfwise (movie)Doug PrayTommy Hilfiger
Dorian 'Doc' Paskowitz dies at 93; took wife and nine children in camper on surfing odyssey
More than one California surfer has dreamed about following the waves in an old camper, picking up occasional odd jobs by day and generally blissing out at night.

But only one did it year after year with his wife and nine children crammed into a 24-foot camper that ultimately gave each child something like three cubic feet in which to grow up. Only one started what became a famous surfing school on the sands of San Onofre and preached the benefits of surfing so unrelentingly that Tommy Hilfiger applied the family's name to a line of beachwear; when it came to surfing, the designer explained in 1999, "there's no one more cool and credible than the Paskowitzes."

Dorian "Doc" Paskowitz, a physician who abandoned the prospect of a lucrative practice for surfing because he said he never felt right about taking money from people in pain, died Monday at a hospice in Newport Beach. He was

His death was confirmed by his son Israel, who said Doc Paskowitz injured his hip in a fall last month, checked himself out of a hospital after surgery, and opted to forgo intensive medical care.

"He didn't want to prolong his life in any other way than jogging, surfing and just being who he was," said Israel Paskowitz, a former world champion longboard surfer.

"There are always kids living in campers on the beach, writing sonnets about waves and boards, and the ocean as their church," he said. "But in five years, they'll be working for big commercial real estate companies. My dad did it forever."

Portrayed in early newspaper features as surfing's answer to the singing Von Trapp family, the Paskowitzs' eight boys and one girl were for the most part home-schooled in the camper by Doc and his wife, Juliette. During one of his few stints in an actual school, Israel recalled his father jogging by while he and his friends were in the playground.

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8
"I was mortified," he said. "I knew I had to run over and see him and I knew that he'd give me a kiss ? on the mouth, in front of my friends, through the chain-link fence. I'm proud to say I kissed him back."

As iconoclastic as he was, Paskowitz had surprisingly old-school tastes. He enjoyed big band tunes by the Dorsey brothers. He taught his sons to stand up when they shook someone's hand. A devout Jew, he belonged to no synagogue but prayed daily and celebrated Friday night Shabbat wherever the family happened to camp. He is credited with pioneering surfing in Israel, where he lived in the mid-1950s; in 2007, he delivered boards to Palestinian surfers, including at least one who had publicly expressed sympathy with the Hamas militant group.

"To be able to go to your enemies and give them something that makes them happy is a most fulfilling adventure," he told the Los Angeles Times.

Dorian 'Doc' Paskowitz
Juliette and and Dorian 'Doc' Paskowitz. ?Doc? Paskowitz said he gave up his medical practice for surfing because he never felt right about taking money from people in pain. (Don Tormey, Los Angeles Times)
Paskowitz and his family were portrayed in Doug Pray's 2008 documentary "Surfwise," a film that cast Doc as eccentric and egocentric. Although the Paskowitz family would be described by the New York Times as "the First Family of surfing," Doc was recalled by some of his children as an authoritarian who kept them from getting the schooling they would need to face the world.

"I'm not some kind of avant-garde, radical intellectual," he says in the film. "I just wanted my kids around me, surfing with me ? and education be damned!"

Maintaining discipline in such cramped quarters sometimes meant forcing balky children to paddle their boards some difficult distance or run to some distant spot on the beach. Jonathan Paskowitz, who co-produced the film, told NPR's Terry Gross that his father woke him in the middle of a freezing night on Rhode Island's Block Island and had him pursue a difficult outdoor "quest" that took hours. The son's infraction: gorging at school on Kellogg's Frosted Flakes ? a taboo in a strictly sugar-free household.

Paskowitz was ardent about natural foods. After seeing a gorilla in the San Diego Zoo eat an apple but throw away the peel, he insisted his family do the same: It was nature's way, he said.

"I'm not going to be upstaged by any gorilla, or any chimpanzee, or any newt, or any gecko, or any squirrel," he told an interviewer.

A natural promoter, Paskowitz was comfortable in the limelight.

"We surfers like to think of ourselves as colorful and worldly, but the truth is that most of us are not," said surfing historian Matt Warshaw.

"But he really was. He had done so much and experienced so much outside of surfing that he was multidimensional in a sport full of single-dimensional people. The sport was far more colorful for him being in it."

Dorian 'Doc' Paskowitz
All nine children in the Paskowitz family, shown about 1976, were raised and homeschooled in this camper by parents Dorian "Doc" and Juliette Paskowitz. (Magnolia Pictures)
Born in Galveston, Texas, on March 3, 1921, Doc Paskowitz learned to surf at 10 and moved with his family to San Diego when he was 12. He attended San Diego State before transferring to the University of Hawaii, and then to Stanford.

He received his bachelor's in biology from Stanford in 1942 and his medical degree in 1946.

He served in the Navy aboard the Ajax, a ship assigned to duty at postwar atomic bomb tests in the Pacific.

After his military service, Paskowitz returned to Hawaii and embarked on his medical career.

"The years between 1950 and 1956 saw one professional success after another for me, but in actual fact these were the worst years of my life," he once said. "I deserted surfing and in its place I substituted ambition. It didn't work. My spirit shrank until there was nothing left. You see, when I kept surfing, surfing kept me."

He had already been married twice. In 1957, he met an opera singer who was working as a telephone operator on Santa Catalina Island. After they married in 1959, Doc and Juliette began their odyssey in a succession of beat-up vehicles, sometimes just a surf break ahead of the repo man.

For spending money, Paskowitz filled in at hospital emergency rooms. He provided medical services on Indian reservations and at migrant labor camps. Sometimes he treated people at the beach, dispensed nutritional advice, or gave surfing lessons, all the while telling stories about Duke Kahanamoku and other surfing giants he said he knew.

"When someone ran across a doctor who lived at the beach in a camper with all those kids, it was kind of stunning," said Steve Pezman, founder and co-publisher of Surfer's Journal in San Clemente. "But he was so witty and charming, they would fall under his spell, even if he would tell them he was scamming them. They would offer to help out, just because they were digging his deal."

In addition to his wife, Juliette, Paskowitz's survivors include daughter Navah; sons David, Jonathan, Abraham, Israel, Moses, Adam, Salvador and Joshua; 24 grandchildren and one great-grandchild. Daughters Sarah, Sally and Deborah survive from a previous marriage.


NewScotty
2350 posts
15 Nov 2014 5:55PM
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I watched the documentary on Doc & his family about 3 years ago. I mentioned it on here but nobody had heard of it and you all thought I was gibbering.
It's a great doco. Worth looking up.
Funny hearing the grown up kids talking about hearing Mum & Dad going at it in the top bed of the camper.
They all come together at the end for a family reunion which was very special at one of the boys hadn't spoke to Doc for a few years. He was a stubborn old bugger but a legend no doubt.

Ted the Kiwi
NSW, 14256 posts
23 Nov 2014 9:20PM
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Anyone been grape fruited recently?

chrispy
WA, 9675 posts
23 Nov 2014 7:01PM
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That's gold.ted.....hence.why in my single days I had no standards, just a good attitude and being heaps ****ed up would do

E T
QLD, 2286 posts
23 Nov 2014 9:54PM
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Thanks for that TED, but I wish I had know about that when I was a boy, maybe I wouldn't have got callouses.

ET.

Al G
NSW, 7652 posts
25 Nov 2014 7:18PM
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Gidday fella's.for any one who might be interested,there is a site called Rare Surf Tees.com.He's got some cool old school vintage surfboard manufacturer T shirts & others.$45 & free postage,I just ordered another one...

Ted the Kiwi
NSW, 14256 posts
25 Nov 2014 8:08PM
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Nice find - some classics in there. There is a bloke in Manly who stocks lots of the old stuff as well. I have a couple of old style rip curl tee's that I gogt off him about 8yrs ago n still going strong. Probably the last rip curl t shirts that I brought

Al G
NSW, 7652 posts
25 Nov 2014 8:34PM
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G.day Ted,hows things mate,yeah I brought the Scott Dillon & 2 Bob Brown one's.I've known Bob for a long time, surfed with him & cruise over to his shop a bit & been to Scott's Museum a couple of times.I'll buy some more in the new year,I'm glad some people reproduce them,because I'm into vintage stuff, it's very hard to find originals these days & that's if they are not worn out.Yeah I 've got a few Rip Curl ,Billabong,Piping hot,Lightning Bolt,etc vintage T shirts, love em,you wouldn't know if the bloke in Manly has a website would you?..

Cobra
9106 posts
1 Dec 2014 5:28PM
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laceys lane
QLD, 19803 posts
1 Dec 2014 8:14PM
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looks like the perfect reference to be a seabreeze moderator Laurie

Macaha
QLD, 21882 posts
1 Dec 2014 9:04PM
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www.goldcoastbulletin.com.au/nocookies?a=A.flavipes

MickPC
8266 posts
2 Dec 2014 3:07PM
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LOL

Cobra
9106 posts
2 Dec 2014 7:07PM
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mick i was a little disappointed with that vid.
i thought they would make the omelette out of the spew bucket contents.



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"The good evening thread" started by laceys lane