Kelly Slater clutches a rail beneath a snarling Sumbawa lip. Photo: Evgeny Ivkov

rare birds

Unprecedented surfing moments in the midst of a pandemic

Kelly Slater roams the Indo archipelago on the whim of swell • Fijian locals pool their petrol money to enjoy flawless, crowd-free Cloudbreak • A Tahitian girl scores the wave of a lifetime at Teahupoo • The WSL’s Hawaiian season from hell • An Irish madman hustles a one- man permit to surf giant Mullaghmore & The Sydney surf police are on patrol. Kelly hanging from a rail as he hits the corner high and fastKelly hanging from a rail as he hits the corner high and fast Troy Sinclair parking his red quad in a luminous Indo tunnel. Bottom: Kelly acquainting himself with the curvature of his Sumbawa escape. Photos: Evgeny Ivkov FAST TIMES WITH KELLY SLATER WRITTEN BY LUKE KENNEDY Australian Expat, Troy Sinclair typically spends his days running his resort, Batu Karang, on the island of Nusa Lembongan. It’s a sweet gig but things had been a little slow on account of COVID and the corresponding tourist restrictions. Troy decided it was a good time to follow up on a little boat project he’d been working on. He figured chartering a boat could provide him with an alternative income stream in hard times. Meanwhile, the surfer in him dreamed of owning a high- speed vessel that would transport him to any of Indonesia’s best waves on a whim. You see this was no ordinary runabout. It was a repurposed Russian special forces, navy strike boat; 12 metres of sleekly engineered, high-powered marine transport with a top speed of 55 knots and a cruising speed of 38-40 knots. Once he’d purchased the new boat, Troy was like a kid with a new toy and began conducting speed trials around the archipelago. He soon figured out he could get from his dock on Lembongan to Desert Point on Lombok in 35 minutes. If he picked up passengers from Serangan in Bali it only added another 20 minutes. G-land in east Java was an hour-forty-five on a good run and Sumbawa was less than four hours away. The boat also came fully equipped with infra-red cameras and sophisticated sonar, so you could surf all day and come home after dark. Invariably, the boat which was soon dubbed the kaikoaIndonesia, radically redefined the scope of Troy’s surfing universe. Cut loose from his gig as a WSL commentator, Strider Wasilewski was in Bali to enjoy a spell riding waves instead of talking … Read more

Kelly Slater roams the Indo archipelago on the whim of swell • Fijian locals pool their petrol money to enjoy flawless, crowd-free Cloudbreak • A Tahitian girl scores the wave of a lifetime at Teahupoo • The WSL’s Hawaiian season from hell • An Irish madman hustles a one- man permit to surf giant Mullaghmore & The Sydney surf police are on patrol.

Kelly hanging from a rail as he hits the corner high and fastKelly hanging from a rail as he hits the corner high and fast Troy Sinclair parking his red quad in a luminous Indo tunnel. Bottom: Kelly acquainting himself with the curvature of his Sumbawa escape. Photos: Evgeny Ivkov

FAST TIMES WITH KELLY SLATER

WRITTEN BY LUKE KENNEDY

Australian Expat, Troy Sinclair typically spends his days running his resort, Batu Karang, on the island of Nusa Lembongan. It’s a sweet gig but things had been a little slow on account of COVID and the corresponding tourist restrictions. Troy decided it was a good time to follow up on a little boat project he’d been working on. He figured chartering a boat could provide him with an alternative income stream in hard times. Meanwhile, the surfer in him dreamed of owning a high- speed vessel that would transport him to any of Indonesia’s best waves on a whim. You see this was no ordinary runabout. It was a repurposed Russian special forces, navy strike boat; 12 metres of sleekly engineered, high-powered marine transport with a top speed of 55 knots and a cruising speed of 38-40 knots.

Once he’d purchased the new boat, Troy was like a kid with a new toy and began conducting speed trials around the archipelago. He soon figured out he could get from his dock on Lembongan to Desert Point on Lombok ...

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