nick taylor – Wakeboarding Mag https://www.wakeboardingmag.com Wakeboarding Magazine covers the latest in wakeboarding gear, videos, tips, photos, boats, news, and so much more. Fri, 05 May 2023 21:42:07 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://www.wakeboardingmag.com/uploads/2021/09/wkb-favicon.png nick taylor – Wakeboarding Mag https://www.wakeboardingmag.com 32 32 Istudiomo w/ Andrew Roehm https://www.wakeboardingmag.com/istudiomo-w-andrew-roehm/ Wed, 13 Dec 2017 03:58:04 +0000 https://www.wakeboardingmag.com/?p=50656 The wakeskate independent film by Andrew Roehm, Istudiomo, recently had its second premier in downtown Orlando, and it did not disappoint. Istudiomo was premiered at the popular bar, Magnolia, and was filled with people from both the wakeskate and wakeboard industry. This hour-long feature that has been four years in the making took its audience […]

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The wakeskate independent film by Andrew Roehm, Istudiomo, recently had its second premier in downtown Orlando, and it did not disappoint.

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Yan Lecomte
Backside Wallride
Istudiomo

Istudiomo was premiered at the popular bar, Magnolia, and was filled with people from both the wakeskate and wakeboard industry. This hour-long feature that has been four years in the making took its audience around the world with an array of riders. The film was heavy hitting from beginning to end and featured several tricks that we saw at Wake Awards as nominations for the Indmar Trick of the Year. It was also full of some of the craziest crashes you’ve seen on film. The boys involved in this really put themselves on the line in more ways than one. We sat down with Andrew to ask him what it’s like to see four years of dedication towards this project come to an end.

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Andrew Pastura & Cole Kraiss
Winch Repairs
Istudiomo

Where did the name Istudiomo come from?

It sort of just came from nowhere, just popped into my head randomly while driving one day. I think it looks nice visually as a typographic logo and I just liked the sound of it when I said it aloud… I get this question more than any other, but just to possibly reduce the number of them occurring in the future… I pronounce the first letter like the ‘i’ in the word ‘igloo’ then the traditional English pronunciation of the word ‘studio’ and then ‘mo’ like ‘motion’… but honestly, it’s just a made-up word so any pronunciation is fine, whatever suits you… That was kind of the point though. I didn’t want the name to have any particular pronunciation, meaning, or defined style. I didn’t want the name to define the product; I wanted the product to define the name.

Who were all the riders involved?

Our squad is pretty deep… We have some of the more of the familiar faces to the scene like Nick Taylor and Andrew Pastura, but we’ve got a good balance going with some fresh new faces really setting a new standard for quality and creativity in wakeskating with guys like Cole Kraiss and Matti Buys, but altogether there are thirteen guys featured in Istudiomo: Cole Kraiss, Yan Lecomte, Travis Belsito, Nick Taylor, Andrew Fortenberry, Bret Little, Ollie Moore, David Roehm, Nick Robinson, Andrew Pastura, Matti Buys, Braden Ioi, and Collin Gee make up our roster, but Bammer Rehn is pretty much an honorary member of the crew by this point.

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Overhead Lake Powell Istudiomo

What were all the locations you shot at and which were some of your most memorable?

We trekked it across the entire continental United States coast to coast. In regards to all the domestic locations we shot at I probably had the most memorable experiences romping through the deserts in Arizona and Nevada with like 8 or 9 of the guys from the Istudiomo crew or venturing through the Rocky Mountains of Colorado and Wyoming. As for international stuff, we made a couple trips over to Africa, Australia, and Asia. We covered a lot of ground for this film, to my knowledge, more than any wakeskate film before it.

Where can somebody get a copy of Istudiomo as well as the coffee table book?

The film will be available online through our website and various other places December 15th. We’re still sorting some of that stuff out but it won’t be hard to find. The coffee table books we made for the film and Istudiomo as a whole are available for pre-order now actually. There are only 100 copies up for grabs and we’ve already had a bunch of pre-orders. You can pick up your own copy of the book at www.typical.supply/istudiomo. They are pretty awesome. The book is 370 pages containing hundreds of photos, articles, interviews, and stories from the production of the film. But personally, the coolest thing about the book I think is that you will every now and then while flipping through come across these QR codes inside that unlock exclusive video content you can only find inside the book. This video content are pieces that aren’t designed to be published or to go public and some of them aren’t even done yet, but they’ll be unlocked and available to view inside the book at different periods throughout 2018. The Istudiomo Lookbook: The book that keeps on giving!

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Matti Buys
Backside Flip
Istudiomo

What were some of the challenges with creating Istudiomo?

Can I say everything? Because seriously every aspect of Istudiomo was a challenge. I had no real professional training for any of this. Everything was self- taught and learned on the fly; with that comes a ton of inherent challenges. The web design, the print design, magazine publication, organizing production, managing trips and riders, coordinating premieres, and the whole business side of Istudiomo like customer relations, social interaction, general marketing, and collaborating with different media groups or brands, it was all stuff I had come across before but never part of a singular media project, where all of it was going on simultaneously. It’s something usually reserved for a team of people running a company but I somehow needed to navigate it solo. So yeah… it was a pretty new and challenging experience, I enjoyed it a lot. Something I’d regret not mentioning too is that Istudiomo has been a completely independent project. We have had no formal backing from brands and we received no budget other than what we were able to scrape together as a group. Istudiomo’s funding came almost entirely from a select few from the crew and extremely generous wakeskaters who donated to support the project. The guys in this video put their own dollars down to make it on trips and took time off work to go stack footage in some faraway places. Each of them faced some of their own unique difficulties to overcome for this film to happen. Of the thirteen athletes in this film two of them are paid a livable wage for their riding, two of them. I’d like anyone who’s reading this to really think about that for a second… There’s a lot of things about Istudiomo that probably would have been less difficult or come out more polished or professional if we had more budget or formal backing or had I gone through a formal process of training for these things, but I think it would have lost a lot of its character and unique qualities that truly make Istudiomo one of a kind.

Four years is a long time to create a video. Why so long and how did this make Istudiomo different from other videos out there?

Four years is an incredibly long time. Sorry about that… Luckily, I didn’t announce to the public this project was underway until about a year into production. I think they’d be calling for my head if they had to wait another year for Istudiomo. But yeah four years is a really long time to work on a film, I blame a portion of that on school, the first two years of production I was finishing up university, but after that my time and energy was 100% Istudiomo. That being said, regardless of school, Istudiomo was always destined to take that long. Istudiomo at the heart of it isn’t a video, but more of a long form media project, that resembles more of a free and adless media company than just your typical wake movie. Istudiomo pumped out free content to the public for three years, a 370-page coffee table book, and then crescendos with a full-length wakeskate film encapsulating everything that came before it, what a surprise it wasn’t financially viable.

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Ollie Moore
Indy Poke
Istudiomo

What was one or two of the craziest moments filming Istudiomo?

Probably the slam that put Drew (Pastura) into the hospital for four days in South Africa. The whole experience was completely unreal. Drew slams on this insane spot, I’d try to describe it but it’s best to just see it for yourself in the movie, but afterward the most unbelievable series of events unfold for us for everything to somehow, miraculously, work out in the end.

Firstly, the slam could have easily killed him, like truly a 50/50 chance. The winch bogged as Drew was taking an aggressive edge into the spot and it ended up giving Drew a bunch of slack in the air right after he popped and for this spot you needed an insane amount of speed to clear some nasty stuff in order to reach the critical landing zone, but he didn’t make it. His arm and hip took the brunt of the impact on a jagged and filthy slab of concrete steps, beneath brown cascading rapids, and while we didn’t initially know the seriousness of the slam, Drew clinching his arm yelling ‘Hospital!’ over and over was all I needed to hear to spring into action.

The whole crew scattered throughout this property more than 500 yards apart all perfectly performed the world’s fastest pack up. We all instantly knew our jobs and we were on the road for the nearest ER in less than five minutes. Here’s the kicker… the nearest hospital was less than 3 minutes away… we were out the water, packed up, and in an ER in less than 10 minutes.

So, we get Drew to the hospital and realize his arm has a deep laceration around his elbow and his hip has got some gruesome road rash that’s bleeding everywhere, we feared the worst. Worried about internal bleeding from the impact, torn ligaments and tendons, and terrible infection considering how incredibly dirty the water we were winching was, so much could go wrong. We get escorted out of the room as the doctors and nurses get to work on Drew. As we wait for the doctors to finish up with Drew time slows down and we feel like we’ve been waiting an eternity. To help pass the time we get to chatting with some locals and employees of the hospital and come to learn that this random hospital just so happened to be right next to this winch spot considered one of the very best in the country, and Drew’s doctor is the best the hospital had to offer, what are the odds of that? Crazy.

They added that if we had gone to any other hospital in the area our story could have easily unfolded very differently, amputation wouldn’t have been outside the realm of possibility., which sounds nuts considering what we know now. Anyway… The doctor calls us into the room. He informs us that Drew’s gash and road rash is extremely serious and needs medical attention to prevent infection, but that’s as far as it goes. Aside from those two things and some deep tissue bruising he came out of his slam unscathed, his tests and x-rays showed no torn ligaments or tendons, no cut veins or arteries, no broken bones, no internal bleeding, nothing, once you see the footage you truly won’t understand how that’s even possible. We all collectively released a sigh of relief.

Drew would go on to have three separate sedated surgeries for excavation and deep cleaning of his wound due to the extreme filthiness of the water we were winching in. True to form though, Drew, only a month and a half later, would go on to ride in the first wakeskate tour stop in 2017 and like always make it through to the finals.

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Yan Lecomte
Frontside Boardslide
Istudiomo

How do you feel the film has been received so far?

After the first two premieres I am pretty pleased with the reception. It’s always nice to hear someone say something good about the thing you’ve worked really hard on for so long, but it’s never really been about that. While it’s cool that the film has been received well by the wakeskate community and the larger wake community as a whole, for me all I really care about are the opinions of the guys who were out there grinding day in and day out with me; and putting time, energy, money into this project and their bodies on the line to make the performances in this film truly unparalleled.

How does it feel to come to the end of this long project?

It’s honestly really odd. I’ve had so much time to plan this project out and I’ve known what I was going to do and what was coming next for so long with this project. I had daily, weekly, monthly, even yearly schedules, itineraries, goals, and deadlines to meet, one after the other. So just practically speaking approaching those last deadlines, and those last releases is pretty surreal. I mean I’m writing these answers to you guys with essentially everything media related done and now just awaiting December 15th. It’s an interesting place to be in after four years of a go-to routine not knowing what’s going to come next…

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Cole Kraiss
Kickflip into Bank
Istudiomo

Is there anyone you would like to thank?

Oh man, there’s so many people. I’ll keep it super brief. I’ve got a longer thank you in the credits of the film and those of you who were instrumental in the making of this whole media project, you know who you are. But I’d like to formally thank my parents and Nick Taylor… If I go much further beyond that I’d just be doing those instrumental people a disservice if I forgot to mention any of them. But yeah Istudiomo would not exist without my parents and Nick Taylor, no question. And thank you to Wakeboarding Magazine for this interview, it’s been a pleasure.

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Confessional w/ Nick Taylor https://www.wakeboardingmag.com/confessional-w-nick-taylor/ Tue, 21 Nov 2017 03:20:01 +0000 https://www.wakeboardingmag.com/?p=55572 The recent surge in viral popularity of ­vertically filmed smartphone videos of people jumping into Bass Pro Shops aquariums has been amusing for most folks, but for me it’s been somewhat exasperating. At least a few times each week for the last two months, I’ve had to explain to different people that just because the news media […]

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Nick Taylor WBM

The recent surge in viral popularity of ­vertically filmed smartphone videos of people jumping into Bass Pro Shops aquariums has been amusing for most folks, but for me it’s been somewhat exasperating. At least a few times each week for the last two months, I’ve had to explain to different people that just because the news media websites (and Lil Wayne) are all using a photo of me in the tank every time somebody jumps in one, it doesn’t mean I’ve gone back for more, and then I have to tell them the whole story. So, here’s a short tale about my quick dip into the Bass Pro Shops aquarium.

About five years ago, myself and some of the boys were on a winch trip through South Florida, jumping down spillways, ­sliding concrete ledges, and enjoying the freedom of life on the road. We’d been ­stacking clips and photos for about a week when we needed to stock up on camping supplies. It’s important to note that I’d been out of the water for an entire month due to an ankle injury and had been confined to driving the winch or shooting photos the whole trip. To say I was full of pent-up energy is an understatement. Pulling into the parking lot, someone cracked a joke about diving into the aquarium with a GoPro, and we kept embellishing the hypothetical scenario until it started to sound more like we were actually planning details than joking. By the time someone asked if I was really going to do it, we were walking in with a couple of well-hidden cameras and I had ­already committed to looking through the glass from the other side.

We spread out around the store, some heading to the second level for a better view, then I gave the signal and scaled the artificial rock wall up to the edge of the water, past the stuffed deer and coyote. Taking a deep breath and smiling into my GoPro, I slinked ­quietly into the corner of the aquarium, fully clothed, and swam down into the middle of the assorted fish species, who looked almost as perplexed and startled as the family of four standing on the other side of the glass. I was only under for about 10 seconds, but in that green ­silence, I imagined that alarms were going off throughout the store and Bass Pro Shops commandos would be popping out of the tent section to confront me. I emerged from the water only to find more silence and to watch my friends scurry back into the clothing racks to remain inconspicuous. I drip-dried next to the stuffed deer for nearly a minute before hopping back down and making my escape. I was intercepted by an amazingly rageful manager near the exit, but the rest of the employees seemed more concerned about containing him than they were about me (he was saying some pretty awful things), so I walked out the front door, ditched the guy they’d sent to follow me, and circled back to the ­rendezvous point: a nearby Italian restaurant where the boys and I laughed over our little Bass Pro adventure.

I’m banned for life, but really the worst part is having to be the poster boy for all these amateurs getting broken off and hurting themselves. Maybe if one of them could manage to get a decent photo, I’d be out of the limelight.

Until then …

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SHOREPOUND | A North Shore Adventure https://www.wakeboardingmag.com/shorepound-north-shore-adventure/ Mon, 05 Jun 2017 21:29:20 +0000 https://www.wakeboardingmag.com/?p=49656 Nick Taylor, Parks Bonifay, Brian Grubb, Austin Keen and Bryan Soderlind bringing wake vibes to the North Shore of Oahu… For the full story on their trip, check out the feature story here >>

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Nick Taylor, Parks Bonifay, Brian Grubb, Austin Keen and Bryan Soderlind bringing wake vibes to the North Shore of Oahu…

For the full story on their trip, check out the feature story here >>

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A North Shore Adventure https://www.wakeboardingmag.com/north-shore-adventure/ Tue, 11 Apr 2017 22:28:47 +0000 https://www.wakeboardingmag.com/?p=51210 Getting barreled in Oahu’s shorepound is unbelievably gnarly. Of course, 99 percent of us mere mortals will never attempt towing into shorepound barrels in Hawaii, but thankfully we have riders like Parks Bonifay, Brian Grubb, Nick Taylor, and Austin Keen for that. Wakeboarding is an escape for all of us, whether we’re just learning to […]

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Getting barreled in Oahu’s shorepound is unbelievably gnarly. Of course, 99 percent of us mere mortals will never attempt towing into shorepound barrels in Hawaii, but thankfully we have riders like Parks Bonifay, Brian Grubb, Nick Taylor, and Austin Keen for that.

Wakeboarding is an escape for all of us, whether we’re just learning to carve or charging into double-ups. Part of that escape is also being captivated by what’s possible. What’s possible in terms of tricks? What’s possible in terms of locations?

Winching in Hawaiian barrels might be a pipe dream for most, but that doesn’t mean it shouldn’t be dreamed about.

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The image of Parks getting barreled on the North Shore of Oahu that graced the cover of our May 2017 issue. Bryan Soderlind

WBM: How did this trip come about? How long was it in the making?

Grubb: Parks and I have been going to Hawaii in the winter time for the last few years. Nick has a place in Maui so we’ve been meeting up with him to surf and do a bunch of fun stuff on the islands. We all talked about winching in the surf but could never line up a winch when the conditions were right. We all knew we wanted to get back out there this past winter and make it happen in some good swell.

In December we started working out all the details. Parks lined it up with Jamie O’Brien to use his winch, and we found a good place to stay.

We shopped the idea around but didn’t get much support at first, so we decided to just pay for it ourselves and make it happen. We would self produce it, and we knew it would pay off in the end. We got Bryan Soderlind and Austin Keen on board too, so our crew was dialed and made all the expenses cheaper too.

When word got out about the whole crew that was going and a great looking swell forecast, we got the support we needed!

WBM: What was the highlight of the trip?

Parks: I think the highlight of the trip was getting to watch the back door shoot out from Jamie O’Brien’s dad’s porch… It was some of the best pipe I have ever seen.

Grubb: The highlight for me was winching the shore break when it was big and just detonating on the beach. It takes so much effort to winch in those conditions. You only get 5 or 6 pulls an hour and the winch driver has to time it just right to get you in the perfect spot. I got a lot of waves but had two that stand out in my mind where everything came together almost perfectly.

WBM: Who caught the best barrel?

Grubb: That’s a close one between Parks’ cover shot and Nick’s backhand barrels. I love how Parks is dragging his hand on the roof and looking so casual but also loved watching Nick getting it on a wakeskate!

Parks: I think Nick Taylor did. He had some backside barrels that were insane. Grabbing his rail in big blue caverns… Bear got some great shots!

WBM: Favorite set… at Keiki Beach or Waimea Bay?

Parks: Keiki Beach for sure. I have never winched shorepound like that before! I have been to that beach many times, looked at it and said to myself, “How insane would it be to ride there?!” It was so scary and fun at the same time.

Grubb: Without a doubt it was the Keiki sessions. Everyday the waves were a different size and always changing, which we loved. We did Waimea mostly because we had time when the waves were too big and closing out at Keiki’s. It was a fun little rail at Waimea, but honestly, if the conditions would have been right at Keiki’s we would have been there all day everyday!

WBM: Who was the MVP of the trip?

Grubb: Everyone killed it on this trip. We had a great crew, but I’d probably have to give it to Bear. He obviously shot amazing photos the whole trip, but he’s got a great vibe and is high energy all day. He’d always encourage us to get one more if needed to make sure we nailed it. Those memories we made will last forever through his images and now in the pages of Wakeboarding Magazine.

Parks: I say Bear. He got some of the most amazing pictures I’ve ever seen. He even got a sequence of Koa Rothman’s wave of the year! He is the most talented photographer I have ever worked with. MVP… Or more like MVB.

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ISTUDIOMO: Photo Gallery & Trailer Release https://www.wakeboardingmag.com/istudiomo-photo-gallery-trailer-release/ Thu, 20 Oct 2016 21:39:35 +0000 https://www.wakeboardingmag.com/?p=53617 ISTUDIOMO: A WAKESKATE FILM Istudiomo isn’t a real word. It doesn’t have any meaning. We’ve heard it pronounced a dozen different ways, and they’re all right. It’s just something that didn’t exist before and now it does. Because of this fact, Istudiomo has every opportunity to be whatever we want it to be. We can […]

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ISTUDIOMO : A WAKESKATE FILM ISTUDIOMO

ISTUDIOMO: A WAKESKATE FILM

Istudiomo isn’t a real word. It doesn’t have any meaning. We’ve heard it pronounced a dozen different ways, and they’re all right. It’s just something that didn’t exist before and now it does.

Because of this fact, Istudiomo has every opportunity to be whatever we want it to be. We can cast off for any far away place and wakeskating gives us the luxury of many options to choose from.

We’ll venture to crystal clear springs, coastline swells, cold mountain creeks, landlocked lakes and swampy river basins, our only limitation is the water and luckily there’s plenty of it.

Our Istudiomo logo is popularly regarded as a symbol for rebooting or restarting, and that’s just what we’re doing. We are rebooting the wakeskate full-length in an age of quick clips, social media, and instant gratification.

We are putting in the work and preparing for the long haul of redefining our sport. This trailer is the first step in reintroducing ourselves.

Hello there, we are Istudiomo, we are wakeskating, and we are delighted to make your acquaintance.

Watch the trailer here >>

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Boating Safety
Always Wear Your Life Jacket. WBM

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BUCKETS https://www.wakeboardingmag.com/buckets/ Mon, 26 Sep 2016 22:16:11 +0000 https://www.wakeboardingmag.com/?p=53856 “In between all the van trips, the team shoots, The Wakeskate Tour stops, the foreign adventures, & the endless laps around Florida, I find myself lucky enough to be relaxing on the sunny little spit of Gulf Coast sand I grew up on: Anna Maria Island, FL. Shallow salty flats of grass & sand, mangrove […]

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“In between all the van trips, the team shoots, The Wakeskate Tour stops, the foreign adventures, & the endless laps around Florida, I find myself lucky enough to be relaxing on the sunny little spit of Gulf Coast sand I grew up on: Anna Maria Island, FL. Shallow salty flats of grass & sand, mangrove bays, & the occasional bump of swell. During the “down time” from all of my adventures, me & my friends will inevitably find ourselves out on the water with my SeaDoo & some kind of HD camera, and so even after the team videos & travel features are done, I’m still left with a big folder full of mostly-unused footage from those magical island sessions. These specific kinds of videos of mine have taken many forms over the last decade & I’m stoked to present to you this year’s rendition… “BUCKETS.” Enjoy it.” – Nick Taylor

Boating Safety
Always Wear Your Life Jacket. WBM

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Wake Awards: Indmar Trick of the Year (Wakeskate) https://www.wakeboardingmag.com/wake-awards-indmar-trick-year-wakeskate/ Tue, 13 Sep 2016 02:52:03 +0000 https://www.wakeboardingmag.com/?p=53309 Each year at Wake Awards, we see what tricks have been thrown down over the past 365 days. Take a look at the best wakeskating tricks that have been landed this year, and see who takes home the 2016 Indmar Trick of the Year Award. Watch the Indmar Wakeboard Trick of the Year Men’s >> […]

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Each year at Wake Awards, we see what tricks have been thrown down over the past 365 days. Take a look at the best wakeskating tricks that have been landed this year, and see who takes home the 2016 Indmar Trick of the Year Award.

Watch the Indmar Wakeboard Trick of the Year Men’s >>

Watch the Indmar Wakeboard Trick of the Year Women’s >>

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Wakeskating behind the new Sea Doo Spark https://www.wakeboardingmag.com/blog/videos/2014/06/05/video-wakeskating-with-the-new-sea-doo-spark/ Thu, 05 Jun 2014 22:49:01 +0000 https://www.wakeboardingmag.com/?p=47635 If you know a little about viral videos, you’ll know a little about a guy named Devin Supertramp. Check out this video he recently did with the Sea Doo team to help promote their new Spark watercraft. The slow mo 4k shots are pretty epic and the reach and exposure wakeskating will get from this […]

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If you know a little about viral videos, you’ll know a little about a guy named Devin Supertramp. Check out this video he recently did with the Sea Doo team to help promote their new Spark watercraft. The slow mo 4k shots are pretty epic and the reach and exposure wakeskating will get from this video is pretty cool.

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The Suwannee Pro! https://www.wakeboardingmag.com/blog/videos/2014/05/15/video-the-suwannee-pro/ Fri, 16 May 2014 04:00:13 +0000 https://www.wakeboardingmag.com/?p=47223 Last weekend the Suwannee Pro went down and with that, we give you this. The event kicked off the season for The Wakeskate Tour and as you can see it left off right where it ended last year. Austin Pastura was absolutely ripping all weekend long, and took the win with his brother Andrew Pastura […]

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Last weekend the Suwannee Pro went down and with that, we give you this. The event kicked off the season for The Wakeskate Tour and as you can see it left off right where it ended last year. Austin Pastura was absolutely ripping all weekend long, and took the win with his brother Andrew Pastura and Nick Robinson following respectfully. Check out all that went down last weekend! It was insane.

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2014 Wakeskate Tour Stop #1 Video! https://www.wakeboardingmag.com/blog/wakeboarding-brand-channel/supra-boats/2014/05/15/2014-wakeskate-tour-stop-1-video/ Thu, 15 May 2014 21:05:00 +0000 https://www.wakeboardingmag.com/?p=55239 The Suwannee Pro was held at Nick Taylor’s wakeskate dreamland in the forests of North Florida. The Wakeskate Tour (@TheWakeskateTour) kicked off its third year of pro wakeskate competition Mother’s Day Weekend. Supra Boats @Supra_Boats was the exclusive wake boat sponsor. See for yourself and check out this incredible video!! Next stop will be The […]

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The Suwannee Pro was held at Nick Taylor’s wakeskate dreamland in the forests of North Florida. The Wakeskate Tour (@TheWakeskateTour) kicked off its third year of pro wakeskate competition Mother’s Day Weekend. Supra Boats @Supra_Boats was the exclusive wake boat sponsor.

See for yourself and check out this incredible video!!

Next stop will be The Texas Two-Step in Little Elm, TX at Hydrous Wake Park on June 13th and14th.

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