So great that you always keep a large portion of the paddle out on video. Positioning before takeoff and the paddle out are always overlooked in surf videos, but so vital in real life. Subscribed, keep it up!
@NathanFlorence8 ай бұрын
Stoked! Gotta show it all the good and bad thats surfing!
@xyzct8 ай бұрын
Nate, having multiple camera angles is absolutely the way to go. The result is way more than the sum of the parts. Personally, I find the majority of POV shots - unless you're locked into a long barrel - to be almost useless if there are not also pulled back shots to provide a sense of scale. Btw, your lovely wife should be doing professional voice-overs. She has a gloriously warm and smooth voice, which is so rare with modern women.
@NathanFlorence8 ай бұрын
She has a great voice i agree!
@richardelg44125 ай бұрын
Nate is the best. He totally rocks surf videos on u tube then wins big wave contests like nothing. Go Nate.🤙
@dmitriyb73698 ай бұрын
No music for this video was such a good choice, you can even feel the tension and nervousness in the air... Also those visions from inside those heavy barrels are crazy, thank you for sharing it with us as always, you a true hero. Now this is probably one of my favourite videos of yours
@canlib8 ай бұрын
Really like the filming style, almost like a point of view documentary, telling a story without speaking. Sparse commentary lets the day spent on the water speak for itself.
@boddysurfer8 ай бұрын
Some of the best surf editing I've ever seen, hire them full time. Mahina with excellent video and commentary! 🏄♀
@jdre19768 ай бұрын
That feeling that comes over you when you come to the conclusion in your head that something below you is probably watching. Time to go in!
@LeeAAlex8 ай бұрын
Happened to me a few weeks ago, surfing murky, overcast conditions. Had a gut feeling that something was under me then not even 10 seconds later a seal pops up right next to me 😅 Glad it was a seal, but was thinking that maybe there's some real credibility behind people being tuned in to the ocean and its eco system while surfing/being in the water 🤷♂
@NathanFlorence8 ай бұрын
Worst feeling!!
@NathanFlorence8 ай бұрын
@@LeeAAlexage old instincts!
@johndoeyedoe8 ай бұрын
🤣 every day. Had a turtle buddy pop up today to say high. So many tigers out here and whites but no attacks in 200 years. Just an hour and a bit flight north of NZ. Solo I don't go in though if turtle buddy has my back.
@sferguson11308 ай бұрын
Oooff, that raw audio, heavy slabs, and the paddle out/in, was eerie man. Glad y’all made it in safely. Ultimately, that’s what’s most important.
@jd32k8 ай бұрын
0:44 “here comes a wave, here comes a wave” Wave spits. Both go “mMmm” in satisfaction 😂
@CaptainKuki8 ай бұрын
0:44
@justinshnoogles8 ай бұрын
excellent stitching together of all the different angles. really captures the mood as opposed to just one angle. great editing. i prefer this kind of footage of what it actually feels like over polished "fun" shots and music. this is raw and real
@johnginella84358 ай бұрын
You are a content creation monster! And we love it. Thanks for keeping the masses entertained.
@parabola89338 ай бұрын
When I was a wee lad I jumped off the end of a jetty in Newport Beach in the middle of the night. I was with a bunch of buddies and a few were on mushrooms so I thought I'd give them a scare. I knew the jetty well, had surfed there many times. I looked at the tide and really measured everything out. It was a high tide and the waves were mellow and the distance to shore was pretty easy. As we were all at the very tip of the jetty I suddenly dove in and proceeded to breast stroke my way to shore. The water was pitch black and as I swam I started to get a funny tingly feeling, but didn't want to spook myself so I kept with my steady pace. Suddenly at my legs I felt a whoosh of water, but couldn't tell if it was from my own efforts. Then just a few seconds later something very large bumped into me right below my underarm at my ribs. I couldn't help but react by swinging my arms and kicking. I stopped all motion and waited for a second, then slowly swam in. I know there's sharks all around us when we're in the water, but when you get spooked it's probably because you're being stalked. Til this day I'm not sure what that was, but counted it as one of my 9 lives. Thanks for the video Nathan!
@Jason-cm6uh8 ай бұрын
Yessir. When you get that uneasy feeling out in the water, there is a reason. I had a moment in The Outer Banks, NC. I was a little over a 1/4 mile out, by myself, mid-morning, glassy 4'-6', and I'm out at 1st Street. Not a crowded spot but definitely a spot. I got the feeling paddling out but ignored it. When I got to the sandbar, the feeling turned into being downright scared. I didn't see anything. I didn't get bumped. Nothing happened, but that feeling of being stalked was absolutely legit. I paddled back in, slow and steady. Didn't even catch a wave. I'm guessing someone else got the feeling and that's why I was the only one out.
@parabola89338 ай бұрын
@@Jason-cm6uh Yah it's interesting if you watch the malibu artist on youtube. He has all that drone footage of great whites coming up on surfers and swimmers all the time, but most people don't know they're there. It makes you realize how many sharks are all around us when we're in the water, but sometimes something doesn't feel right and it's best to go with your gut.
@MrGarthHardin7 ай бұрын
Born n raised in Kailua, Oahu. Surfed most of the shores except ''da west side'' cause it's suuuuuch da mokes-ville(moke is a scary looking hawaiian) n da titas(female moke) were even worse !! Summer time we would midnite surf at Kaiser Bowls when the moon was full or close to it. So we surfed one nite from midnite to 4 a.m. n I started to paddle in as we were pau(done). I stop on the inside to wait for my homies, sitting just off the reef ledge n next to a big buoy channel marker. Something runs into my rt leg n fin(am a kneeboarder) hard ! Like real hard ! The water went brown n I climbed up onto that buoy scared pissless n thought about Capn Quinn in the movie Jaws !! Was screaming at my two braddahs still in the line up .. SHAAAAAAARK !!They thought I was kidding until they saw me on the fuckin buoy !!! We made it in ..
@StayHighNZ8 ай бұрын
Check out this interview below about this reef. This spot has some legendary stories. These guys got followed by a White back into the river, all the way in front of where Nate parked his car. And they were all vomiting out of fear. Yyyyew. NZ charging doesn't get heavier than this Nate dog you legend. SMART: Well, one of my friends used to live down here. He’s a Timaru boy. We got friendly with a farmer up the valley, and he had a little hut he used to let us stay in. We’d come down surfing, and my friend liked living down here, so he ended up coming down to live down here. We surfed a reef quite regularly - there's a nice reef break going on the next bay. It’s a bombora, so you’ve got to paddle for 15 minutes across deep water to get to an offshore reef. I wasn't able to go out, but three of them went surfing out there - Paul McLaughlan, Craig Welsh and Brendan Brooks. They said a few minutes earlier they’d seen some Hector's Dolphins in the bay. We quite often would see Hector's Dolphins there, and they thought "Oh that’s Hector Dolphins. It’s safe" you know? Dolphins, no Sharks, you know? As people always say - I hear that all the time here. And when they see Seagulls circling - that is not a good sign. CRAWFORD: Why not? SMART: Seagulls circling generally means there are some fish scraps. If a Shark come up and eats something, there’s going be a lot of debris floating on the ocean, and the Seagulls are going to go straight for it. All surfers say that in New Zealand - "If you see Seagulls circling, you’ve got to be a bit careful." CRAWFORD: Ok. RESUME SMART: And then Paul caught a wave, and he’d ridden down the wave, and he was paddling back out. As he’s paddling out, Craig and Brendan sitting on the side of the wave, and quite a big wave came in - maybe the size of this roof here [approx 4 metres], and Paul said it was like an 18-foot White Pointer in the wave, swimming towards where the other two guys were. Sort of going towards them, and then the wave came up and it was a really, really, hard broken wave, really hollow, shooting on it. And the wave just came, and last minute just sucked up and Boom! The guys who were out there heard the yelling. The guy was yelling "Ahh!" so they said they looked in towards the wave, and saw this massive Shark coming towards them, doing a big corkscrew dive. And as it went towards them, it dove, and it went down underneath. CRAWFORD: It turned over on its back? SMART: On its side, and then dived down, as it was coming towards them. That wave ... they were still maybe 15 metres away. Craig turned around, and he caught the wave and he rode it in to the end of the reef. CRAWFORD: And this reef is a 15-minute paddle offshore? SMART: Yeah. CRAWFORD: We’re talking half a kilometre offshore? SMART: Yeah. CRAWFORD: And all of this happened out there? There were three surfers - your mates? SMART: Yeah. Paul was on the inside, he had spotted it first. Craig managed to catch the wave that he’d seen the Shark in - because it had dove under the wave before it got to him. I honestly believe the Shark was coming in to get them, and the wave kind of sucked up, and took a big trove and just kind of messed the Shark up a bit. CRAWFORD: Why do you think the Shark was coming in to get them? SMART: Just because it ... oh, it’s one thing I forgot to tell you about. Fifteen minutes previous to that, they’d seen a big thing just go 'Flap' in the water, and they thought "That’s strange, might just be a Whale or something" - because we do see Whales here. But they didn’t think much of it, and they’d seen the Dolphins, and they probably thought it was safe. I mean, Seagulls - well, alarm bells ringing. But not a big Flap. And then 10 minutes later, Bang! they seen the Shark. The guy who was paddling out when he first spotted it, the wave stood up and he seen the whole thing. CRAWFORD: So, the Shark was parallel to the wave? SMART: Yeah. CRAWFORD: It was going along the wave? SMART: Yeah. Inside the wave, going towards the other two. They were out on the side of the wave, as it kind of came in, it did the big corkscrew dive, and then went down. Put it this way, if that wave hadn't been there, I think things would have been very different. CRAWFORD: Ok. SMART: Because it would have been flat water. That Shark would have been swimming straight towards them, and then Bang! - all of a sudden wave puffs up, something pops up in between them, and messes the Shark up. I believe. CRAWFORD: When your mates told you the story, you heard it from their three different perspectives, right? SMART: Yeah. CRAWFORD: Other than the corkscrew dive at the end, did they say anything about the speed of it? SMART: Didn’t really mention the speed of it - just that it was swimming with speed. CRAWFORD: And it was a big Shark? SMART: He said ... I mean, we’re all pretty familiar with the oceans in New Zealand. And the first guy who’d seen it, Paul, he’s a fishing guide now. He’s very, very, experienced. CRAWFORD: The guy’s been around the water. SMART: He’s been around. But he said, it wasn’t so much the length of it. He said it was the girth of it. The thickness of it. He reckoned it was like 6-foot wide. He said he could see it in the wave, and sure it was long - but it was but the thickness and the width of it. CRAWFORD: And that’s when the animal was coming to him? SMART: Well, he was spotting on the inside. He was kind of safe, but the Shark was swimming towards the other two guys, and the wave broke between them. CRAWFORD: So, the Shark was going across from him ... SMART: Yeah it was. Going towards the other two guys. Craig caught that wave, and rode it in to where the wave stops at the end. The guys were freaked out, and they started paddling in. Brendan had missed that wave ... CRAWFORD: And he was still out there on the reef? SMART: He was still out there. But then the next wave came, he caught that, and went in. He didn’t even have a visual of the Shark. The Shark was gone by then. So, between the second wave and the third wave, the Shark was gone. CRAWFORD: There was no indication, no circling behaviour afterward? SMART: Nothing. But when they got on the beach, they waited for Brendan, who was a few minutes behind them. That guy, when he got up on the beach he started dry retching, because he was that freaked out, you know? He wasn’t actually throwing up, he was just hyperventilating. They all got up there, and they walked up the beach. They got their clothes, they got changed. And five minutes later, that Shark swam all the way back in the lagoon! Exactly to where their footprints were on the beach. And then it just turned around, and swam back out to sea. CRAWFORD: They saw that? SMART: They saw that. When they got out, they had a camera there, and they took some photos, and you can see the fin. But that was at the same time the tide was getting a bit low, lots of kelp sticks out. Sometimes the kelp comes up, and it can look just like a fin. But we're used to that, you just don’t worry about it. But he had photos of it, and you could see it was inside the reef, and you could see it. But it wasn’t a zoom lens, and it was a long way away. CRAWFORD: But the fact was that they saw it, and they were absolutely convinced that that was not just a Shark but ... SMART: That one guy lived here. He was my best friend, and so many nights we’d sit around and he would just tell me so many times that story. Just burned into him, you know? After that, my mates were a bit freaked out, and didn’t really want to surf there too much. Then I came down one time, and we said "Right. Come on, let’s surf over the reef." We called it the reef because it’s a reef break, it was a good swell. We’d been over there, we had a good surf, and we came home and had lunch. And we thought "Right. We’ll go back and surf it one more time on the outgoing tide, because it’s a high tide break only." As soon as we arrived, we came up to lookout on the hill - the break is a good 800 meters out from the lookout point of the hill. As soon as we pulled up, I looked out and I seen a wave break and I seen this - I’ll never forget it - I seen a big kind of light grey shape of a Shark silhouette in the wave. And then that wave passed by, and then it was gone. So, I only seen that wave for about two or three seconds. CRAWFORD: And that was from an elevated perspective? SMART: Yeah. Looking down on it, so I had a pretty good look. CRAWFORD: 800 meters away, though. SMART: Yes. So, it was pretty big. I mean, I would estimate that Shark to be at least 12 foot. At least
@billyirish2948 ай бұрын
Great read
@Akooks8 ай бұрын
Yeah I always thought dolphins meant no sharks til I saw that video from that LA shark Photographer showing dolphins swimming with great whites.
@Maximusdecimus6498 ай бұрын
🥶
@jimjammy17888 ай бұрын
Great shark story, got anymore? I had an experience surfing a big left in Victoria, Australia, similar flat water paddle to an off shore reef. There were 2 guys out, and as I made the break, both of them said they were going in. Brilliant, just me on the dinner plate then.. The waves were insane but after catching a few, I got the eerie feeling that I wasn't alone and all the hairs on my body felt like they were standing on end, it was such a weird primitive feeling but one you shouldn't ignore. It was an overcast grey day, and it seemed like it suddenly went still and quiet,no birds or signs of life. I thought fuck this. I knew I had to get out of there right away. On my lengthy paddle in, I tried to keep calm, and in the distance, I thought I saw another surfer paddling out, but as the swells rose a dropped, there was no surfer.. I thought WTF and am I going crazy.?. Next thing, a large seal popped up in front of me wide eyed..then darted straight off. It just made me think what is chasing that.. Anyways, 20 more minutes of bricking i, and I hit shallow rock and onto land.. I thought it was all in my head until another surfer on the headland came down effing and blinding about the massive shark that followed me in the whole way, just cruising at the same speed I was paddling at and occasionally going underneath me from one side to another., absolutelyfreaked the shit out of me. That surfer thought i was a goner, but I'm still here to tell the tale. Never surfed that spot again, though.
@finnkane77748 ай бұрын
@@jimjammy1788 insane!!! Glad you didn’t see it, would have been hard to stay calm!
@routecauzevision51258 ай бұрын
I’m just in awe of you and everything you do Nathan honestly man, massive respect to you and your good lady, Ivan and John and the whole team for the sheer hard work and next level skill it takes to make these vids, big love from uk
@evan86908 ай бұрын
Use this comment as a like button for raw audio no music edits.
@yamabushi1708 ай бұрын
The ocean itself provides the perfect accompanying symphony.
@rudydickens85417 ай бұрын
yeh , finally1
@letsssgooo46183 ай бұрын
I dunno some of his videos with the music going is fucking awesome
@perfectstorm92598 ай бұрын
Welcome Nathan and friends to New Zealand. I hope you make it to Taradise, head down the coast
@OrionsMako8 ай бұрын
Sweet edit, seriously enjoy these. Great ability in bringing the feel of the place to us.
@brucelee-wo5ge8 ай бұрын
Fascinating report. The whole experience shown in detail with commentary allows the viewer to feel the thrills, fear and other emotions.
@ProdigyHighlights8 ай бұрын
That first duck dive...total darkness. Reef is definitely more dangerous, but those dark water surfs test your courage like none other. And then when you wipe out and find yourself swirling in a black hole, oh man.
@chipadams21127 ай бұрын
That is literally one of the scariest movies of our time😂 just watching you guys paddling in and then especially out. I knew this video wasn’t a shark related one and I still had the hairs on my neck standing up watching with nervous anticipation!!! No lie. Awesome video man keep up the good stuff. Keeping surfing fresh!! Many thanks to you all.
@headmondronary21278 ай бұрын
Thanks for visiting NZ. Your more than welcome back. Dinner plates are clean
@NathanFlorence8 ай бұрын
Thanks appreciate the NZ hospitality!
@dougart118 ай бұрын
Amazing Nate, the front view makes the inside pov view way more enjoyable to watch. Slabs are my favorite to watch and to me you are the slab finding GOAT, I will never forget that perfect 20' footer you made definitely one of the best of all time. Love it dude be safe.
@simonbackwash8 ай бұрын
Well....that spot was indeed super spooky....Just from watching, i also had that sinister feeling that you guys been stalked the entire sesh 😬. Great call you didn't stay longer... I think 90% of the time when you get this vibe, it's probably there, and it's probably a good idea to paddle back. Shout-out to the local paddlers too ! balls of steel. And shout-out to Zord and Mahina , the content is just getting better and better. I love the filming, edits, all the house the jokes👌🏻, packing, gears, surf checks. Don't change anything 🙏🏻 Your content and channel is unique guys❤
@everettwery8 ай бұрын
I loved all of the different video angles. That was sick editing!
@mtnrabi8 ай бұрын
One of the best wave exploring videos Ive seen in a while.
@VioletJayne8 ай бұрын
that was awesome. Just take heart that our Kiwi sharks are better fed than our cuzzies cross the ditch. You seem to be traversing our wild terrain like pros.
@LilleyAdam8 ай бұрын
Truth. We were at waihi beach when the girl got bit in the leg. First in about 50 years iirc
@jasonhutt91178 ай бұрын
@@LilleyAdam I'm in Whangamata that was very sad at the time
@LilleyAdam8 ай бұрын
@@jasonhutt9117 I was wrong though, it was first in about 10 years.
@jasonhutt91178 ай бұрын
@@LilleyAdam I once had a long line out near the middle of the beach and something big pulled the reel out about 6 months ago
@garyrobinson48478 ай бұрын
Nathan Mahina thank you 😃🤙
@billyirish2948 ай бұрын
Thanks nate.....the only surf footage pov or anything surfing these days exciting to stop and watch....keep up the good work 👏 🙌
@NathanFlorence8 ай бұрын
Glad you like them!
@Kiss-my-patu8 ай бұрын
Yep sums up west coast nz surfing, sitting in the car with the heater on watching for one makeable wave to convince yourself to go out. Chuck on the wet wetsuit with a plastic bag over the feet to help get it on. Breathe on your hands to warm them up before you start the 30 minute paddle out getting smoked by set after set on the head. Take off on the first bomb that closes out and get held down and pushed way out of position as you head back out. Waters cold, waters dark, waves are heavy. Mauri ora
@NathanFlorence8 ай бұрын
Love it!
@denisrichardson32608 ай бұрын
i can fully relate grew up in taranaki ..73 now livin in oz
@TaranakiFrother-oy2dx8 ай бұрын
Looks like you’re still enjoying kiwiland. Sick! Murky water is what we’re used to. Keep in mind that In Aotearoa you’ve got more chance dying while driving to the surf than being sort after by an upper end grey suit.
@gabstart15948 ай бұрын
Bruh , i watch your videos because you are and inspiration !! To go every time out there and chargeeeee, I particularly…don’t care about the angles, thanks for taking all the time to create videos for us around the world to enjoy 👊 pura vida ! Aloha !
@scottymac51748 ай бұрын
One of my good friends was not so lucky. North of Scott Creek. A group of guys already out. He jumped in and was paddling out.,,, WHAM! 185 stitches and an airlift. He still surfs up there. There is Always some kind of Food Chain in surfing. The Lineup, the environment.
@NathanFlorence8 ай бұрын
That is so scary! Epic he lived to tell the tale!!
@manlys43518 ай бұрын
Hello Nathan. I hope you are enjoying your visit to New Zealand, I'm in the North Island. The South Island is pretty cold, remote and gnarly. Mahia peninsula has some gnarly slabs and rocky point breaks if you are traveling the North Island. Also Cray Bay and Stingray Bay in Hawkes Bay are awesome Breaks. The North Island is alot warmer than the South Island especially the Winterless North, with places like Shipwreck Bay right up the top which is an awesome long point with insane Slabs and barrels wedging all along the point when going.
@derekkeep8 ай бұрын
The areas you're describing can also be very fickle unfortunately.
@jordank_248 ай бұрын
Really liking the adventure/off the beaten track aspect combined with the heavy slab surfing. Think it resonates with a lot of people in this part of the world cause getting to the spot is always part of the story you tell after.
@NathanFlorence8 ай бұрын
Really makes it all more then just a surf, full on adventure its a lot of fun and when u do score makes it all the better!
@alexn60608 ай бұрын
Hey Nate, epic adventure. Just some sharky stats for ya: there has been about 120 attacks in New Zealand since 1840, of which only around 20 have been fatal. So that's less than one attack per year, and a fatality about every decade. There are plenty in our waters, especially with seals in the area, but extremely unlikely to have a human snack. I surf in NZ and know how spooky it can feel at times though, almost like you're being watched 👀haha. The blue summer waters of the north feel a lot better, although ironically summer is the sharkiest season.
@LilleyAdam8 ай бұрын
There's too many fish in NZ. Aus is all fished out.
@tibolcb64468 ай бұрын
don't be fooled and look at the numbers elsewhere, specifically south-west oz and the reunion island, when the surfer population goes up well guess what? so do fatal attacks, 20 years ago we could surf northpoint with a bunch of mates and have as many waves as we could and fatal shark attacks were a myth. These days when north point is on there are another 100 dudes out there and 1 fatal attack nearly every year in the area because everywhere you can think off is crowded af
@kiboshkooks8 ай бұрын
Good yarn big dog
@liamr38668 ай бұрын
@@kiboshkookswell said
@theseb19798 ай бұрын
@@tibolcb6446you have no idea what you are talking about. Crowds don’t increase shark attacks. Reunion was a very special set of circumstances that had nothing to do with crowds. Stop ranting please like a delusional fool.
@davidphelps21218 ай бұрын
Looks very much like most "up North" breaks along the Northern Santa Cruz County Coastline. Waddell, 3 4 and 5 mile, Davenport, Ano etc. Murky cold and deep water paddles are the norm outside the cozy confines of the Monterey Bay. Nathan keep on doing what you do best, ripping waves, making stellar content, and living the life! Stay well always!
@itsjustagamefocker8 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@fiddlestickzmuzik8 ай бұрын
So grateful for the drone footage, seriously the footage you get from overhead mixed with your mouth cam is what makes these vids so great to watch. That water is murky due to recent rains I'm going to assume ? on a clear blue day and clean water that wave would be something else to watch. A lot of bait fish move in really close to shore when it's murky like this so you get a lot of predators coming in looking for them, lucky for you I'm not talking about sharks. On a clear day it might be sharky is there are seals there there will be sharks not far away.
@Surfercheflife8 ай бұрын
Dark water, dark skies and big waves = spooky surf session! Beautiful wave though. Nice score!
@kickersme8 ай бұрын
love it Nate that wave is sick
@dharmakaya_bee8 ай бұрын
Nate, your vids make my day! best thing to watch after coming home from an exhausting day at work. Love your work
@NathanFlorence8 ай бұрын
Glad you like them! And appreciate the comment!
@WayneLynch698 ай бұрын
Incredibly great Nathan. You remind me of an updated "Endless Summer" (though as the title suggests they didn't even take wetsuits). Awesome to visit these nuts spots/waves
@NathanFlorence8 ай бұрын
Endless winter version here 😂
@davidgough35128 ай бұрын
the wetsuit had not yet been invented
@kellymiller55292 ай бұрын
The only surf channel I watch making me laugh right now with that knife thing that was funny ha ha stuck in Hawaii not so bad.
@KandMe18 ай бұрын
I know somebody who petted a seal once, that seal clamped it jaws onto his hand and proceeded to drag him across the rocks. Really messed him up. It’s not a good idea to pet the seals, as cute as they are. That wave is like so many places in NZ we always considered unreadable back in the day. Where is it? Brings back memories of biting winds, booties, made a helmet once from an old wet suite stitched together using wool. Southerly wind coming from the Deep South and blowing hard. Oh yeah those were the days.
@olliewilliams77538 ай бұрын
Is it literally the most famous Bodyboarding wave in NZ? His GF even names it (albeit cryptically).
@goldenboy1405 ай бұрын
You also get Seal Finger if one bites you. Their mouth is full of nasty bacteria
@svensorensen72728 ай бұрын
Gloomy and spooky session with miss Sunshine at the end😊🤙
@WiZoRD_C458 ай бұрын
Love the respect you are showing towards our home Aotearoa. Keeping the spots un named is huge bro, im sure the locals where you're visiting massively appreciate it. So close to making that wave at 8min16, if only that boil up off the rock wasnt as funky. Your a beast Nate, keep charging!
@stuartgray4678 ай бұрын
they did name it though
@WiZoRD_C458 ай бұрын
@stuartgray467 did they? The location? Thought more ya need to know to know ya know?
@bongwaterboy420698 ай бұрын
They named it & showed landmarks, very disappointing.
@WiZoRD_C458 ай бұрын
@@bongwaterboy42069 shit, clearly I didn't pay enough attention. Watched the wave more than anything..
@isaacdart55916 ай бұрын
your videos are such good quality man. no wonder your channel is blowing up
@bholden86258 ай бұрын
Always dig this channel. But dang that was some scary water. Cold too hahah. Cold water big animals lol. That was gnarly as ever. Even though you didn't make one. You were deep in that one. Awesome gopro clip. Way bigger than it looked from land huh?? Awesome video brother!!!
@webleeoz8 ай бұрын
Sickness! Best content on KZbin. So much potential in the land of the long white cloud! 💯💣💥
@rawdog72208 ай бұрын
That seal is like 'Dude, pleeease don't make me go in the water🥺' Looks a lot like the UK / Ireland.. but with sharks🤙
@Barely-Average8 ай бұрын
Awesome video Nathan! Nice to see you're in NZ, my wife and I live in Christchurch, would be sweet to see you around that area. In case you're looking for the next wave, this weekend (25-26) there's a massive swell incoming to Banks Peninsula, so you might want to check out Magnet Bay or Te Oka :)
@FromMars6668 ай бұрын
Best video so far. Great spot and the drone views are killing it
@craigchan71068 ай бұрын
Enjoyed the 3 camera angles. Helps put things in perspective for us. The mouth gopro is very deceptive on what the actual size of the waves you're riding. Its nice to see the same wave from the other angles so we can appreciate the size of the waves. Thank you.
@jasonhutt91178 ай бұрын
Reminds me surfing south Taranaki when the sun was going down and something bumped my ankle paddled in straight away...good advertisement for your booties 3 seasons. Love to see you here in NZ try many breaks around taranaki great place to surf. I live here in Whangamata we have the Whangamata bar that is epic as well
@NathanFlorence8 ай бұрын
I need to do a video on those booties they have survived 3 winters and some of the heaviest waves of my life! This year unfortunately they started to come apart, made me sad as i an attached to them now!
@BlackSonicShadow7 ай бұрын
These recordings are amazing, good job!
@jshillkiller22628 ай бұрын
Madness! That wave was sick! Reminded me of a paddle out I had.at The Farm on South coast Oz one time. Brown water frothy as and no one out. I went in after accidentally grabbing the side of a big arse fish in the paddle stroke. Freaked the living shyte outta me and the fish..eerie stuff Love your vids
@mackash8 ай бұрын
The Farm. What a place on the right swell. The Farm and Mystics. Awesome. Thats where i learned to surf. I grew up in Shellharbour and Warilla in the 80s and 90s. My mates Grandad used to drive us around from Cowries boat ramp in his fishing boat, up past Redsands and shallows, around bass point and then drop us off at the farm. Good memories. Man i miss that place. The mountain ranges too. That whole area is full of great whites. Mates grandad said he seen one about 30 ft long he reckons. Bigger than his boat and he had a pretty decent size ocean fisher. Right near the coal loader, near redsands, where the abalone divers dive.
@jshillkiller22628 ай бұрын
@@mackash awesome stuff! Gods country. Totally love the area. What a blow out about the sharkat redsands ! I only saw.a shark once out and no white but the fin bw me and.last.guy out was still scary..I never knew in thousands of surfs around there that whites were around.
@craigrumbal68118 ай бұрын
I've surfed this wave. It's sick. You really need to backdoor the peak to get in there.
@davemacleod96238 ай бұрын
Great spot that one...pity you didn't have a jet ski woulda made it safer for all....yes very sharky looking an they are probably there being not far from their breeding ground...awesome adventure an filming...hope you get to Papatowai..
@0dbm8 ай бұрын
We are taking him home , he’s gonna love the tropics My man
@trackjunky33388 ай бұрын
you've become a pioneer mate - thankyou , respect
@joeskienz8 ай бұрын
Really stoked to have the Nate Slab Tour come to Aotearoa New Zealand! Nau mai haere mai ki Aotearoa. It's awesome you're in the best region for surf. You could've easily went to Raglan and called it a trip, but you've gone to the most hardcore and consistent place in the country. There's a legit world class slab you'd love in the North Island (prob the best wave in NZ) but it's super fickle so you're in the right spot to score heavy slabs in a short time frame.
@GlassGenius8 ай бұрын
Head to Wellington Nat. Not far away theres super heavy waves on the south,south east, and lower east coast. World class empty waves all around there. Murky water though.
@genripper-b8q8 ай бұрын
looks a lot like dillon beach in nor cal. same maximus spook factor...same everything but the kiwi speak and right hand drive
@yeahno14138 ай бұрын
Love the drone and POV combo! So sick!
@TheTurbineEngineer8 ай бұрын
Exactly how it is in Florida. I grew up in water like this surfing New Smyrna and on super rare occasions the clear water would make it to the beach. Those days were always special.
@jimsibley16518 ай бұрын
Same thing on the Daytona side of Ponce...and once in a great while you'd get clear water on the north side of the jetties. This footage reminded me somewhat of some post-hurricane surf...heavy overcast, big, brown opaque water
@TheTurbineEngineer8 ай бұрын
@@jimsibley1651 I surfed there once in 2012 and you guys were brutal lol. I had a dude cut me off while paddling on a wave by putting his feet in my face. I didn't think I was acting like a googan but maybe I was?
@josemanuelgarciaotero93938 ай бұрын
Perfect place to find some shrooms. Looks like make able in the buggy. How do you position yourself there? Experience, feeling or is there any trick. Good video again!
@matthewj98328 ай бұрын
You definitely see how much skill you have when the conditions arent perfect and theirs normal surfers out,
@JamieFleming-q6r8 ай бұрын
there were no normal surfers out 🤫🤫🤫
@mattpage28348 ай бұрын
Sick to see you surfing this spot, secretly hoping you surf the left your bro scored:) Also a spooky paddle though lol - maybe worse!
@johndoeyedoe8 ай бұрын
New Zealand. Nice. Some good slabs there. Love south Pacific waves bro. So much energy comes off Antarctica.
@unkletonyahearns1798 ай бұрын
Hey, our little buddy Sterling Spencer gave you a shout out as the smartest KZbin Surf podcast deal… FYI, love you man
@poncholarpez62338 ай бұрын
Awesome slab! Hope you come back to NZ for a cyclone swell. Epic left slab on east coast north island for you.
@tonylewis18038 ай бұрын
Great vid going to really conveying sketchy,scary atmosphere that vibes one right out being able to surf……EDGY!
That's NZ surfing for you. Cold, murky water. I'm a kiwi who lived in Aus for 20 years and I so miss nice warm, clear water. And the continental weather pattern, where it's more predictable wind.
@cullenhallbelmont8 ай бұрын
nice liked the whole thing. the trek and the paddle out. seems crazy
@GiuseppeGaribaldi466648 ай бұрын
Eagerly waiting for this to drop. Hyper Notifications Required 🤙🏻
@Bryan-jd7os8 ай бұрын
Great idea to test products with the test pilot program. One time payment of $20 to join? I just might do that. This spot was just GNARLY!
@NathanFlorence8 ай бұрын
Thanks man! I think you will be stoked as a member!
@AlcoholiCSurfeR8 ай бұрын
@@NathanFlorence hey Florence / you have to go surfing here / island of portugal without crowd / a beautiful beautiful beautiful place / write on youtube and search for " Fajã de Santo Cristo - Discover Experience Açores " / you're going to get sick of this place
@jamesroscoe75558 ай бұрын
@@NathanFlorence The test pilot program is a great idea! Gear question though... It looks like that 4/3 is quite loose as you are pulling down the sleeves in a couple of videos (Shipsterns also)... Is that something with the design or did you end up with a larger size than intended?
@NathanFlorence8 ай бұрын
@@jamesroscoe7555 yeah i didnt have time to get the custom suits before trip so just got some that were handy and they were to big
@jamesroscoe75558 ай бұрын
@@NathanFlorence I figured that might be why... Would be interesting to see if/what you guys do for hard core winter suits in the future (for us that's usually a 6/5 water temps around freezing, air below). Thanks for the awesome videos!
@nathanaelkitchen8138 ай бұрын
Love this video, thanks for sharing this adventure!
@NoNamesAvailable818 ай бұрын
I've permanently replaced my Chuck Norris jokes with Nathan Florence jokes. Stay safe Nathan!
@amberbugs8 ай бұрын
I don't like how when you catch a wave POV, as soon as you drop in it switches angles to the drone. I prefer to see the whole wave start to finish! And thats why i like your videos too
@NathanFlorence8 ай бұрын
Good to know
@jackvolkwyn4708 ай бұрын
agree
@juangonzalezdeaudicana86968 ай бұрын
POV sometimes sucks, drone is real 100%
@aarmcintyre8 ай бұрын
Totally agree. Honestly raw pov overall is just superior.
@Saramcmillan.8 ай бұрын
The problem with point of view is you have no idea how big it is the drone gives you that keep doing it
@hitmonRay7 ай бұрын
for your wax, do you use base coat and top coat or just one?
@derekkeep8 ай бұрын
Did you get to surf the super fun left at the northern end of the beach?
@NathanFlorence8 ай бұрын
I didnt!! Swell was a bit to raw!
@Saltyvibezworldwide8 ай бұрын
What settings are you using on the GoPro? Also do you have a leash on it?
@ODL9578 ай бұрын
Better to be safe than sorry, good choice to leave before something happen
@liberateyourslack8 ай бұрын
NZ's best "pinching closeout" (if you know, you know). Very Isolated spot. Shame the windy bay beachbreak wasn't doing it, thought that might be your guarantee for barrels. You'll definitely score around there, just need to be onto it!
@janepower68428 ай бұрын
Best cold water surfing tip from NZ - fill up 2 x 2L plastic bottles (reuse juice bottles from the super market), fill them with the hottest/all hot tap water, put them in the car/boat and use them to fill your wetsuit with warm water and wash the salt off post surf. It's still warm 3 hours later.
@eeekarmcollective23478 ай бұрын
I come for the spitting barrels, but stay for Mahina's commentary 💯👌😂
@stevitos8 ай бұрын
Are you going to do the north island as well? Great video btw!
@joegibbs25088 ай бұрын
The clamping door closing at the end of the barrel would be enough for most to say "no, thanks".
@WillStinton8 ай бұрын
Sounds like Florence Marine needs to develop the shark bite proof wetsuit, you might be the perfect candidate for the prototype testing 😎
@sharonhalverson88758 ай бұрын
Love the switch pov Really gave perspective to the non surfer. I was scared of everything out there
@fabiodias51558 ай бұрын
Did you actually take the knife out? 🤣 can't imagine how stressfull crossing the channel is. love this adventure sessions in new waves
@jamestpearson97618 ай бұрын
What part of NZ is this?
@mickmay108 ай бұрын
My favorite video of yours so far cause I used to surf this wave! It's fucken hectic, seen it be this size and all of a sudden 20 footers are hitting the ledge. So psyched. There is another crazy left slab 2 headlands further west.
@wasabiginger69938 ай бұрын
😂 Mahina, you so funny ... best get that exclusive Florence 24/7 Ice Bath for your new pet!
@SVBlueRecluse8 ай бұрын
NAte, how many liters do you step up when wearing a full cold water suit, gloves, booties, hood?
@daviddarling86428 ай бұрын
Cold, dark water. That probably describes more than 50% of our planet’s surf spots. Coming from Santa Cruz, CA I remember the first time I surfed a spot when I could see the bottom the whole time and how freaky it seemed. Perspective is everything.
@warrenwilson25728 ай бұрын
Get out there with the ski!
@gabrielgullette66958 ай бұрын
Hopefully, you and JJ will sponsor a sponger one of those slab hounters like yourself.
@paulapopenhagen67538 ай бұрын
Big swell up the east coast this weekend, looking forward to seeing some more mutants. Slabs in the Caitlin’s or east Otago maybe…
@KyokushinNidan8 ай бұрын
What is the best wet suit to take to NZ? I have a hard time coming from Hawaii and wearing a wet suit. Feels like a soaked blanket keeping me from standing up.
@procaliadventures8 ай бұрын
It’s than not then if I’m not mistaken, you bunch of woozies!!! Just kidding, great episode, see ya on the next adventure. Continuamos…