2011年1月16日星期日

the ground for most of the shoot. replica brand watches Kyle Strait

It wouldn’t seem fair for him tobe such an amazing surfer and a really interesting guy to spend the daywith, but he is. He’s turned me on to several mind-altering books aboutlife and love and nutrition. Hes so likeable and down to earththat our shoots with him are always really fun. His eyes really do looklike this, so I was glad Jake could capture that. It’s almost too muchwhen he looks right at you. I had to look at the ground for most of the shoot. replica brand watches Kyle Strait, shot by Frank Ockenfels 3: In 2005, when we shot Kyle on this crazy massive group shoot for a Redbull/Outside book called Faces,he was hands down my favorite. His bangs saved us from hisI-am-going-to-beat-you-senseless stare. Without them, we’d probablyhave turned into one of the drummers from Spinal Tap.

In college, when we were most avid, Bachar was always more than just a climber for us; he was more than a human being: he was a talisman, a kachina doll, a phylactery that we carried with us for courage and for inspiration. A friend on a climbing trip to Yosemite came back one summer and, as if he had seen Sasquach, reported that Bachar walked in front of his car. “He was huge,” my friend said. Bachar was ripped, for sure, though no replica Rolex Datejusts watch giant. But he was huge to us. Though I never met him, I didn’t need to. I had seen him climbing on videos, his smooth and deliberate and meditative progress up vertical and overhanging faces of granite. This virtuosity in fact and in concept tied to what I was learning in school: Bachar was proof of what Lincoln called

Mountain biker Markus Stoeckl set a new world speed record in the series downhill mountain bike class this past week when he blazed down a 6,500-foot, 45-degree snow track at the La Parva ski resort in the Central Andes of Chile and hit a max speed of replica IWC 3714-01 watch 130.7 mph. The 33-year-old shattered the eight-year-old world record by 14 mph despite poor weather conditions, and the fact that his protective visor was so fogged, he was forced to hold his breath for the entire 40-second run. I knew that this would be my only chance,” he said, in a news release.But here at Outside, we know the entire time he was thinking, please God, dont let this end like him. —Christina Erb