pI saw it again during the#160;smoking last swell. Even in this highly enlightened green-eco-retro-cool-daddy culture and in a world where there are more waves and methods of wave riding than ever before imagined, surfers are still dropping in on other surfers. Uhg! I saw dudes getting a href=http://clk.about.com/?zi=1/1hc#038;zu=http://surfing.about.com/od/wordortheday/g/fade.htmfaded/a in the most cold and tragic way, pushing over sections and looking back like bloated pro wrestlers ready to scrap. Improper hand gestures abound as rudeness spread like Ebola in what translated into to a free market economy run by piratea href=http://clk.about.com/?zi=1/1hc#038;zu=http://surfing.about.com/od/wordortheday/g/kook042105.htm kooks/a. Come on! This is a plea. Please you guys and gals, don't drop in on surfers who have priority. It breaks down the natural order of things and throws a cog into the brotherhood (and sisterhood of course) of the waves. Dropping in on, snaking, hopping, working, burning, shoulder-hopping or fading your fellow surfer is never cool. If you think it is, then you might be a kook. If you're not sure of your kook status, check a href=http://clk.about.com/?zi=1/1hc#038;zu=http://surfing.about.com/od/surfingfaq/a/052705kook.htmhere/a. Sometimes, I guess, a payback for a previous drop-in is uncontrollable but try your best. Use words and not saber-rattling that may lead to a physical altercation. Fights on the beach just blow the whole vibe for sure. Unintentional drop-ins occur, but again remember to let the surfer know it was a mistake. And don't forget that two unintentional drop-ins will suddenly seem very intentional./p
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