She will be omnipresent on surf for years to come. In April 1983, surf dedicates its first major story to Jenna de Rosnay. The beauty, who was just 20 years old at the time, developed into a speed queen in a very short space of time and was also a model in front of the camera - or vice versa? In any case, the daughter of the former editor of "Surfer" magazine was a talented surfer "who looked down on the clumsy sailboarders with a tired smile" until she met Arnaud de Rosnay." It wasn't until she spent "a few weeks" in Polynesia with the 17-year-old baron from Brittany that Jenna's windsurfing spark was ignited. In 1981, she came to Weymouth as a photographer for Speedweek, and a year later she took part and set a new record straight away, although this was not recognised due to measurement errors. The de Rosnay couple brought a lot of glamour to the windsurfing world - until Arnaud disappeared without a trace around a year and a half later.
surf author Dieter Fabritius travels behind the Iron Curtain and reports on the windsurfing scene in the GDR. While official party organs were writing "Board sailing is a sport that could only develop through capitalist greed!", a lively DIY scene was developing in garages and backyards. Instructions from Poland were published in the youth magazine Praktika, and several TenCate boards and wind gliders were built countless times. VEB Waggonbau Ammendorf was finally allowed to officially build "Delta" boards, whose mediocre riding characteristics were optimised many times over. High-jump rods became masts, engine mounts became a kind of power joint, "still the number one item of exchange for every DIY board builder". However, the waiting time for such a board was up to five years, and the black and second-hand market flourished. However, windsurfing was more of a hobby for employees or the self-employed than for the ubiquitous workers and farmers. "That's because higher up, the colourful crowd that had recently taken to the lakes was eyed with suspicion - from the yacht rails." Anyone who wanted to take part in regattas had to join a company sports group, but this also gave them some freedom. Windsurfing also became more and more popular as part of the relaxation policy of the 1980s, although the open Baltic Sea was still taboo in 1983.
In February 1983, the LTU Cup on Fuerteventura was the first World Cup in windsurfing history. Although the event is not really exciting due to a lack of wind - the official wind limit is still 15 knots - there is a great sense of optimism. A lot of space is devoted to explaining the regulations: Manufacturers pay into a pool and nominate riders and officials, there are course races, slalom, wave riding and an overall classification. In addition to the World Cup, there are also the Funboard Cups in categories A (Europe) and B (National), in which riders with equipment other than that of the ten pool manufacturers are also allowed to compete. At the end of the season, the best and worst 20 riders are relegated and promoted respectively. This structure later gave rise to the PBA and, following its insolvency, today's PWA.
In the early eighties, he was the "court jester of the Mistral family" and extremely well known in the surf scene: Walter "Wuffi" Neudert from Lake Starnberg, who ran a delicatessen shop and was "notorious for his drinking and punch resistance". He gives Robby Naish a Tyrolean hat, slaps a dodgy tour operator on the open stage and takes part in dubious "mast length tests". The local shop is buzzing, but the onslaught of sailors and surfers leaves Wuff little time to get out on the water himself. So he leases the boat and takes ten crates of beer to Elba "to philosophise". After three crates he knows: I don't want children yet, after seven crates his own surf school is out of the question and after the last bottle, Wuffi decides to make surf films. With success: in 1983 he had already exposed 15 kilometres of film and shot many advertising films for major brands. And he was still at the forefront at the parties.
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