story by peter dugré • portraits by fran collin
Transcription
story by peter dugré • portraits by fran collin
Past Portraits STORY B Y PE T E R DUGRÉ • Crank that rotary telephone back a few spins and dial up 1975. That’s ’round about when this trio of extreme sports athletes—Peggy Oki, Wade Nomura and Kim Mearig—began carving out their place in sports history. Theirs was not a game of fields and balls. Style and culture played as big a role as athleticism when the sports of BMX, skating, and women’s surfing were blowing up. On the front lines of a youth movement that spanned the late 1970s and early 1980s, the three subjects of this Past Portraits have since retired from their thrill rides COPYRIG HT C.R.ST ECYK 2013 RA PHOTO WADE NOMU KIM MEARIG PHOTO POR T RA I T S BY FRA N COLLIN and settled into more tranquil Carpinteria lives. Without knowing it at the time, these locals were trendsetters, cultivating a look and lifestyle that was packaged and exported to a generation of alternative athletes. Spotting them on Linden Avenue on a weekend stroll, you would never suspect that they enjoyed the fluorescent pink and neon green limelight at the stylized beginnings of extreme games as we now know them. So strap on your helmets and sign on the dotted line, this trip down memory lane comes at your own risk. ABOVE CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT, circa October 1981. Wade Nomura test runs one of his newly developed 26-inch cruiser bikes in Stow Park in Goleta. The test run was for equipment set up for the Nationals. Today, Nomura serves on the Carpinteria City Council. One of the early signs of Kim Mearig’s surfing success is her OP sponsorship. Her professional surfing career lasted nine seasons. Peggy Oki, front row, second from left, with her Zephyr, aka Z-boys, teammates at the big Del Mar contest in the late 1970s. According to the history books of skateboarding, Oki wowed judges and spectators alike and was part of a new era in the sport. SUMMER2013 33 CarpMag_2013Summer.indd 33 6/11/13 4:06 PM PEGGY OKI The first Z-boy to win a national skateboarding contest was a girl. Now a woman and 2012 Skateboarding Hall of Fame inductee, Peggy Oki calls Carpinteria home and is decades separated from when she and fellow Zephyr team skaters revolutionized the sport of skateboarding in the late 1970s. Known as the Z-boys, the rebellious and gritty Zephyr team skated the concrete jungle of paved schoolyards, steep hills, and emptied swimming pools in the rundown slice of Venice and Santa Monica called Dogtown. Their raw image and hard-cutting, free-flowing style of skating launched an entire industry. Oki reflects on her time as a Z-boy still amazed that her teenage energy somehow snowballed into a national movement. Simply put, she says, “It was really a great time.” Skateboarding was something to do in the afternoon when the surf was not good. During the same period, surfing was getting a makeover from Larry Bertleman, who crouched on his board and carved out the face of the wave while skimming a hand on the water. The Z-boys wanted to surf like that, and they wanted to skate like that. The group ditched conventional skateboarding, then a dormant sport known for its upright, stiff tricks, and planted the seeds for the highflying aerial tricks and speed of today’s extreme sport. Oki says the Zephyr team discovered her by chance – barreling downhill—and asked her to skate with them. “I was a tomboy at heart. I would go out and play in the dirt,” she says. “I didn’t care that girls were supposed to do certain things. I just wanted to go out and have fun.” At the now-famous 1975 National Championship held in Del Mar, the Z-boys took the sport by storm. The boys placed high in the slalom and freestyle events, but Oki, a hard-turning, energy ball squatting on her board, won first place in the women’s freestyle event. “Visually it was kind of cool that I had super long hair. It would almost drag on the ground,” she says. The freestyle event was kind of like a gymnastics floor routine. None of the other girls skated anything like Oki. Zephyr teammates Tony Alva and Stacy Peralta became the international faces of skateboarding. Oki, who wasn’t a fan of the pace of organized skating competitions, where days crawled by sitting and waiting for turns, dropped the sport pretty quickly. “I’m not a spectator,” she says. She moved on to college at UCSB and has lived in Carpinteria for 33-plus years. SCOTT STARR PHOTO ABOVE, peace portrait, from about eight years ago. Today, Peggy Oki puts her skateboarding stardom to use in her role as an activist. She is regularly invited to skateboarding events, and agrees to attend usually under the condition she can speak about the international plight of whales and dolphins. OPPOSITE PAGE, present day portrait. Along with her skateboarding superstar status, Oki is a well-known watercolorist. Her paintings often depict ocean themes and local landscape themes. Now she is an activist dedicated to whales and dolphins— and protecting endangered species from over-fishing. On how her skateboarding days are connected with her mission today, Oki says her “passion” remains constant. “We climbed over fences to go skating,” she says, adding that with skating, “You hit concrete, it hurts and you get back up.” On the international stage when Oki encounters resistance from the Japanese government, she keeps fighting. “That’s the Dogtown spirit,” she says. 34 CARPINTERIAMAGAZINE.com CarpMag_2013Summer.indd 34 6/10/13 5:36 PM “I was a tomboy at heart. I didn’t care that girls were supposed to Make-up by Lanete do certain things.” CarpMag_2013Summer.indd 35 6/10/13 5:37 PM WA D E N O M U RA In the early 1980s, BMX bike tricks were currency on the youth street cred market. The BMX scene, “was getting hot and heavy,” says Wade Nomura, who was in the center of it all. Then in his mid-20s, he hopped on a bike and rode it all the way to three national racing championships and to being recognized in five sanctions. Nomura not only mastered the rugged dirt racetracks, he created the “Nomura bike,” a model that squeezed every possible ounce of performance from a BMX frame. Nomura, a sharp-featured, fit man, slightly less enthusiastic than a personal trainer, remembers how he stumbled upon the BMX scene by accident. Working on a landscaping job in the late 1970s, he happened upon a group of underprivileged teens with big BMX dreams. “When you walked around, you didn’t see a road bike. Everybody had BMX bikes,” Nomura says. That encounter morphed into the Nomura Racing bike shop in Santa Barbara and a team of racers. That’s when Wade went to work redesigning the bikes. Looking back on the labor of love, he says, “The technology I saw had not evolved for 20 years.” Working in his shop, Nomura designed a bike out of aircraft aluminum, knocking about 10 pounds off the weight, and altering specs to get more leverage out of racers’ legs. “People learned how to race my bike,” he says. The Nomura team pedaled to nine national championships in its first season. His bikes sprung off the blocks. “Ninety percent of the race is the start,” he says. Then, Nomura remembers, came the day when he flirted with the idea of racing. He was an old fogey in the sport at 26, but a big opportunity came at an ama- teur National Championship event in 1979. Organizers announced a new race in a new division, 26 and up, and he seized the opportunity to take his first national championship. For the following two seasons, he won the amateur national crown and carried three national championship distinctions over a three-year period in five sanctioned circuits. BMX Magazine called him “the winningest amateur,” calculating that he’d won 85 percent of his races. Still his shop and racing weren’t that glamorous. “People asked: ‘When are you gonna get a real job,’” he says. At age 30 in 1982, he went pro. “I don’t think anybody has ever turned pro at 30,” he says. At his professional peak, he ranked 12th in the world. Nomura smirks recalling when he turned down an offer to play himself in the movie “Rad,” an industry-driven feature about a conflicted teenager making a difference with his BMX. His career-ending race was in Las Vegas in 1984. At full speed, he remembers shooting up a 10-foot jump. At the top, his bike sank in a soft patch of dirt; his body, an object in motion, flung 16 feet into the air. He landed on his shoulder and sustained serious damage. He tried to race again, but “lost the edge,” he says. “I was competing against teenagers, and those guys come back in an instant.” Nomura quit cold turkey. He stopped manufacturing bikes and settled into family life and his landscaping business. In 2001, he got an affirming trip down memory lane as part of the Japanese American National Museum’s exhibit “More Than a Game: Sport in the Japanese American Community.” Wade Nomura, fourth from left, in Bicycle Motocross Action Magazine, Sept. 1981. Nomura placed first in the JAG BMX race in Costa Mesa. The other “news factor” in the magazine was the new “26 and over class” for BMX races, which had been solely for a younger set. OPPOSITE, present day portrait. Today, Councilman Nomura’s focus is on serving his community. He rode to victory in last November’s Carpinteria City Council race. WADE NOMURA PHOTO 36 CARPINTERIAMAGAZINE.com CarpMag_2013Summer.indd 36 6/10/13 5:37 PM He was an old fogey in the sport at 26, but a big opportunity came at an amateur National Championship event in 1979. CarpMag_2013Summer.indd 37 6/10/13 5:37 PM Time slows down when Kim Mearig rides a wave. The 198384 World Champion of surfing, who is regularly spotted in the lineup at Rincon, glides and turns with a dancer ’s grace. When Mearig was wowing judges, she made her pioneer repertoire of maneuvers look easy while the herky-jerky competition had trouble keeping up. She also took the coveted Surfer Magazine “Surfers Poll” in 1984, a vote of confidence from peers that meant as much to Mearig as the ASP World Championship title. Now a mother of two with warm cheeks, curls less sunbleached than before and a self-deprecating sincerity, Mearig remembers how it all ABOVE, riding a Hawaiian wave. Kim Mearig was featured in Surfer Magazine in the almost never happened. Reearly 1980s. wind two years from the championship, she recalls, and her OPPOSITE PAGE, present day portrait. Today, Mearig is a familiar face in the lineup at Rincon. She makes her home in the foothills of Carpinteria. career nearly fizzled out before it got off the ground. At age 18, Mearig sputtered so greatly saw another girl in the water, you knew them,” Mearig she lost her sponsorship. Even her parents, who had been recollects of the sport once dominated by men. “Off the driving her to competitions since she was 14, told her to Wall” and “Off the Wall 2” surf films featuring Mearig call it quits. alongside Tom Curren and other big names of men’s pro “My dad was like, ‘Go to school or get a job,’” Mearsurfing showed that women could keep up. ig says. “And I was thinking, ‘I’m not through with this Of her style, Mearig says, “It’s like putting someone on yet.’” She had saved some money from her first year as a the dance floor. Everybody has their own inner rhythm pro, and without a big sponsor, she supported her own … It’s nothing you necessarily work on.” Mearig and travels to start her sophomore season. Frieda Zamba, her primary rival, were the first women to In the first two events of 1983, she finished in second pull 360-degree turns. place. Then came the big event, the Huntington Beach OP Mearig’s pro career lasted for nine seasons, and she Pro. She claimed first place. “It was like my dreams didn’t was runner up for the World Championship in both 1985 get shot down,” she says. “I went against the odds.” and 1987. She had her son after retiring and spent more Sponsorships started rolling in, including from event host time in Carpinteria where she has lived since 1980. Then, Ocean Pacific, setting Mearig off on the odyssey of her when it all seemed like it ended, she says, her career iconic career. She treasured traveling to events with huscame full circle in 1993, when she entered the Huntingband Brian Gruetzmacher and sticking around to see the ton Beach OP Pro and won again, for only the second sights. “We’d say, ‘what do we want to see in this corner time in her career, making her the OP Pro champ twice, of the world,’” she says of Australia, Europe, and wher10 years apart. Mearig’s monumental surfing career was ever else surfing brought her. recognized at the Huntington Beach Surfing Walk of Mearig’s aggressive yet graceful style stoked the growFame in 2002. ◆ ing flame of women’s surfing. “Back in the day, if you KIM MEARIG PHOTO KIM MEARIG 38 CARPINTERIAMAGAZINE.com CarpMag_2013Summer.indd 38 6/11/13 4:07 PM MakE-Up/HaIR BY RYaN COLkET She had saved some money from her first year as a pro, and without a big sponsor, she supported her own travels to start her sophomore season. SUMMER2013 39 CarpMag_2013Summer.indd 39 6/11/13 9:49 AM