Sugar Magnolia

The woman heard the garage door close as her husband backed out of the driveway and headed to work. He might come home tonight and he might not. She loved him… once. Now it was a relationship of use and misuse. He cheated. It was his way. At one time, he at least tried to hide it. No longer. They barely talked. She pulled her hair from her face and reached over to the bedside table and grabbed a pack of Newport cigarettes. She lit one and inhaled deeply. A blue cloud hung above her head and drifted like her thoughts. The morning light streamed in the windows like an invitation.

She rolled onto her side and thumbed the remote. The CD player spun & whirred into motion. Billie Holiday’s voice flowed like velvet across the room. She felt less anxious with him gone. This was her time. As a girl growing up in Boyle Heights near Los Angeles, she always thought she would marry a strong man and they would have a little place to call their own. Her mama would smooth her hair and encourage her to “… look pretty now!” as they entered the church on Sunday mornings. Her mama always had a way of preparing her. The watchword. Someday. “Someday, a good man will come along and love will come walking in with him. A girl has to be ready. Good men are harder and harder to find!” Her mama. She always fussed about the kitchen and mumbled under her breath. Their daddy had left them a long time ago. He was a distant memory in her mind. Tall. Shadowy. Long legs crossed in dark blue pants. His voice rumbled and answered her mama’s questions in a tense undercurrent. He didn’t visit that often. She couldn’t recall the last time that she saw him.

Pulled from her reverie by the smoldering cigarette, the woman stamped it into an ashtray and took a shower. Toweling, she flipped the radio on and listened to the local hit radio station. She smoked a joint and dawdled about the house as was her habit. Watching the hummingbirds out back, she saw the large empty pool and –for the millionth time–made a mental note to get an estimate to have it repaired and filled. Her morning soon became afternoon. She went outside to the mailbox. Jerry– her neighbor– raised an arm in greeting. “Good day, Sugar. How have you been?” She waved back and told him she was well. Her name was Francine but everyone just called her ‘Sugar’. It was the nickname her mama gave her when she was a little girl and she carried it into her adult life like a treasured family heirloom. Going back inside, she saw a magazine propped against the side of the doorway leading to the garage. She picked it up then looked around oddly. Skateboarder’s Journal. She put it under her arm unsure of where it came from and went inside.

That evening, she picked up the magazine and a note fell out. She unfolded it.  It was a polite letter from a skateboarder and writer. He wanted to bring a few professionals over and ride skateboards in the pool out back. She shrugged and couldn’t imagine her husband ever allowing that to occur. She wondered how they could do such a thing. The magazine had photographs of guys skateboarding and hanging precariously on a pools edge and other photographs that were equally exciting. She saw a young guy hovering over a long staircase on his skateboard. “These guys are crazy!” she muttered to herself. Placing the magazine on the glass table, she listened to music as the day burned itself out and into the next one.

She thought of the decade that she called this house home. It was better here in Riverside than where she came from.  She recalled the streets of Boyle Heights. They were now gang-infested and violent. It was quiet here in Riverside. People left each other alone. Families. Future. Drifting off to sleep, she heard a familiar song that she liked. Her favorite line was – “… my only wish is I die real, cause that truth hurts and those lies heal and you cant sleep thinking he lies still…” She wanted to have a new chance at life.  She longed to tell her husband that … “enough is enough!”  It wasn’t going to happen.  Her life was stuck in a holding pattern. It was her and the house with its brick courtyard doing time. She awoke when he came home. She heard the car and the garage door. He stumbled about the place. Drunk. Groaning inwardly, she feigned sleep. She smelled him. He had the ghost of an empty twelve pack on his breath. She hoped he would pass out and sleep. He tucked up beside her. Revulsion. Finally, sleep took her.

When she awoke the next day, he was gone again. It was just as well. Her heart had gone to sleep years ago. She was a broken angel with dirt on her face. He only used her as a mattress anyway. She sighed. She longed to see something real. Soulful. Later, she was in the kitchen and heard a knock at the door. Answering, she saw a blonde man standing there smiling. ” Hello. My name is Ozzie. Did you get the magazine I left for you with the note?” She looked past him to the street. There were two or three guys in a car looking towards the house. They smiled and waved politely. She looked back at the man in the doorway. “I looked through it and read the note. It’s pretty amazing what you guys do. How did you know we had a pool?” she asked. Ozzie told her that his friends had ridden the pool in the mid 1990′s. The previous owners allowed them to come skateboard in exchange for yard work.

Adam 12

Jake Reuter

me

She shrugged absently and remarked that her husband wouldn’t really care to find a bunch of strangers in their backyard when he came home. “Why don’t you guys ride that new skateboard park that I read about in the newspaper?” Ozzie smiled. He went on to explain that skateboarding in pools  led to the modern day skate park being built. His friends and him were purists in a way. She shook her head in the negative and was starting to close the door as she heard him say one other thing. “Backyard pool skating is the original thing for us. We like to keep it real.” he added. She stopped. “Keeping it real.” She hesitated for a moment and then pointed to the side gate and grinned- “It’s unlocked.” Thanks to MRZ for the images. Skate and keep it real- Ozzie

the sweetness of Sugar Magnolia

The Holly

Summer. Friday evening. The sky was orange in the distance. Temperatures had been above 104 degrees all week long. The twilight still sizzled. It would be close to midnight before it dropped down into the 80′s. I was inside the cool confines of Ridiculous. The week had been a tough one at work. Nag Champa burned in a smokey rivulet from a brass incense cup.  My phone vibrated on the nightstand. I put down my book- The Marquis de Sade – and took the call. Salba. “Hey dude. What’s your deal?” I had nothing going on and wasn’t relishing the idea of a Saturday pool draining mission in 104 degree heat and told him so. Maybe we could skate tomorrow night here under the lights, I added. Salba grunted non- committally and told me that he had a rad kidney that he knew of. Lowden had found it and it was insane.

Holly

Before he hung up Salba said, “I’ll phone you in the morning and we will go hit it before it gets too hot.” The next day we met up and I had to admit, it was a pretty insane pool. It was a right-hand kidney with really mellow gradual transitions and tapering side walls. Painted bullnose coping wrapped the top of the pool and the whole thing had a slight bend in it. The shallow stairs were tucked away neatly to one side. It was pristine.

Jake Reuter- bluntslide deathbox

Brandon Wong

We rode it that day and subsequently went back several times. I saw Lowden there and thanked him by giving him a new amoeba pool that I had found nearby. That is how it is done. I returned to the Holly with Jake Reuter, Brandon Wong, Ripperside Shawn and MRZ on other occasions. We had a good time, kept it quiet and made our visits brief. Salba ended up shooting an Independent Six Pack video at the pool and it is a great skateboarding clip.

Salba- FS death light

Gable- FS Grind

The pool is gone now. It is a swimmer that provides a summer respite from the heat for a new tenant in the home. I wish them well. The pool will be there. It isn’t going anywhere… and neither are we! Thanks Lowden, Salba, Ripperside Shawn, MRZ, Jake, Gable and BD Wong. Skate- Ozzie

me

fun

Royal Love

Jake Reuter telling me: "Boy, this looks fun!"

A friend is someone who will bail you out of jail.
A best friend is the one sitting next to you saying “boy was that fun.”
- The Maugles

Today is a good day. Go skate and be happy. Thanks to MRZ for the images. Skate- Ozzie

Jake Reuter

lamentation

… a road runs black. Twighlight. Trees grow in a tunnel as headlights stab and seek. I drive through it.  I see crows rise and flutter by the roadside. The birds run these grounds. I watch a wrought iron fence grow out of the darkness and climb over a nearby hill as it encircles what looks like a cemetery. I smile to myself. I briefly hum The Smith’s song- ‘Cemetry Gates’ as I bank the wheel down a dusty driveway and onto the property. Burial plots stretch out into the night. The air is hushed. Insects quiet. Waiting… I wander among the dead. I let my palms slide across rough tombstones. Headstones from the turn of the century are sprouting out of the grass. My fingers trace the names of the long-forgotten. Who were these people? Did they live in fear? Love? Was the world a better place back then? Were they victims of violence or just the advancing years?  Personally, I wasn’t sure which was more painful: unrealized dreams or unrequited love? Pain. Futility… holding on until the end. Shuffling through the silence was eerie.  I felt no fear. Sometimes I feel as though I am one of the dead. I suppose we all ponder such things from time to time. A shadowy stone mausoleum squats in the lush grass ahead of me. Weeds grow rank against its base. Neglected. I read the last name inscribed on the stone face: J.M. Binniock. I’m reminded of our own – Bob Biniak – who passed on less than two years ago. Greatness.  I wonder if this J.M. Binniock was as inspiring in his time as our Bob Biniak was in ours. I suppose people never really die, as long as we keep thinking about them. A dark bird startles me as I round the side of the mausoleum. It arcs above my head towards a tree, harking at my intrusion. I smile and wish it well. It dwells here in the quiet places. The deep earth welcoming us all…  Ozzie

Bob Biniak R.I.P.

“Swallows” – A porn pool problem

‘Aries’- in the shallow end

Jana

Most women love skateboarders. They should. We are the coolest things on the planet. Some women get near a skater & you can almost hear their ovaries rattle. Many skaters love porn… but more on that in a minute. Last week, I received a phone call from Tony Alva. We hadn’t talked in a few days. We caught up on things & TA told me that he knew of a pool near his house. His friend– Eric — had told him of it. It was permission. It was also a swimmer, but we could drain & skate it. I told him that I would be there the next morning bright & cheerful. About an hour later, I received an email from Nick Gates of Broken Magazine. He said that he had a pool that needed to be drained & wondered if I could help. Of course! He gave me a guys name & number. Eric Staniford. I started putting things together. Unknowingly, we were all trying to get the same pool going. It was rad! I placed calls, made arrangements & a time was set up.

I called Kevin Burke & the next day, we drove to Los Angeles. The house was in a sleepy canyon. A big stone wall surrounded the property. It kept the place away from prying eyes. The air was cold as it was early. Huge trees overshadowed the pool. It looked like a sun-splashed, little blue wonder. The pool sprawled out from the patio- glistening. Eric & Nick were there with their friend- Jessie Hotchkiss.  We grabbed the pump & set everything up. My Yamaha pump is the absolute ruler! It can remove 260 gallons of skateboard-inhibiting water a minute. I  call it  ‘The Straw From God’.  I told the guys this & they smiled but I don’t think they understood. They soon would!

My pump started & I stick tested the pool. It seemed pretty good. The lip curled around and up in the morning sun. The hip was cocked out smoothly to one side. The  box was slightly out of reach. I ran my hand over the smooth skin. As I stick tested it, I noticed it seemed a bit vert-like pretty far down the trannies & this worried me. I also felt the plaster under the water. I was dismayed to see a heavy white film on my hands. Damn! We were going to have to scrub while we drained & probably CLR the pool to remove the paint scum film. If not, the pool was going to be like an ice skating rink. We continued with the draining & cleaning.

Eric & I, left to go to the store & buy coffee & CLR. Enroute, I questioned him about the pool, the porn & how that all came about. ” It all started with a Dominatrix.” He stated wryly.  “One of my best friends in Florida is now known as –Mistress Baunfire. She was  a model for the website-Deviant Nation.  When I moved from Florida in 2008, Deviant Nation was a major competition site with another website-Suicide Girls- showcasing sexy naked tattooed girls. I was a staff photographer.”  I nodded & remarked that naked tattooed girls are generally pretty sexy as far as I was concerned & such a line of work seemed pretty interesting. He smiled & continued. “This introduced me to many models in L.A. Even after the site’s collapse, I was being contacted to shoot for the models as a freelance portfolio- building photographer. The model –Aries– asked that I shoot some portfolio shots at her friends house. This friend was Hustler Porn Star- Jayme Langford. “

Jayme & Jana

Monica

“At her home, we shot some images of her in the dog pen and the full pool. I saw the pool and my first thought was “I have to drain this.” I shot the portfolio photographs at the house. After months of planning, taking photographs for Jayme and asking a lot of questions,  I got the okay from Jayme to drain the pool.”  I smiled. Eric had played ‘the long game’. Sometimes, time takes time. We gathered our supplies at the store & were on the way back to the pool.  Eric told me that he hadn’t been able to get the pool drained. He trolled it around & finally I took the bait. Quickly, we were back at the porn house.

In less than two hours, it was no longer a swimmer. It was now in a state where it could be utilized for a wholly different purpose. After it was empty, I began a thorough inspection. I felt the face wall with my foot, dragging it down toward the drain. I immediately noticed a jolt. The wall bellied out. Not a good sign. I  thought we might be able to carve across it wide & minimize its abruptness.  TA showed up. Some other pals came as well- Pat & Erdy. We sat talking & let the pool dry. We had CLR’d the pool & scrubbed it. The paint film came off milky white.

Being as it was a porn house, jokes started flying.  12 year old adolescent banter quickly filled the air. Someone called the pool, “Milk Bone” which brought quite a few howls of laughter. Kevin Burke sealed the deal when he named the pool, “Swallows”. Perfect.  We let the pool sit & then took a few runs. It was tight & tiny. The kink on the face wall was  very difficult to get over. A few of us grinded it & photographs were taken. I looked around & smiled.  We were at the porn pool.

scrubba dub

Tony Alva- questioning the preparations

Nick Gates- first to grind

Kevin Burke

Jessie Hotchkiss

We had drained it, cleaned it & now we were riding it. It was imperfect, like much of the world.  It sounded like a dream come true for most skaters. Here we were. A sunlit Los Angeles morning. The murky, exotic world of beautiful porn actresses. OG Tony Alva. A permission pool to skate. Good friends… and the pool ended up being less than cooperative. For some, the pool would seem a problem. When I looked around, I quickly saw what I already felt inside. It didn’t matter if the pool was great or not. What mattered is that we did what we did. The look on everyone’s faces & the vibe told the story far better than I ever could. As I looked around, I could see that there was no problem at all. Thank you to Eric Staniford & Nick Gates for setting it up & the porn girlies for letting us in.Thanks to Eric, Nick & Kevin for the images.  Skate- Ozzie

Steve Bailey visited as well.

Brandon Perelson

Parting money shot- Jayme Langford. Thanks!

Draining a swimmer with BTO: 

Ennui

Gosh! Cabbie burned and overturned.

“I’ve got a great ambition to die of exhaustion rather than boredom.” – Thomas Carlyle

Boredom. The long wait that comes with injury. The plague of all skateboarders. We are unique in that we throw ourselves into harms way more often than not. Personally, I’d rather feel like I’m alive by pushing my limits than sitting around in a stagnant pool of complacency talking about how rad it was…  ’back in the day.’ Excuses. Lies. Lethargy. I’ve seen it all. Steve Caballero & Lance Mountain have been icons of the skateboarding world for a long time. They invented a new way to skate. Innovation and style. It pours from them everytime they skate. They’ve both had their fair share of injuries as well. In their long and stellar careers, I think that they’ve been hurt about as much as is humanly possible. They still come back for more.

Mr. Mountain

They both have had the crushing weight of boredom envelop them as they healed. Lance delves into his artwork and Cabbie plays music and paints as well. Perhaps their creativity is all-pervasive. Maybe we are all like this. We create and express ourselves on skateboards but we are more than just this. Skateboarding might define us but we are more than the sum of our unique parts. We cannot be pigeonholed. If you are injured, hang in there. Write, paint, play music. Be creative. Lance said it best: “Skating does not make you a skateboarder. Being unable to quit skating, is what makes you a skateboarder.” Thanks to Deville Nunes and Naka for the images. Skate- Ozzie

the cure all

Tony Alva

I’ve started feeling sick lately. My head. My brain isn’t wired correctly and sometimes my thoughts are particularly disturbing. It tells me to hurt myself… to lash out at others with viciousness. I pray and do all I can to prevent either of those things. After all I’ve been through, I never want to hurt myself or anyone again. Kindness is not weakness. People better remember that! I haven’t really been writing on the Blue Tile Obsession because I didn’t really know what to say. People have been bumming me out. This made me realize that I needed to write something and stoke out my pool pals as I’ve been receiving emails and things regarding my silence. I have been writing though. I recently completed three  articles for the new Skateboarder’s Journal that is coming out soon. I finished a Tony Alva piece and a double article on Mimi Knoop and Nora Vasconcellos. I am hoping that you will all check them out.

Lance Mountain

yours truly

A few weeks ago, Lance, TA, MRZ and I went skateboarding together. It was one of those perfect days. Sunshine, the ocean, good food, friends and pool riding. It made me realize that the world will always be an imperfect place. It can be full of conflict, ugliness and human weakness. However, there are moments of perfection that override all of these. That day of skateboarding with my good friends, washed away all of the bad juju and made me feel clean again. Skateboarding is the cure all. Thanks to everyone for the messages and MRZ for the images. Skate- Ozzie

everyone loves Lance!

California Free Former contest – 1977


Free Former World Championships


Skate event program with rider names


Dennis Martinez -’Vert Wall’


Ellen Berryman


Long Beach Arena


Stacy Peralta

I am posting this tonight, as I won’t be able to do so in the morning. I am such a ‘skate history’ dork! Recently, I went to San Diego & was visiting Jim Goodrich. We were going through his old slides & photo-albums. I noticed a few slides from the California Free Former 1977 contest held in Long Beach that year. He also had a ‘program’ & the ‘rider listing format’ in his possession. Just look at the names on that list…amazing! Tony Alva, Bob Mohr, Ty Page, Bruce Logan, Paul Hoffman & Robin Logan, just to name a few. I quickly asked if I could photograph the priceless items & received the ‘go ahead’. Jim told me that the ‘vert wall’ you see in the Dennis Martinez image was gnarly. The contest organizers were giving a hundred bucks to any rider that reached the topmost letters that say ‘professional’. I think they kept their 100 $. People came close…I suppose contests & all have changed. That is a good thing. I love progression. Bruce Lee stated that “Change is the changeless state.” I’m not quite sure what he meant by that, but it sounds cool…and Bruce Lee said it, so it has to be meaningful. Anyway, I know these are not pool images, but they are a super reminder of where we all came from. Thank you to Jim Goodrich for being so gracious with us all. You rule Jim! Skate-Ozzie

a morning in the big round church


truckload of goons


spillway of joy


‘Gates of Steel’


the writing on the wall, told the story of it all.


pit


looking out


Samwise


Michael using sign language


‘threeler’ by Kevin Burke

Salba told me that his father watched the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers building the Baldy spillway & pipe, back in the 1950s. His father told him that the ‘pit’ was full of fresh water runoff from the dam & had rainbow trout swimming in it. He said they would go ‘fishing’ in there. I could hardly believe anything could come out of that muck hole….I guess times were cleaner…& better back then.
Legend has it that Pat ‘Muck’ Mullis rode the Baldy pipe in 1969 on a skateboard. I know that I saw pictures of Waldo Autry, Curt Cortum, Jerry Valdez & an entire host of early skateboard pros, riding there in the mid to late 1970s. The feds would bust skaters & the fines went up as high as 500$ back then. The feds would dump buckets of hot tar over the top edge of the pipe, to let it splash & dry in an effort to prevent riders from getting some of Baldys sweetness. Andy Mac & Salba took me there for my first trip in 1993. I will never forget it.
I walked slowly back the pipe & saw all of the different stickers on the pipes ceiling. I saw early Powell Peralta & Bones stickers. I saw a fading curled G&S Fiberflex sticker. I saw countless names & dates spray painted on every available surface. The bottom was rough from the winter snow melt & runoff. I have seen water spouting a 4 foot high ‘rooster’, as winter snow melt smashed a path down the spillway. I guess it picks up a bunch of gravel & stones which pit the pipes concrete bottom. We try to avoid the rough areas when we ride.
In Greg MacGillivrays movie ‘Five Summer Stories’ from the 1970s, there is a small part where skaters cruise the Baldy pipe. Its smooth as glass & virtually graffiti-free. We went today & made the pilgrimage to the big round concrete church for skaters. Its one of the longest ridden skate spots in the world. Stan Hoffman saw Salba & others ride there in the 1970s & decided to put a fullpipe in at the Upland skate park he was making. A combi pool followed & history was assured. Whenever I go to Baldy, its a spiritual thing for me. I saw photographs in 1976 from there, when I was an ‘outcast’ skating in Pennsylvania. I wanted to get there terribly. It took many years. When I walk in the pipe, I always walk back with a flashlight & peer around in the gloom. All that history…all that energy & power…it gets me. When we start from the very back of the pipe & ride out, I experience something strange. About halfway out, I am no longer riding the pipe….. it is riding me! You go so fast & its so dark & echoing…its unreal. Today,we went & worshiped. It was stellar. Thanks to Michael Serna Jr., Samwise & Kevin Burke. Thanks to Kevin & Sam for some of the images.  I shot the rest.  Skate-Ozzie

the long hot summer – 1980



Ozzie: Tuck-knee handplant. 1980


Jim Howell: BS air. 1980

School was out & the long hot summer began. Central Pennsylvania grows really humid in June. It can be unbearable when you are outside doing–virtually–anything. Jim Howell & I never really let the weather bother us. We didn’t care…much. We rode in freezing barns, dirty cobweb-festooned basements & drafty attics. We did anything to skate. Cherry Hill was an option, but we needed a ride & that didn’t happen everyday. With a two hour commute, parents & friends were ‘less than’ enthusiastic, about driving us to the skate park & sitting there all day. I understood. One day in June, I called Jimbo & he came over to the house. We frequently changed the ramp, according to our whims & ideas. We saw the ‘tombstone’ at the ‘High Roller’ contest in the magazine & fashioned one for the ramp. It was a joke, but we dropped in, pulled rock-n-rolls & airs off of it. Once, we wanted to learn ‘fakie ollies’ but the one side of my ramp was small, so we built an ‘over-vert’ addition. We didn’t have plywood, so I went down this winding country road behind my house. I went to an old deserted barn & pulled ‘tongue-in-groove’ planks off. We put them together & added about a foot of ‘over-vert’ on the ramp. Jimbo pulled ‘fakie ollies’ & ‘fakie ollie to tail’ that night. We hung a “Coleman’ lantern on the corner of the ramp as it was growing dark & he was close to making it. As bugs flew in our mouths & dive-bombed us, Jimbo slapped one down. We were elated! These negatives sat in my fathers darkroom file cabinet until about three weeks ago. He wasn’t sure if they were good or not. He just sent them. I asked Ray to scan them & just saw them for the first time ever. There was an image of Jimbo as well! So Stoked. We didn’t have very many images from my ramp so this was a find! I wanted to share them with everyone. Thank you to my father- ‘David’ -for these images. Skate. – Ozzie