High tech hits big waves
With a suit that lets him breathe underwater, surfer Garrett McNamara is invincible. Almost.
With a suit that lets him breathe underwater, surfer Garrett McNamara is invincible. Almost.
The space age promised loads of kick-ass innovations in technology, and more importantly, it inspired us to dream.
Some of these innovations are a part of almost everyone’s lives, while others are a boon to a select few.
A very select few will benefit from Garrett McNamara’s new big wave surf suit. The suit, designed with oxygen pocket technology from the Camelback water canteen company, allows people to breathe for a few minutes underwater, according to McNamara.
McNamara’s isn’t the first potentially life-saving device introduced to big-wave surfing recently. Shane Dorian’s inflatable wetsuit from Billabong helps bring surfers to the surface after bad wipeouts. But neither are currently commercially available.
Being able to do breathe underwater for “several extra minutes” may not be important to most of us, or even to many surfers. But McNamara surfs monster 90-foot waves, and he seeks to break his own record on a 120-footer in Nazare, Portugal.
Even with the suit, McNamara is never certain he’ll come out alive. When asked by TMZ how he knows he’ll survive, he doesn’t mince words:
“I don’t.”
Which brings us to a major hole in modern technology. Namely, where the hell is the miracle button? The move-mountains button? The button that would bring somebody back to life after being without air for an hour?
Apparently science has a long way to go before it gives us everything it’s promised.
Peyton Manning will be released by the Colts on Wednesday, and the 49ers would be wise snatch him up.