Captain Rob Machado took to the high seas in San Diego with 300 scallywags and saucy wenches aboard looking for booty.
Kalle Carranza and Magnum Martinez take us to the newest Costa Rican discovery.
Del Mar surfer girl Elizabeth "Lizzy" Clark set sail in her 40-foot sailboat on the adventure of a lifetime - San Diego to Baja, Baja to Mainland, Mainland to Central, Central to South American, South Pacific to New Zealand, and on and on — in search of waves. Here are the photos.
The tour drove into Times Square in New York City Thursday night and dropped a package off-a crew of pirates ready to make it an all-nighter. Did they make it? Not quite.
Stop five of the 2006 Planet Reef tour literally stormed it's way through Northern New Jersey as the tropical storm that was heading our way actually landed on top of us. That didn't stop a thing as the bus made it's way to Spellbinders Surf Shop in Allenhurst where even the local police are huge fans.
The 2006 Planet Reef Tour has been a blast. Last night we had dinner in Atlantic City with a bunch of local retailers and then followed up with a bit of a pub crawl where Ben Bourgeois made a total ass of himself...
(Sing along…) On the road again. After a long night's drive through the Chesapeake Bay tunnel and Maryland, the 2006 Planet Reef Tour found it's way to Atlantic City and the third stop of the tour in Southern New Jersey.
The second stop of the 2006 Planet Reef Tour sped north late Sunday evening and crash-landed in Virginia Beach, Virginia-the East Coast capital of fun times.
It was another huge day for the underdog today at the Billabong Pro Jeffreys Bay with round two getting underway today in clean one metre (three foot) waves at the famed break known as "Supertubes". Check the photos here!
The bus is packed, and everyone's fired up for the 2006 run of the Planet Reef tour sponsored by Reef, Dragon, Fuel TV, Surfing Magazine and Surf Aid International. Stop one landed the crew in Ben Bourgeois' hometown of Wrightsville, North Carolina where the Atlantic spat out waves in the 2-3ft range and the weather was sweltering hot without a trace of wind.