Ken Bradshaw
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Ken Bradshaw (born October 4, 1952) is an American professional surfer and winner of the 1982 Duke Kahanamoku Invitational Surfing Championship.
Bradshaw was born in Houston, Texas. On January 28, 1998, Ken Bradshaw successfully towed into, and rode, a wave with a face generally accepted among surf authorities as about 80 feet (24 m).[1] The site was Outside Log Cabins, an outer reef on the North Shore of Oahu, Hawaii. This wave was his second of the day at about 11:30am.[2] The ride lasted about 30 seconds. There is a poster by the photographer "Hank" of Bradshaw riding a 60+ footer that has been mistaken for the biggest wave ever surfed. His record-breaking wave, which was 10 to 20 feet taller than that photo, was not photographed. Only some grainy video footage by Bill Ballard exists which was shot from shore nearly a mile away which appears in the videos The Moment and Making the Call), but the view of his historic wave is partially blocked by a smaller, unbroken wave in front of it.
He took part in a hypothermia experiment for Discovery Channel[3] which lasted for 4 hours at 0°C (32°F, 273 K) without clothing. His body temperature dropped to 35°C (95°F, 308 K).
Lifestyle
Bradshaw is a vegetarian.[4]
References
External links
- Official website
- The Big One (Forbes.com)
- Wave Warrior (pbs.org)
- Ken Bradshaw (Surfline; Oct 2000)
- [4] Vanity Fair article from 2011