Sunday, 19 February 2017

Shutdown

It's been a while since I last posted here. I'm not even sure that anyone read it even when I was posting regularly, but that's not why I did it. I wrote to capture my own chronology and the surfs I had (most of them anyway - so many were not captured here) and to grasp other thoughts as they came.

If I was writing for other people it was to attempt to demonstrate that it is possible to have a career and commitments and surf regularly, and that this is important if it's something that you love to do. I've seen a lot of people give up surfing as their lives have moved forward and of course that's OK. It's not like you're giving up on something critical. Surfing is just a sport after all. Though among the people I spoke to who had stopped surfing, too often this wasn't because they'd made a conscious choice to give up, but because lots of small decisions mounted up to not going often, and then not going at all.

Surfing is a skill and like any skill, if you don't practice it, it starts to fade. Standing on a board is a bit like riding a bike, once you know how to do it you'll get back there pretty quickly. Everything up from there though is a different matter. Bottom turns, cutbacks, off the tops, re-entries.....when we get into that realm the skill is much more like tennis. The nuance becomes important and if you don't practice you're not going to get the ball over the net as often, let alone remember how to top spin properly. And once it fades, frustration sets in. Or maybe even doubt. Either way, the combined effect can become its own barrier to getting back in the water. Frustration that you're not able to move as fluidly as you did before, or doubt that you can even handle the surf conditions at all. This is a self-perpetuating cycle that lengthening time between surfs exacerbates, eventually culminating in not going at all. Giving up by stealth.

If this sounds like I'm saying surfing is a religious cult that you can never leave, this isn't the intent. Whether it applies to surfing or something completely unrelated, if there's something that you enjoy, or even love doing, then do what you can to avoid this happening. No-one wants to be looking down the barrel of regret.

So this is the last post for this blog. I'm not stating this because I imagine an audience rising up in protest at its demise, but as my own way to close this chapter and acknowledge that nothing more will emerge here. I'll keep it here in case anyone stumbles upon it as part of a digital archaeology dig or in case the photos inspire someone to try some of the spots or lifestyle on the East coast of Australia.

As an aside, if you are interested, I now exclusively use the Day One now app for capturing surfs, thoughts and ideas. It is awesome. Every one of the posts I made here has been transferred into that app. to complete the chronology.

Keeping surfing! Bye!

Wednesday, 22 October 2014

Missing [approx. a 3 min. read]

Just watched Roger Sharp's great short, "5mm” that appears to be filmed in Scotland, and I'm reminded of what it's like to be a surfer in the UK. Specifically of what I miss about surfing mid-Winter.

The best waves in the UK are during the coldest months of the year. A time when the days lean to late sunrises and early darkness and the wind whips across a frozen land that somehow feels more brittle than during the Summer. Where the light fades from dusky orange to a harsh white; neon almost in its uniform glare and the indistinct shadows that it creates. A time when water temperatures dip to 6˚C (43˚F) and plummet even further on the land.

During these months I miss the sense of a battle fought; of pushing and testing yourself. Against the weather, against yourself - tracking and calculating forecasts - and against your body, pushing it to its cold water limits. Maximizing time in the water takes consistent effort. From the regular cycle of tracking the forecast every week to your pre-surf preparation. What you eat the night before, how you get your core warm when you sleep, the way you maintain this heat in the clothes you wear and food you eat en-route to the beach, how you setup your car (heater on medium; too high will make you sweat and switch your body to a cooling mode) and your routine as you get changed (face the front of the car into the wind so you are protected at the rear). Every aspects matters.

I miss the natural quietness that comes as the effort that's needed to keep going against the numbing cold deters so many. The stillness of isolated spots where there may be no-one there to enjoy it but yourself (or the few you brought with you). You're often within reach of large towns and even cities but you somehow feel like you're separated and very distant from these. The blend of the ocean's rise and sweep of the offshore wind creates a natural white noise sound stage to the countryside's backdrop. It's a strange remoteness that exists at the ocean's edge mid-Winter.

I miss surf that looks like somehow hand-drawn and released from someone’s imagination. Lines stacked to the horizon, brushed clean by offshores at dramatic spots that nestle deep within counties you’ve never considered for surfing before.

And above all I miss the camaraderie of preparing, searching, discovering, and tackling all of this with friends. To call surfing mid-Winter an ‘expedition’ is accurate on so many levels.

If you've never lived and surfed in the UK then looking at all this effort you might wonder, why bother? This wouldn't be unreasonable. Even those that have surfed there for years often allow their resolve to be eroded over time. Letting the natural rhythm of preparation slip away until the effort to re-start it doesn't feel worth it. In a slow, almost indiscernible creep, the rhythm……disconnects. The weekly checking of the charts becomes an accidental discovery of good surf from a weekend past when a video circulates online of "that day". The once ready-packed surf kit becomes strewn across the house (or relegated to the garage / shed) and before long the last surf was months or years, not weeks or days, ago.

Keeping motivated and pushing to maintain the weekly rhythm does take effort. If you’re in a cold water location, keep at it. If you’ve stopped, re-start. If you’ve never tried, give it a go. The search itself and those air-brushed days that wait at the end of it really are worth it.


Thursday, 4 September 2014

Without Water

A short edit of a trek through the high desert in East California. Not a drop of water in sight but some calm solitude.


Monday, 2 June 2014

Crystalline

Clean, crisp morning, pre-work refresh, sun tingly above the horizon to paint the sky in an orange glow. Even the monstrosity that is the surf club looked good in this light. After weeks of Summer time air temperatures, pushing the boundaries into the realms of the late-twenty degrees on a regular basis, this was the first day when the Winter steamer would have been welcomed. Brisk Westerly winds stripping the meagre warmth that the Summer suit provides. Sets still infrequent but at least the odd rideable one and the hungry crowd of days before are satiated enough to make the crowd manageable.

This is more like it

No rain for weeks? It's like surfing in Evian

Commuting

Seagulls have reclaimed the beach post-Summer buzz

Hungry

A few week of flatness build the energy and anticipation to levels that verge on a pre-UFC bout; surfers start to swim, run, cycle....we are are a twitchy crowd...edgy when we are not active. And then the swell arrives and everyone - good, bad, the in-between - descend upon the beach. The usual cycles of morning and afternoon crowds, those who have family commitments sneaking in earlier, or arriving later with children in tow, are crumbled and everyone arrives, en-masse.

And so it was on this day after complete flatness for a few weeks. A hungry crowd and very few waves to go around. The pictures make it look far, far better than it was. An ugly backwash and infrequent sets mean that the attached evidence was limited to a freaky few who managed to sneak onto an unmolested wave that found a bank.

A thick crowd of hungry animals

Just after dawn it was a bit more reasonable

No-one in the right spot

The only place to be alone

Inside backwashed moments gave brief visions (none make-able)

Wave of the day

Sunday, 18 May 2014

Fiji

Finally got around to uploading the pictures from the recent Fiji trip. Most of the shots are from the day at Rainbows (check the rainbow that flows from behind the wave - you can see it on the empty barrel shots). Shout out to Chris, Steven, Rod, Scott, Chaps, Shiloh, and Eddie who were charging. Click the link below to see the full album.



Saturday, 3 May 2014

Epic

Just back from a trip to the Coral Coast, Fiji where Marcus and I had a week of epic surf. Constantly battling watching perfection slide past and not having enough energy to keep, on, going. Three to four hours stints, twice a day the norm with the legs giving out from the long rides before the arms did.

Back into work now so it'll be a few weeks before I get around to sorting the video and the rest of the surf shots. Just flicked through what I have taken and put a small sample below. More to follow in a bit.

The reef below. Stunning but sharp.

Frigates. Epic left-hander with 200 - 300m rides.

Shifties. Looks enticing but shallow and generally to be avoided
at this size to miss the reef.

J's/Rainbows on the biggest day of the trip.

Steven at Js/Rainbows.

The inside at Js/Rainbows.

A smaller day.

Another day of epic lefthand barrels.

Saturday, 19 April 2014

Double Rainbow

Well, almost. A double foam ball on a single wave? Surprisingly enough there weren't any takers for this outside monster. Novelty spots the only option on this day. For this that know this spot, it sits very close to a shark breeding ground. In one of the shots you can just see the sign in the foreground that tells you this fact. Just by the jump off spot. Keeps the concentration sharp.

Wild ocean but long rides for the patient

Steep take off and went a bit fat on the inside.

Double foam ball!

Shark breeding ground.

Friday, 18 April 2014

Happy Easter

The swell keeps on coming. Solid waves on Easter Friday (video below), by Saturday it had jumped to the point that most beaches were closed, 10ft sets rolling in, up over the sand and into the scrubland. Very few around, just the lifeguards keeping everyone out of the water, and no-one out in the surf except at the odd novelty spot to the South which was a bit wind affected and lumpy.

Sunday, 13 April 2014

Sandpits

Some very solid waves coming through yesterday evening and this was after the swell had calmed a little. Windswept and, frankly, looking pretty ugly. There were a few rides happening but a lot of carnage in between. Cross-chop, backwash, peaks made heavier with rippling sand. It looked like hard work. A few crew were getting some sold waves.

Styling in the sand monster

It was a whole lot of fun until this happened

This guy was catching all the best ones

An uncomfortable position to be in

On the way back home

Moonrise over heavy seas

A big bottom turn on a solid wave

Seen a lot more of these types of boards out recently.

south by south-east

VIDEO: opted to stay on the beach today. Made the mistake of going surfing straight after the rain and a seawater bug found its way in. Some wild surf out there today.


Saturday, 12 April 2014

Friday, 11 April 2014

Boom!


Autumn has arrived with a very bold statement. After a few weeks of fun waves that characterise the wobble of a shift in season, Autumn has decided it's time to make itself felt. Steep climbing charts from nearly zero swell to six meters in just a few hours. Good job it happened overnight otherwise a few would have most likely been caught out. Heading out to look later and surf if the more exotic locations are up and working.

Sunday, 6 April 2014

A Slight Breeze

Gale force cross-shoares making for ugly peaks. Still the odd one worth catching. The lefts especially which were being blown wide open by the cross-shore. Had an hour or so out in the water and about 20 minutes at the beach shower trying to tease out the buckets of sand that had been rammed into the wetsuit.



Sunday, 30 March 2014

Laird


Since the surf wasn't up to much and the weather was nice Mark kindly lent me his spare paddle board (not SUP - just to be clear) and we did the 6km paddle from my local beach to his. An amazing experience seeing the coast from a completely unique perspective. The thought of what lay beneath, looking up, did cross the mind more than once but the view was worth it. Stopping off in bays along the way to check out the reefs. Coming back in the swell had jumped a little so ended up having a bit of a tricky final stretch back into the beach.

Post paddle board checked the local beach and the swell was up to 2 - 3ft so headed out for a few hours. Needed a nap in the afternoon but other duties prevailed.



Sunday, 16 March 2014

Momentary

Had about ten minutes to take a few shots before the rain descended. In fact, this has been a pattern for the past few weeks. A quick surf fitted in amongst other things going on (on this day a fun left-hander at this usually crappy beach break as a heavy NE swell pushed in).



Friday, 14 March 2014

Inflated

After what feels like over six weeks of really small surf, mostly too small to be bothered with, a new swell was forecast for the weekend. Anticipation rising; 2-3ft and clean on Saturday, bumping to 5-6ft Sunday.

Keeping it short, it was an ugly mess. No banks, tide pulling it in all sorts of directions. Ultimately the wrong side of frustrating despite more size to it than there's been for a while. Floated in after two. Not worthy of a photo even (screen grab from the surf cam. makes it look better than it was).

Usually any time in the ocean is all upside but the differential between forecast and reality proved to be too much for even the most optimistic soul. Hopefully tomorrow will be better but ratcheting down the expectation meter. Just in case.

Friday, 7 February 2014

That's New

The local was looking a bit wobbly and uninviting so made a few detours to beaches around and ended up somewhere that's often avoided. Not famed for its waves, more for the likelihood of chaos. It lived up to half its reputation. The backend of the swell meant less grunt but there were still peaks. Lefts and rights. Some tucked in the corner, some middle beach. Water like Evian with shoals of fish visible, flying across the sand beneath.

Chaos was still there. Almost got run over by someone doing a last minute drop-in. Seemed like a genuine mistake and we both exited unscathed but in that sickening moment as you watch 7 ft of uncontrolled long board drop directly in front of you it felt like it could have taken a different path. Apologies abound whilst getting rolled around in the set that followed. Board managed to exit unharmed too. Think I'll take this spot off the future list - got lucky twice and don't want to push it.

Crystal clear water. Board shorts were in vogue.

Corner rights.

Breakpoint

After what has felt like the longest spell without real swell, the flatness is broken. It was bigger today but the weekend's still got some juice to work with.

Saturday, 1 February 2014

Torn

Wind ruffled waves, a stiff breeze from the SSW adding texture to waves with this 'not quite offshore or cross-shore' wind direction. Plenty of fun waves around; long lefts pushing against the wind. Shorter, punchier rights. Stayed out too long, the SPF50 no match for the noonday sun, pushed aside to burn the skin. An infrequent experience but a steady reminder. Back to the zinc.

Lefts - the pick of the day

Outside peaks