Sorry mate!

> 10 years ago
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elbeau
elbeau
WA
988 posts
WA, 988 posts
5 Feb 2011 1:56pm
I can't remember how many waves I have caught on a Stand-up paddle board.

Hundreds, thousands probably.

The list is huge.

The first unsteady steps on a 12'6”.

Backward rolls as the board raced away.

Gliding down the face of a 1 foot peeler and

trying to turn what felt like a massive barge.

Wondering if it was really worth the effort yet loving the experience.

Next the 11'2”and finally a modicum of control.

Turns were possible. Not just turns but a certain style. Some nose riding. A few

cutbacks. Stilted and stiff but yet recognisably surfing.

Finally a ten five.

The joy.

Long board glide with more sashay than a hula dancer. Stoked!

Control and competency combined.

A plethora of waves over 5 years.

So of all those waves, which one is the most monumental?

The one that sticks most in my mind? You might think it difficult to separate all those

wonderful memories.

And they are.

Wonderful I mean.

Beautiful glassy days with cascading foam and the delight and wonder of people

seeing stand-up for the first time.

Foam and fear at times with deep overhead threats and thrashing underwater roils.


One wave stands out however. It lingers with me not like a haunting yet the memory

visits me every now and then when I think of the surf.

It wasn't an especially big wave or a fabulous barrel, not even a nose ride of note. Yet

it stands out for a specific reason.


I remember the sound.


It was one of those special days. Sunshine, families, chips, seagulls, ice cream.

The surf was about three to four feet. Clean, glassy and clear with little or no wind.

Although the bay was crowded there were waves for all.

The short boarders, boogy boards and long boarders were congregated in a group at

the main break.

My friend and I were on SUPS about fifty metres seaward.

The waves were breaking on an outer bank and passing through deep water before

reforming for the gathered throng.

My companion and I were picking off the set waves and powering through the deep

water. We then were working the break so that we both went wide when we hit the

reform. This allowed the prone paddlers to sort out the excellent peaks amongst

themselves. We had as many waves as we wished and they had their pick of the

reforms.


I don't think it was greed. Certainly I had had my share.

It probably could be excused as compulsiveness or spontaneity.

Whatever.


It reared up as a set wave.

An A frame four to five foot glassy peak and with no one to hassle me it was easy to

pick it up.

Down the face and then the wave fattened as it hit deep water.

Paddle deep and skate along like ice skating on a stand up sled waiting for the reform

and here it comes.


Every other time that day I had turned to the left. Always a wall had formed.

Few of the prone surfers could get on to it because the paddle gave such an

advantage. I would get a nice re-entry or two, a nose ride then finish in deep enough

water to paddle back out.


He was about forty years of age.

Forty, forty five or so.

Long boarder and he was paddling hard. He was inside me to the right. All day I had

been going left, despite being aware that that the right hander was a better ride. It

ran at least twice the length of the left hander. Sometimes it barreled and often

walled up


I turned right. A nice flared turn, set up to walk forward and trim.

The wall was still forming and it was such a lovely wave I knew there was nose ride in

there somewhere. A few back hand re-entries and then a roundhouse turn at the

end as the wave neared the beach.


There it is


The one wave in thousands that I remember clearly after so many.

What makes it so memorable? The wall? The nose ride? Was it the cut back at the

end?

Probably not.

It was that sound.

The sound of a forty something long board surfer groaning as the one wave that he

had been waiting, hoping and maybe praying for all morning was taken from him. He

possibly had been looking most of the day for such a wave. A reformed A frame

with no one else in his proximity but a stand up paddle boarder that had been (up to

now, going left all morning.)

He didn't swear. He didn't shout.

There was fate here and he was open to her vicissitudes.

He simply groaned.

That groan has imprinted on me more than all the “oys” and “my wave's” yelled in

the surf ever could.

Sorry mate
doggie
doggie
WA
15849 posts
WA, 15849 posts
5 Feb 2011 2:54pm
This from Tracks mag, it's a Naish ad and there is some small text at the bottom of the page which should be bigger -

"Please use common sense when surfing a SUP. Just because you can catch every wave doesn't mean you should! No one likes a wave hog. Have respect and don't be a kook!!"

Page 110 volume 1 2011.

smh
smh
NSW
7269 posts
smh smh
NSW, 7269 posts
5 Feb 2011 7:08pm
So the guy you "took the wave off "was your mate ?
smh
smh
NSW
7269 posts
smh smh
NSW, 7269 posts
5 Feb 2011 7:46pm
Mate you've got plenty of mates
There's not many down my way but out of all of them theres one thats a real goose but I haven't seen him around for a long time. Maybe his past finally caught up with him because he was one of those blokes who would paddle out and just ruin it for everyone because he wanted to catch every wave.
I'm thinking / hoping that someone had a quiet word to him in the carpark.
obct
obct
NSW
3487 posts
NSW, 3487 posts
5 Feb 2011 9:07pm


climber
climber
NSW
1125 posts
NSW, 1125 posts
5 Feb 2011 9:18pm
doggie said...

This from Tracks mag, it's a Naish ad and there is some small text at the bottom of the page which should be bigger -

"Please use common sense when surfing a SUP. Just because you can catch every wave doesn't mean you should! No one likes a wave hog. Have respect and don't be a kook!!"

Page 110 volume 1 2011.





Onya Doggie... experienced the exact action yesterday that your post speaks of.

Having just moved to Port Macq, i have choosen to stay wide of the "main" packs at present in town. Got out yesterday and decided to paddle to a peak some 150mtr away from the shore break. (Been watching it for a bout 20minutes and I was the only one on it)
Bloody hell... got 1 great wave then only one and got invaded with 2 sup and a goatee who proceeded to take every bloody wave..what made it worse was the involved proceed to tell me how they did not think you could ride the waves out here but "saw you surf it" and thought lets go there...my ask to share the waves was met with a less than favourable response... gave up and went home
rant over

cheers
Climber

PS had a bloody boomer of a wave sail later in the day
doggie
doggie
WA
15849 posts
WA, 15849 posts
5 Feb 2011 6:36pm
Mate you are always gonna cop that, I have seen it many times at trigg point over but with longboards and goatboats. Hence don't surf there anymore, it's a shame. I bet none of the LBs over in this room would do that
asea
asea
QLD
5544 posts
QLD, 5544 posts
5 Feb 2011 10:10pm
f em smash em
Makaha
Makaha
1145 posts
1145 posts
8 Feb 2011 3:32pm
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