Time: 1845-1945, 1 hr.
Conditions: 1-2 feet, inconsistent, high tide, calm wind, sunny, glassy, warm air, cold water.
Pre Blog:
I decided to play it safe and not surf during this big swell that just passed. It was already surfacing during the middle of last week while I was still recuperating from the weekend. A very close friend of mine recommended sitting this swell out. I would miss a swell but with it I’d get more time to allow my shoulder to heal properly. Overall, I’d get more longevity out of my shoulder. I didn’t want to, but I remained a dry-walker until the swell made its exit.
Summer, are you here?:
I wore jeans today at school. Mistake. I was so frickin’ hot. I showed up to each class in a pile of sweat. Perfect day for the beach, I thought. Even though I was gone for most of June, the consensus has been that this wasn’t a “true” summer; it was still a wetsuit summer. With the business day’s end, I drove home in a hurry with only one thought: grabbing my board and heading to Porto.
Injury or not, I’m paddling out:
The last thing I ate was a banana after my last class. It’s 1820; I’m starving. I bust open the fridge and tear into the pie that Cheryl dropped off last night. What a godsend. No, it’s not the best surfer fuel, but with an empty stomach that banana cream pie saves my life. I don’t think twice about leaving my wetsuit behind. It’s too hot today; there’s no need for it.
| Cheryl, you're awesome. Silverton too. |
My shoulder feels decent, but I’ll only know for sure once I hit the water. I look for signs of onshore wind on my drive down. The flag by the airport lookout point is dead, trees aren’t swaying, and the air remains stale from what I can tell. I pass Dockweiler but can’t tell what the water’s doing. I see Hammers and the southside of the jetty. It looks small. I can’t deny the classic, fall-season Porto atmosphere as I pull in. The sun’s getting low, the ocean is glassy, and the thin beach crowd is a testament to the summer’s end. I park at a meter that has over an hour of time left. Leaning on the rail I watch the ocean. Everything’s perfect . . . well almost. There are just no fucking waves. I send out a text to let everyone know the situation. Rick replies and says that I should’ve went to San Onofre with him this weekend. Dais replies and says that it looks better towards the end of the lot. I’m not sure if he’s watching the surf cam at home, but my pondering ends when he rides right up behind me on his skateboard and catches me by surprise. I haven’t seen him in over a week. He tells me that he and Khang scored at 26th yesterday. They caught an odd window in the late morning when the wind turned offshore, and they even saw some guys getting dry barreled. “You just had to be there, “ he says.
“Yeah, it’s just one of those moments. If you weren’t there, you’ll never know. But if you do go, then you’ll get rewarded.”
“I’ve never seen 26th break like that.” We look on into the bronze sky. “You going?”
“It’s so small, but it’s so nice out.”
“I’ll go if you go.” Just then a rare bump in the surface occurs, and some inside shoulders pop up; they look rideable.
“Yeah, I’m going.”
While I’m changing I meet a guy that’s packing up to leave. His name is Bobby. He tells me that he’s just making the transition from a longboard to a shortboard. I give him my opinion about the “learning curve” and how I went through the same. However, he reveals that he’s only been surfing for four months, and he’s going from an eight-footer to a 5’7” thruster. That’s a hell of a jump, I’m thinking. We shake hands, and I walk out with Dais to the sand. “I hope the temp’s not too bad,” says Dais.
I think about how musty my armpits were in class and how my stench probably turned off the sorority chicks around me. “Nah, man. It has to be warm.” It’s my first time surfing in over a week. I put my foot in. It’s kind of cold. I get waist deep. It’s pretty cold. I paddle into the breaking shore pound and get submerged. It’s freezing; I should’ve brought my wetsuit! The look on Dais’ face acknowledges my sentiments. Fuck my life; fuck our lives. There’s only one other guy bare backing it.
We only have about an hour to surf, and things start off slow. From the start, we don’t expect much. We sit and wait for the random bump. A couple come, but we both scratch out. I draw first blood on a small close out. I catch it too close to shore and jump ship in shallow water. Dais throws me a shaka. I yell out to him, “It still counts!” The tides too high; it’s drowning out any potential peaks that are smothered by the high water line. I catch another close out, but on the way back out I see Dais on a right-hand shoulder. At least we’re both getting something.
The sun’s just under the horizon. I see hues of peach and pink ahead. It’s a beautiful contrast with the dark sky to the east and PV’s lights to the south. The moon shines brightly above and shimmers over the slightly rippled water. I take out my trusty camera, but it doesn’t turn on. My poor JVC waterproof camera. This little gadget survived my whole trip to Bali. Finally, its life expires. It played its part.
It’s a miracle, but I manage to scratch for a left that has some shape to it. It’s fast, but there’s some length in the ride. Dais catches another one as well. Despite the lame surf, we’re still getting an experience out of it. And to think how spoiled we are. People all over the US take vacations to SoCal just to put their feet in the water, make a sand castle, or even see the beach. Us, we have it in our backyard. Who cares if the surf’s not great? We have to appreciate and value this. It’s life, it’s free, it’s nature, and we’re in it enjoying it all for it’s splendor and glory. And for how much? The low price of fifty cents since there was a free hour on my meter.
We call our last waves in. The darkness throws my depth perception off. I jump ship and ass plant in ankle deep water. Mental note: people get paralyzed hitting sand in the shallows, never again. At the shower there’s a beachgoer rinsing his feet. He has a chair and a cooler strapped to him. “How are ya?” he asks.
“Good. Beautiful evening!”
“Yeah. Finally . . . summer decided to show up!”
It did, at least in the air it did. I know that the summer’s over in the water, that’s for sure. No more bare backing attempts. It’s wetsuit time, time to invest in a 4/3 perhaps.
A simple evening and a simple surf sesh. I say bye to Dais on the way out. On the drive home my senses feel refreshed. There’s a slight blur in my vision from the saltwater, and yet the traffic lights have an ornamental quality to them. The reds and greens look like they could be on a Christmas tree. The sky over the ocean is so black that it’s stretches seem deep and infinite. El Segundo’s dark, but the street lights have auras. The seat warmer feels good against my back and is at odds with my lower core temp. All these sensations, they’re things I haven’t had in a while. It feels good to be a surfer again. Tomorrow I can feel good about today.
Ahhh what a beautiful evening sesh. I'm glad the pie sustained you threw it! Reading this made me really regret not getting in the water this past weekend, but of course there will be many more days to come. Thanks again for the DVD, it'll get me to this weekend.
ReplyDeletetoday is the tomorrow you worried about yesterday. so, feel good about today, today.
ReplyDeletei'm glad you caught a small window of the ice cold waters today. i wanted to go too, but i got home around 630, and that would make my arrival around 700, which would pretty much leave me with zero time to surf... yea, no boardshorts until your next bali/hawaii trip, unfortunately. the water just froze over the weekend.
so the shoulder's... 90%? don't push it!! the southern hemisphere is PULSING with swells right now, you can catch waves for the next two weeks guaranteed... no need to push push push.
anyways, hope to see you over the weekend
Cheryl, yeah, seriously. You and Silverton must've been "pied out" if you gave that delicious thing up. More time for surf. We'll be out there.
ReplyDeleteKK, you didn't miss out on much. I think after your recent swell campaign, you would've been pissed off in the tiny surf. I'm trying not to push it too hard. I'll do my best to save myself for the weekend. I need to check the swell.