Crew: Rick
& Shan
Time: 0630-0845
Conditions:
3 FT, inconsistent, crowded, gloomy.
I meant to surf HB because of the new south
swell, but on Sunday night Rick told me some bad news about a family member. He
said he was taking a couple days off from work, and that he’d be surfing on
Monday morning. All I could say was, “See you there.”
#
I celebrated the end of my work weekend a
little too hard. I should be up and at the beach already, but it’s 0545, and I’m
the phone with Rick. He’s already checked out both the jetty and 45th.
“You on your way?” he says.
“Yeah, yeah, ummm, just loading up the car.”
I try to make it sound like I’m not groggy. After I hang up, I get all my gear
together in a hurry and drive out to Porto. I score free parking on Highland
and 45th. Shan also hit me up yesterday too, so I send him a text
and let him know where I am.
It’s a gloomy morning, and the usual peaks
are working: sandwich shack, shitters, 45th (less consistent), and
the tanks (even slower). On the sand, there’s no sign of Rick anywhere in the
lineup. I see his van, but I don’t see his bald head where the packs are. I continue
my walk north. Nothing. I wonder if he’s at Hammerland. When I make my way as
far as the tanks, I see him running towards me.
His yellow fish is hard not to notice, and
he’s dripping wet, saying, “I just surfed the jetty and got a couple waves.
Thought I’d check it out over here.”
I give him a hug.
“I have to call work, Matt. Just paddle
out, don’t wait for me.”
Eh, I’m in no rush, and I think it means a
lot to paddle out together, no matter who you’re surfing with. “I’ll wait,” I
say. As I’m sitting down, stretching, I look behind me and see Shan doing the
same thing. “Shan!”
“Oh, Matt. I thought that looked like you,
but I thought it wasn’t.”
We catch up. I haven’t seen him in a while.
Rick joins us again, and we paddle out at 45th. Either it’s
inconsistent or there are too many surfers that make it seem inconsistent. Or .
. . it’s both. I’m having a hard time catching anything, but I try to switch my
focus by talking to Rick and Shan where I can. The bathrooms are working. There’s
a left that keeps lining up, but there are so many guys there. The current
pulls north, but I work my way south to fight it. Rick and Shan let the current
drag and keep them at 45th, but it’s too crowded there for me.
Rick leaves to take his daughter to school,
and then Shan disappears not too long after. Once I’m alone, I get my first
decent wave. It’s a left. I drop in, pump, check turn off the lip, pump, and
get a carve on the shoulder before it fizzles out. The sensation of the wave rejuvenates
me with life. I paddle back to the lineup optimistic and hungry for more.
#
Surfing Porto is like a love-hate
relationship. I’ve written it off so many times, but deep inside I love this
place; I always will. But on this morning, if you’re not willing to put
yourself inside the pack at the bathrooms, the shitters, or Rosecrans, you’re
not gonna catch anything. The secondary peaks aren’t working as well. I let
myself drift to the tanks, hoping for something. My last wave is a shapeless
wonder that pushes me on to shore.
When I get home, it turns out that the OC
has south wind fucking it up, so either way I made the best decision to surf
local, not just to save on gas but to also be there for a friend.
hahaha nice caption on the photo... that was exactly the conversation we were having.
ReplyDeleteit's good you got to spend time in the water with rick. i'm sure he appreciated it!
Dude, caption is funny but your FACIAL EXPRESSIONS. LOL! Any ridiculous caption would work here. "I'm pregnant." LOL
ReplyDelete