Location:
Old Mans
Crew:
Briana
Conditions:
2-3 FT, hot, glassy, consistent, crowded.
Good luck on waking up early with Briana.
There is just too much plundering going on to make up for the two weeks that I
was gone. My alarm goes off at 0600, but we stumble out of bed at about 0700.
There’s no debating on what to wear this morning. Bri and I both put on trunks
and rashguards.
The sky’s a bit overcast which gives the
illusion of cold, and as we walk towards Old Mans I still can’t tell what the
wind is doing. When we reach the lookout over the water, I take a good look at
Churches. Some small rights are on tap. The north side of Churches, going into
Middles, has another peak working. I turn to the left. Old Mans is clean, and the
northern most peaks are working all the way towards the military campgrounds.
We venture back to the same spot. As much
as I’d like to check out the other breaks at Old Mans, they just look too
crowded. It’d rather be at the edge of the lineup here than in the middle.
Besides, we have a pretty good streak where we’ve been surfing.
There’s a small gap between the crowd at
the peak and the surfers sitting wide. We paddle to the gap and wait. I feel
that my back and arms are sunburned from yesterday. My nipples are also raw. I
wince as I rub them through the rashguard, paying no mind to the other surfers
giving me weird looks.
Some sets come in at three-feet, but the
longboarders at the top of the wave have first dibs. It’s hard to get started.
Impatient, I rush to the top of the wave at the first sign of a bump. I hear
splashing behind me, and a longboarder races past me to get prime position and
take the wave. When the next wave swings wide, I hurry my little ass on Zippy
again to catch it, but the same longboarder paddles out to catch that one too.
I stare at him as he’s making his drop in the first section. I think my
paddling ability is not too shabby for an intermediate surfer, but I can’t
compete against seasoned longboarders; there’s no way.
A chick that he’s surfing with sees the
frustration on my face and says, “Darn longboarders.”
“Every wave . . . fuck.” I paddle away and
head towards Bri.
“I just realized what I hate about
surfing,” she says.
“What?”
“Crowds.”
#
I catch a wave that swings wide, and then
another one. Soon my wave count goes up, and I’m stoked all over again. Some
walled sets break on the outside. I always think that some longboarder’s gonna
be on it, but this spot is so mellow that most of them pass up the wave if
they’re too deep. I gun for the shoulders. Zippy’s so fast in the flats that
I’m able to pump, and get at least one turn on the second section before it
closes out. Being on this big, meaty fish and these small waves have made
surfing slow motion for me. All the turns are slower, but it forces me to get
really technical on feet placement and weight distribution if I want to pull
anything off. I really think I stopped longboarding too early because I didn’t
know how to turn yet, but being on Zippy is cool because I get to practice all
the fundamentals that I’ve learned since then. I now realize how important it
is to have the right equipment. To think I disregarded Rick every time he told
me to ride a fish “because you need a board for Cali waves,” he’d say. But there
I’d be, trying to catch two-foot mush on a standard shortboard.
It’s nice to drop in on such small waves
with the confidence that I’ll get to the open face. I take late drops that are
still noncritical, so easy, so mellow. I’m able to practice the basic turns and
fundamentals of surfing on such a small scale at Old Mans. Up on the highline,
I can see the wave forming. I drop back down with speed and trim back to the
highline, throwing in a slow, graceful turn if the momentum and shape is right.
But when I say turn, it’s like trying to move an ocean liner. I think that for
small days, days like these, I really do need a custom fish in my quiver.
Zippy’s really refostered my love for small surf and the stoke potential in
them.
#
Bri’s picked up where she left off, still
going through her fundamentals. On my way back to the lineup, she’s paddling
for a wave breaking towards the outside. She’s so deep. She’s on her belly
during the drop, and she purls. I hold my breath as the 7’10 Epoxy NSP shoots
out from behind her, landing full-length where Briana’s head is. She stands up
in the shallows next to her board. Slow and rattled, she gets back on and
paddles out.
“Did your board hit you?”
It takes a while for her to respond. “No.
I’m okay.”
#
Once
the wind turns onshore, we decide to head back to the cottage. After we shower
and change, we head back to the commissary for tonight’s dinner: tilapia,
zucchini, and squash.
YES YES YES!! gooooo fish!!! derek fisher! matt fishcakes!
ReplyDeletefish plows through all those flat sections... and that pumping motion.. it's so addicting! i'm sure you will transfer back what you've learned on a fish to the thruster. and it will be epic~