LOC: Old
Mans
Crew: Bri
Time:
0830-1030
Conditions:
4-5 FT, sunny, light onshore, consistent
Bri and I are perfecting this whole “Staycation
Fridays” thing. We packed the night before, wake up nice and early, and we have
a good idea on how much food to buy. After our Vons run, we head straight to
San Onofre.
According to the forecast, it’s supposed to
be somewhere around three-to-five feet. I assume that that’s on a generous
scale. Instead, I’m expecting it to be around three feet. Really, I don’t care
if it’s huge or not, I just want it to at least be three feet, something I can
turn on.
When we exit the 5 South, we see the lines
coming in to Lowers. I’m stoked. We drive up to Churches, and my hopes are
confirmed. There is swell. We score the same parking spot as the week before. I
suggest that we do a little recon before we suit up.
It’s not a perfect, cloudless morning with
endless blue sky. The sun is hunkered behind some patches of clouds, but we can
still see the sky behind them. There’s a gray haze in the air, but it’s mostly
attributed to the mist created from the all the water moving around.
The wind is still offshore; it’s glassy. We
walk in front of Churches, snacking on Bri’s homemade choco-chip cookies. The
sets at Churches looks good at five-feet plus, but the tide is making the waves
a little funky. They aren’t lining up from the top of the wave all the way to
the inside. Some of the bigger waves are sectiony, leaving only the tapered end
at the shoulder to guarantee any distance. Still, a lot of in-between waves
have better shape. I can’t stop snapping pictures with my phone.
“Let’s see what Middles is doing,” I say. I
used to love Middles. I never used to surf Old Mans. I would usually start off
at South Churches and gradually work my way North. If I had no luck there, I’d go
to Middles. From there, I’d keep an eye on Lowers to see if anything would
swing wide. If waves did, then I’d sit on the south end of that world class
break. But on this morning . . . Middles is flat and crumbly. So is North
Churches. My beloved left isn’t doing so well, so Trestles is out of the
question. On to Old Mans we go.
#
I bring the JS just in case. I think it
would work well at Churches, but since Old Mans is a bit slower, I’m gonna need
as much beef as possible.
This is the Friday for the Don Kadowaki
Fish . . . but I don’t . . . fucking . . . have it. Don’t get me wrong; it’s
Cheryl’s board. If I really want to surf it again I need to just buy my own.
Well, so I don’t have the Kadowaki with me.
I’ll have to bust out the Zippy.
It’s hard to tell what the waves are doing
at Old Mans, but we can see peeling white wash at the most crowded peak towards
the center of the whole break. Our usual peak is too crowded, and the waves
aren’t swinging wide as much. We watch it for a while. Towards the inside there
is some shape, and the outside waves are walled. Maybe it’s because of the
size, but you have to be at the main peak to catch anything.
“What about over there?” says Bri.
I’m proud of her. She points to a peeling,
inside left that I already eye-balled when we showed up. The only thing is, on
a day when there’s size, the inside waves are gimmes. We need quality rides,
outsiders. Some big, clean, soft shoulders are breaking further south, but there
are a lot of longboarders there. This swell is obviously no secret, and this
place has probably been crowded all week, so we have no choice but to join in.
We paddle out at the channel. An inside
left approaches. It’s three-feet and clean. I try to turn and catch it late,
but my timing’s off, so I wipe out. From there, a set starts rolling in. Briana’s
gonna make it to the lineup faster than I can. I haven’t brought out the Zippy
in juicy surf, so duckdiving it is kind of a bitch. My shoulders are burning
from my recent workouts at the gym; I kind of regret not keeping my body fresh
for this morning.
We’re literally sitting in the channel between
crowded peaks to our north and south. I don’t want to compete, but I know I
must. It’s just so hard against longboarders. The San O vets know what they’re
doing. They’ll take the big ones on their longboards, bottom turn, swing them
around, and get LONG ASS RIDES. Bri and I sit a little more towards the inside.
I catch a few rides going left, but it’s a helluva wait for anything to break
here.
We hover on the outside of the north peak
to no avail. There’s no chance; every wave is taken. However, the break to the
south is a little more scattered, so we test our luck there.
Open It Up:
Things are slow. We can only watch guys on
the outside do their thing, but we drift further south which puts us in the
midst of some scattered peaks.
The lineup here is a little crazy. The bomb
sets break far . . . really far on the outside, some in the middle, the inside,
a little more south, more north. It’s like roulette, where you sit is where you
place your chips. Your number might come up or it might not, but you are definitely
in the game.
Sitting here is also a lot of work. Since
the peaks are scattered, as well as the lineup, surfers are going in every
direction. There’s a lot of maneuvering and duckdiving to prevent our heads
from getting chopped off.
My first juicy left comes my way. It’s just
a hair under five-feet. There’s even some marble whitewash and foam mixed in with
it from all the water movement. Getting into the wave is so easy. That Zippy
has so much volume, and combined with the push of the wave, I’m going faster
than expected down the face. I set my rail, crouch low on the bottom turn, and
begin to extend my body so I can climb the face. However, the drop’s so fast
that I have problems working against the Gs to stand up. Instead, I can’t
deviate from the set rail, so I plunge into the face of the wave on the bottom
turn. I resurface, knowing that I just blew a good one. I think about that
rail. What else do I need to do? Maybe get more on the tail; I need more control.
I’m better prepared for the next waves.
Zippy sure ain’t loose, but it’s working like magic in these big, slopey burgers.
I make the section of the next left all the way to the open face. My frontside
turns don’t have much arc in them; they end up being more like check-turns off
of the lip, but I redirect back down the face with ease and make the next
section. I feel I can get anything on this board in these conditions, just as
much as the longboarders.
It’s an inconsistent morning because of the
crowds and possibilities of where the waves might break, but every so often a
peak swings within paddle-reach of me and Briana.
We separate for a while and sit in
different spots. I see her paddling back from the inside every time I look in
her direction. Into the second hour, we reunite and she says, “I’m actually
going down the line now!”
I’m glad she’s getting this experience.
Even though there is size, these waves are so forgiving and manageable that it’s
hard not to find yourself in the open face.
The onshore wind picks up, and the high
tide thins out the crowd. Bri and I now sit at the main peak, hoping to catch a
random bomb. I pick up a conversation between two old longboarders.
Man: “Where
do you live?”
Woman: “Chino.”
Man: “Wow,
Chino! So you’re pretty dedicated. What’s the closest break to you?”
Woman: “Probably
Huntington, Newport.”
Man: “Yeah.
It just gets so crowded here. I don’t even surf the summers anymore, can’t do
it.”
I’m thinking how much it must suck to make
that drive from Chino to the beach.
Even though the crowd cleared out, it’s
still hard to get good position. There are still more surfers than there are
waves, and I’m so deep on some of the set-waves that I absolutely cannot make
the section.
I have a chance on one, but this noob drops
in on me. I yell, “Whoa!”
He tries to pull back and says, “SHIT,
SORRY!” He purls right in front of me, so I have to straighten out.
The funny thing is, I’m not mad at all. The
guy was sorry, and I could tell he
was genuine about it. I pay him no mind back at the lineup.
Now the wind and the tide are too much. We
paddle back towards the channel and catch inside waves to end the morning
session.
Back at the staycation site, Churches is
still firing, even through the high tide. The south end is working with set
waves breaking far out, leaving rides up for grabs for those sitting on the
inside. Some of them are sectiony, giving waiting surfers a chance to intercept
the wave.
Bri and I lay out our beach blanket and
kill off our food. We both fool ourselves thinking we can study or write, but
again, this place is too beautiful to ignore. The only thing that sucks is that
it’s much windier than last week.
Those are some nice pics of the peak firing...reminds me of when it's going off up here, just minus the crowds!
ReplyDeleteMinus the crowds and minus . . . MR. GREY!
ReplyDeleteI dunno...maybe it was his buddy, Mr. Hermit Crab that bit your toe!
ReplyDeleteSeems SOCAL has it's own sea borne dangers to look out for! ;-)