Loc: El Porto
Time:
0800-0945
Conditions:
2-3 FT+, overcast, low tide, punchy, fast
Sometimes you have to know when to call it
instead of hanging around, doing overtime for one more wave.
This morning, I cruised through Porto,
there was decent shape. It seems to hold the low tide better, especially at 45th.
From there I cruised further south, where the surf is usually less crowded, and
it was a foot smaller. I turned back around, luckily scoring parking on
Highland.
The sky was overcast and depressing. It
would have been easy to stay in bed. I chose my Kainalu Fish over my shortboard
today since the surf looked small.
Dots of surfers lined 45th
Street to 42nd, and there were gaps of dead space between the
bathrooms and Rosecrans.
Sitting in the lineup, some guy yelled to
his friend, “They found the Malaysian Airliner!” I couldn’t help but eavesdrop
because I’ve been wondering if they’ll find that plane or not. Have I been out
of the news loop that long?
Some groms were in the lineup, and an old
guy said that it was their Spring Break.
It didn’t take long for the waves to start
coming in. Towards the outside, long peaks would sprout up, giving workable
shoulders at their ends. The low tide made the waves stand up as soon as they
hit the sandbar. Surprisingly, the sets were a little bigger than three feet.
I cursed myself for the wrong board
selection. I’ve been spoiling myself with this fish, and even though I had set
up all my boards for specific conditions, I’ve gained some weight, and the Mini
Driver is my only second option until I get lighter for my smaller boards.
My first wave was a closeout, and I pulled
in even though there was no hope for glory. Paddling back to the lineup, a
small inside wave came my way. I turned and went on it, and then I wound up
gliding down the line on its clean three-foot face. Despite the weather, the
water was glassy—no wind.
As the wave softened up on the inside, I
cranked my first top turn, but I drew such a long arc that I transferred the energy
into a small cutback. I almost lost the wave, so I took a step forward to push
the nose back down the face, and I slid right in. That wave was the best wave
out of the last three or four sessions I had surfed.
After that, I kept pulling in on the
closeouts, even pig dogging on my backhand. I purled doing so on one. My fish
wasn’t made for surfing like that.
However, I still manage two more fun rides,
going left and right.
With the tide going down, the waves were
getting faster, but they were still fun. I thought about the things I had to do
today: write this blog, read at least a hundred pages out of a novel for class,
and respond to some work email. I could have easily pointed my board back
towards the lineup and milked the rest of the window, but I thought about
calling it. Why not? I had already caught three decent waves. I could get an
early start on today’s business without draining myself of energy. And was
today the day to stay out for a marathon session?
I had fulfilled my stoke quota with the
three fun waves that I got in less than two hours, and the surf wasn’t epic to
justify an extended session.
Back at my car changing, I felt like I had
received just the right dose of surf, and I didn’t feel bad leaving it behind
in order to start my day.
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| Here's another pic of my friend, Rick, snaking me yesterday. He actually fell hard on my board, but he didn't do any damage. |

Good thing he didn't fall on the board he's riding because it is my Mini Driver. The last time I let Rick ride one of my boards he snaked Klaude, cut back into him and dinged the nose and blamed Klaude!
ReplyDelete"Who brought Barney" is the saying Matteo!
I remember that day! Wow. Haha, Rick and his snakey ways! Hope to see ya'll tomorrow or this weekend. It was scattered and punchy this morning.
ReplyDelete