Loc: MB, 26th
Street
Crew:
Klaude
Time: first
light
Conditions:
5-6 FT+, offshore, consistent, sectiony and walled.
“Forecast”
I’m no surf expert, but I’ve been trying to
pay more attention to how long period and short-to-mid period swells work.
After yesterday’s tiny session, it’s hard to believe the forecast that today is
supposed to be 4-7 feet. Being that this swell is short to mid, I wonder if
it’s actually going to have that much size.
“In
the Dark”
Everyone and his dead grandma will probably
be on it, so that’s why I’m parked at 0630 when it’s still dark out. I walk to
the pull up bars on the strand and take a seat. Surprisingly, no surfers are
out patrolling it yet. There was free parking when I pulled up. Other than a
few power walkers and one guy who’s doing push ups, I’m the only potential
water walker out here.
I can’t see what the waves are doing, but I
can make out some dark lines. When each one breaks, crashing whitewash races
along the water. Palos Verdes is my backup call, but it doesn’t look too big
out here. Maybe five feet. Manageable. One giveaway that it’s not too big is
that the waves lack bass, that pounding vibration that you would feel through
the sand and in your gut on a big day. It’s not huge and round.
I send a couple texts out and head back to
the wagon to suit up.
“In
the Light”
More guys are on the strand watching it
now. Only three guys have paddled out. A longboarder stands next to me at 26th
Street tower. I may have been a little wrong about the size. It’s still not
round and thumping, but it’s a little bigger than I had thought.
The guy looks at me, shoots me a half grin,
and shrugs.
A blazing pink horizon peeks over the
houses behind me. Even the water looks pink. Offshore texture, little
cross-hatched triangles flutter along the water’s surface. The waves coming in
look soft but with size. Unfortunately, they’re a little sectiony. I understand
why no one’s out. It’s gonna be a mission to find a good one with shape.
Did I say I’m no surfing expert? I sure
ain’t, but one thing that I’ve learned is the lesson of Respect. You gotta
respect the ocean, even on a manageable day like this.
Because the swell’s coming in nice and
consistent with size, it’s a long paddle out. I think I’ve surfed for about a
week straight, so about halfway out and my delts are on fire. I haven’t taken
any on the head yet, but there’s that warning beacon in the back of my head:
Beware the Line. By line, I mean how sometimes you think you’ve made it out,
and then there’s that fucking monster out the back, and no matter how hard you
try, you’re not gonna make it to the
chopper. But I do. I turn around. I’ve barely drifted. It’s manageable.
“Selling”
I see heads in the parking lot, dudes on
the strand. Guys are watching, debating. The locals aren’t out yet. That’s a
bad sign. Especially if Don K., the King of 26th Street, isn’t out
yet, then there will be a better window later. That’s what a lot of the older
vets do here. Patient in the parking lot with binos, it’s an exclusive club.
They might as well paint their names on the parking stalls. Whoever’s in the
lineup is a guinea pig. Worth it or not, our surfing will tell.
I’m not a fan of getting worked on the
inside. You ever catch a bad wave out of frustration, and then once you come up
for air, the real set comes? Yeah. No thanks. I think I’ll be picky instead.
I let the walled and sectiony ones pass. My
first wave looks like it has a shoulder. Paddling into it, I appreciate the
power that it has from its size, and I don’t mean power like gnarly barrels or
anything. What I mean is, I don’t have to scratch hard to get into this wave.
It’s automatic. One, two, three strokes, and I’m up with fluidity and ease, but
it’s too bad that the wave just stands up and runs away. Closeout. My next
right is smaller, and I get two weak backhand check snaps. Even though there’s
size, they fatten up on the inside. More closeouts. I do kickout snaps before
they dump.
My wave of the day is a two turn left. I
practice a layback turn and actually ride out of it. That’s something to take
home.
“The
Green Light”
The South Bay, at least Manhattan Beach,
can be fickle. Sometimes it holds shape, sometimes it doesn’t. Sometimes it
holds shape at six feet, and sometimes it closes out at four feet. Depends. It
always depends on something.
I’m not sure when the gun went off to
officially start the race, but now everyone’s out here. The only problem is, as
consistent as it is, shape is still an issue. So now there’s a sea of bobbing
heads, all waiting for that magic shoulder. I can already tell it’s gonna be
one of those days when you just paddle in for the hell of it, closeout or not.
Since the waves aren’t round and heavy, it’s
so easy to go for glory. I turn and go on an overhead wave, and right before I
slide into it, I see Klaude paddling up right next to me. He has his tongue
out. It wags rapidly as he shakes his head. The mating call of the Neanderthal.
Classic Klaude. I slide down the face, make the drop, and ride into the flats.
“DUMP
RIDER”
Back in the day, my friends and I would
joke about how the waves here are so dumpy, and that’s how the Dump Rider Crew
began. It must’ve been a year of bad sandbars at that time, no shape. We still
had fun on those days, and today is a nice throwback to that.
While most are picky, Klaude and I just
say, “Fuck it,” and go for everything. Down the line? Not gonna happen. Not today.
Yet, while everyone’s still stagnant, only moving around to dodge the
closeouts, it feels good to be making the rounds—paddle in, popup, closeout,
paddle back out, get another one.
Eh, nothing to brag about, but it’s better
than sitting still.
“Perspective”
From the sand, I see a guy pumping down the
line on an inside right. Two turns. Not sure if it’s the tide, but the waves
are starting to look peakier. There are more people out, more on the sand
racing towards the water. Ha . . . guess it was worth the wait.
ahhh that's right, i saw that layback you did. i completely forgot about that.
ReplyDeletegood day to just train our DRC spirit. even if we got to surf for one hour together, it was a lot of fun.
i was wondering why no one else was going for the waves this day. but maybe we're just used to going for shitty dumpers
Awww yeah. Always DRC style. Gotta let them know, don't fuck with our waves. "You gonna eat that? No. Give it here."
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