Loc: Manhattan Beach, 42nd Street
Time: 0645-0900
Crew: Rick, Garr, Klaude
Conditions: 2-3 FT, high tide, swampy, crowded
Board: Motorboat Too
I love surfing at my other local beach
break, but I have to spread to the love and surf with my other homies, too. So
I’ve figured out a schedule that allows me to surf with all my people each
week. Monday through Thursday is pretty open for me. I can either surf local or
travel to HB or as far south as Trestles. Garr likes to surf the Rosecrans area
on Fridays, so I can catch him there. With Rick only able to surf the weekends,
I have to put in a Porto sesh at least one day out of the weekend. This
morning, I’m meeting them at 45th.
#
This morning I’m a good dawn patroller,
catching Gary and Rick parked by the bathrooms before the sun’s up. Juan pulls
up a minute later. Even though it’s dark, I can tell that it’s swamp city out
there, but the peak at 45th is trying to break through the tide. A
couple longboarders get on the left. Tony, local thug life surfer, rips a small
inside wave.
Juan says he’s gonna wait for the tide to drop,
but I just head out first. Why wait? Some of those waves look rideable. I send
a Vox to Klaude and walk towards the steps that lead towards 45th.
It’s been a while since I’ve made this
walk. I used to know a lot of people here. I look to my right and Whiffle Boy
is there. He waves. I shoot him a peace sign and walk down the steps.
The paddle out feels long. My muscles are
aching. I’ve been surfing since Monday, and it’s catching up. I catch a mooshy
right and then give up on 45th. I sit wide south a little more
towards 42nd. Soon, I see Rick on 45th. More people
paddle out there to join him.
Gary paddles up behind me. “Look,” he says
pointing behind him. Klaude’s here.
Finally, I get an opportunity to catch up
with Fort Klauderdale. Being an accountant, he’s really busy this time of year,
pulling late nights at the office while trying to be a social gerbil at the
same time. Throw dawn patrols on top of that? I don’t think so.
Lucky as I’ve been lately, I get some
decent waves. I’m just in tune for some reason, and most noticeable, I’ve
really been getting my front side wraparound cutbacks down. Maybe it’s because
the surf has been soft lately, so it’s not like I’m getting snappy forehand
hacks, just being fluid, rebounding off the lip, being low on my board as I
redirect back down the line, and eyeing the section in front of me, preparing
to pump towards that open face again. And I’m talking only three-footers tops.
Easy surfing.
Gary and I are paddling back out when a set
wave breaks. Klaude pulls out. Gary tells Klaude that it was about to go round
and barrel.
“I’ll pull in next time,” says Klaude.
Either way, the wave looked fast to me.
We hold down the spot for almost an hour,
but the place just gets packed. What had been the no-man’s land that no one
else wanted to surf is now a prime surf zone.
There’s a Japanese chick floating around on
her fun board. Klaude chats it up with her a bit, even hooting her onto some
waves. She paddles and doesn’t catch anything.
Some longboarders paddle into our zone. One
guy goes left. I’m on the shoulder, but I pull out for him, and he eats shit.
Afterwards, the same guy paddles back out and takes the next wave again. Lame. It’s
poor etiquette. If you had blown a wave and someone pulled out for you, let the
next wave go. And then again, this is Porto.
Once Tattoo Face enters the zone, I’ve had
enough.
“He loves it over there,” says Gary. He
motions towards Rick. Rick’s right in the thick of things at 45th.
Leader of the pack, he’s catching back to back lefts. Paddling back through the
lineup, he talks to everyone around him. It truly is Rick’s spot. He’s at home.
Gary shoots south towards the bathrooms. I
leave Klaude (sorry, bro) and paddle for 45th, but it’s much too
crowded. I sit wide north, watching Juan get on the frontside action.
For old time sake, I paddle further north
in front of the Chevron tanks, but the surf is dead here. I’m forced to push it
further, and I find myself in the next pack. Whiffle Boy is here. I can see
why. To escape the crowd, this is where one must surf.
But the surf here is wonky. I paddle into a
wave as the backwash hits, and I chuck my board just before I fly into the air.
I have a good laugh with another surfer when I resurface.
I also get caught inside in a weird wonky
rip. It’s when a long set rolls through, too. When I finally make it back to
the lineup, I see that it’s not even a long paddle out to shore. Not sure how I
got worked so hard.
My last wave, finally, I have an open-face
right. I draw a deep bottom turn and prep to hit the lip when a fucking Costco
Foam Fucker drops in on me. Not only is he dropping in on me, but he’s going
left into me . . . the wrong fucking way. It’s one thing to snake someone but
to slide down into him/her going the wrong direction? C’mon, man!
Foam Fucker raises his hands in apology. I’m
so over it. I straighten out and eat shit on the whitewash. I’m shaking my head
in disappointment when I resurface. I turn around. Foam Fuck is still
apologizing. I put up my hand, gesturing, Sure, sure, it’s cool. Not much I can
do now.
Walking back onto shore, I catch Whiffle
Boy. “Looks like you had a visitor on that wave,” he says. “It is Porto.”


Duckbutter that was another memorable session for me witnessing the progression of the #DRC elitist.
ReplyDeleteI was impressed with your "go for it" attitude on a left set wave. I had to paddle my ass off to get out of your way, but your commitment was solid as I sank my board under the white water as you dropped in.
On the wave that @kloudymorning chose not to go on, well what can I say other than it was a go for broke wave that offered oppurtunities.... Defing moments, Cease those moments!
Rick owns 45th. I need to start embracing his tactics and team with him to split peaks or something, I just have a hard time when groups of 2 or 3 guys paddle out and sit right on you.
It's time for a #DRC / #WHC Expression Session Shootout! Duckbutter
Garr, thanks for the props. I've been having issues with timing on critical waves like that. For some reason I always end up late--it's usually a set wave that I have to turn and go on. I think that if I can position myself better and paddle into those earlier, I'll be able to set myself up better. Also, sorry for almost running you over. Haha. See you soon. Got your Pill.
ReplyDeletedamn, guess i gotta show up for WHC #GoForBroke challenge.
ReplyDelete