Loc:
Manhattan Beach
Time:
0645-0900
Crew:
Bri & Klaude
Conditions:
3-4 FT, light onshore, crowded.
Board:
5’10 Mini Driver
My phone gets blown up with texts around
0530. It’s Rick and the WHC. They’re already parking around Rosecrans to surf
Porto. I had just surfed last weekend with Rick, and when it comes to Porto I
usually only surf there on weekdays. It’s been a while since I surfed my
favorite local break. Since I haven’t surfed there in a while, I decide to make
an appearance. Small waves or not, I have to keep my membership going. Time to
punch in and get my local card validated.
Bri works, so she drives there separately.
I have to take a mean ass shit, so she leaves ahead of me. When she gets there,
she shoots me a Vox and says that the surf is small and no one is out.
Driving on Vista Del mar, the surf in front
of Chevron and around the Jetty looks dismal. “Small and no one is out,” she
had said. Exactly not what I want to hear.
When I pull up to 26th Street, I
see some small lines rolling in. The ocean’s surface is textured like stucco
from the onshore wind. Indeed, no one out. Yet . . . I already know I’m going.
I’m already suited up when I’m walking down
to meet Bri. I catch Stocky John and Mitch in the metered lot. After a small
chit chat, I catch Bri in Vietnam Vet Mike’s VIP parking spot.
We
warm up just south of the tower. Just from parking fifteen minutes ago, the
surf has already picked up a notch. The shape is a little messed up from the
wind, but some fast racy peaks are still rolling through, some with shoulders
to offer. Just north of Marine, the lefts look consistent and rippable.
Oscar, Kai, Young Mike, and a bunch of
other regulars are out. It’s crowded, but at least I know the faces here.
Sitting on the left, I actually score a lot
of rides. In the right place, I take off as the shoulders stand up. The waves
aren’t round. They start off soft with shape and turn sectiony on the inside. A
lot of them are four footers. Most of them are chasers, but they’re fun. I
finish one wave off with a solid carve, my wave of the day. Before long
everyone is out: Orlando, Jose, Ross, Roy, Don K “The King”, and Klaude.
I had scored a lot of lefts, so I paddle
north to the next peak where it’s less consistent. Obviously, Bri catches a lot
of waves on her NSP. She should be on the Becker, but it needs repairs. She has
to leave early for work, so for a while it’s just Klaude and I trading off
waves with the local vets. It’s hard for us to get a good down-the-line ride,
but Roy is shining, always picking the gems, getting at least two turns.
About a quarter to nine, the wind picks up.
A lot of people leave. The water gets choppier and the lowering tide makes the
rides shorter. After the surf, Klaude and I meet at Goodstuff for breakfast.
So today I wasn’t expecting much. With an
already shitty surf forecast and tiny onshore waves at first light, the surf
ended up producing more than what was called for. Most importantly, it was a
day when everyone was out, all the regulars. I can’t say that we are all
officially friends, but we’re at least friends in the water, part of the same
class at the same school of surf. I showed up, participated, and got points
attendance.

There are bonds stronger than surf, and there is no stronger bond than to share surf.
ReplyDeleteThe dichotomy of surf life.