Tuesday, February 7, 2017

2017 – 13 & 14 The Return of Fran-Sauce


            On Sunday morning, I was supposed to meet with Klaude and Khang at 26th St., Manhattan Beach. Only issue is, with that day being Super Bowl Sunday, a gang of people called in sick, so I had to stay over to walk an extra flight out. When I finally arrived to the beach, the boys were nowhere to be found. I paddled over to a small pack at 30th Street and recognized sitting towards the inside. Instead of calling out his name, like I should have, I was trying to be Ninja Matt and planned on getting as close as I could to surprise him, but a wave came, and with that wave went Dais. All I could do was look forlornly towards the shore, knowing that my buddies were somewhere on the sand, heading back to their cars, and not even realizing that I had actually made it out.
            It was a major bummer, but at least there were waves. For the first time in days, the surf was actually manageable. I mean, there were some rideable peaks, racy, but still shouldery enough for a quick turn or two.
            I spotted Toru and Cliff, two 26th St. regulars. Cliff said I had missed it when it was good earlier, but when I paddled up to Toru he said I didn’t miss much at all. The tide was actually on the downswing, so if any window was rideable it was at that moment.
            The paddle out was surprisingly far, and the waves were breaking more towards the outside. I managed some long racy rides that brought me to the inside, but it was so hard to set up for finishing turns because the waves mooshed out around there.
            I surfed for an hour, and the wind started to change a little. The second shift was over, and most of the locals were gone for the day, already heading home to begin the pre-party festivities.
            Walking on the sand, I saw Francis waving me down from The Strand. Francis…he’s easily in my “top 5” as far as good men go. He was in town to take his paramedic test for his job on Oahu. I hadn’t seen him since last summer. With his classmate in tow, we headed to Seafood Town for their lunch special, and in the evening we went to Klaude’s friend’s Super Bowl get together in Culver City, where I finally met up with the boys and told them how I had narrowly missed them that morning.
            We all planned to surf the next day, despite the strong chance of rain. That Monday morning at work, it rained really hard on the LAX runway. It was the most coldest and miserable session I’ve ever had at work. With it still raining by the time I got home, I thought surf was out of the questions. I checked my phone. Klaude went to work. Khang was a negative. Dais suggested going around 10am.
            Francis told me we should just check it out anyway, and I agreed. “Sometimes all you need is that friend,” he said, “that makes you paddle out in anything.” I guess it had been a long time since I had a morning like that, but we packed up and headed to 45th Street, and right when we entered the lot we saw seven guys out. The wind was howling offshore, the inside was churning and consistent with kelp, but the waves breaking on the outside were actually clean. Suddenly, what had initially been a bummer of a stormy morning turned into a stoke filled changing fest in the parking lot.
            “Fuck yeah. It’s on,” I said. We giggled like little girls, or maybe it was just me. He sampled my wife’s chunky horse pill of a board, me on my puddle jumper. We paddled out into the winter water. I wondered if we’d get sick, and I hoped it’d be worth it if we did, but there we were, two surf homies paddling out together just like old times.
            To make the rest of the story short, Francis was charging on a board that I’ve only seen in small cobblestone surf. He took a lot of bomb rights, maybe only chest to shoulder high, and threw huge fans of spray out the back. I was stoked for him, for us.
            After an hour and forty-five minutes it was time to call it. His flight home was at five, and the ominous conditions from the storm still made the atmosphere a little sketch. We ended the surf officially with a late breakfast at Main Street Café in El Segundo.

            Here’s to the homie. Hope we get to surf again soon.


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