Loc: 45th
St.
Time: 0830-0930
Conditions: light
texture, 2-3 Ft., dumpy, uncrowded
Board: Catch Surf
Skipper
As usual,
I scored free parking. I was on the later train to avoid the rising tide. I
wanted to catch it on the way down. I couldn’t exactly tell what the surf
looked like at the top of the hill, but when I walked down, I could see that it
was dumpy, solidifying the foamy as a good choice.
The
waves were super sectiony. The hint of a shoulder just stretched out over the shallower
inside and dumped. Somehow, I managed to snag the in-between waves that had
marginal shape, legit kissing the lip on my front side before the wave shut
down.
I pulled
into a few for some barrel practice but still wasn’t the worthiest day for even
that.
A few
longboard chicks paddled out and were jaw jacking back and forth about how dumpy
it was, and then a set wave came, one that actually had a shoulder. A turned and
scratched for it. I was literally at the end of the corner, right where it
looked flat but would immediately pick up as soon as the main lip folded over.
The drop was so fast that I had to knee ride it, but I slotted myself in the
hollow pocket. I don’t know if going to my knees is a bad habit or not, but I
can tell if I’m too late. Going to my feet would take a fraction of a second
longer and make me miss my mark of where I need to be. My knees though, if I’m
super late I can save some time and get in there, so I was. I was in there, the
white cavernous swirl around me turning white and sandy from the wave sucking
up everything over the inside bar. One of the longboarder chicks was paddling
out and saw me in perfect view. I knew I wouldn’t make it out, but I held on
and held my line until detonation. I had my arms up like a Y; I didn’t know
what else to do. And at point of impact, it’s like I was pushed forward in a
box of suds and sand, still on my board until I tumbled off into the shallows.
No consequences, no injuries. I guess it’s easy to get away with this when it’s
not too gnarly out, but even then, the bigger set waves are hella dumpy.
“How
was that?” the longboarder chick asked.
“I was
in there. It was super grindy. I didn’t make it out, but it was nice having
this board. I can kind of go for it on the foamie.”
We
talked for a little bit longer, but I paddled back to my spot. Another set wave
came, just like the grinder I had caught before. This one heavyset longboarder
chick hooted this longboarder dude who was at the top of the peak. He had prime
position. It would have been gnarly if he went for it, especially on his board,
but…he backed out. Right there on the shoulder, I turned and went. I popped up,
but my footing was off. I felt like I was wheelieing, hitting the brakes too
hard on my back foot. I never stuck my bottom turn to redirect down the line,
and just like that the wave crashed behind me. Fock, that would’ve been a good one.
And
of course, when I paddled back to the lineup, the heavyset chick was on the
balls of the other longboarder dude, talking about, “Wow, that was so dumpy! It’s
so dumpy out here!”
Sorry…I
am being totally judgmental, but yeah. At least I actually went for it.
And
that was the session. I walked back up the hill, feeling I got as much as I
could. Parking for free helped. No need to feel obligated to that hour or hour
and a half that I would have put in. Even on a day like that of insignificant
surf, I still felt good. It was nice, driving on Vista Del Mar back to El Segundo,
windows down and wind in my hair, salty, ready to move on with the rest of my
day right.
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