Matt's surf report

Tuesday, June 13, 2006


Outer Banks waves. The small waves were compensated by the huge fish! On Tas's birthday we had 8 Spanish Mackerel all over 1 1/2 lb and two Cobia- one 30lb and the other a Monstrous 65lb. Posted by Picasa

East Coast Odyssey

Its been a long old trip up from Chiapas in southern Mexico. We had hopes of surf on the Gulf Coast and some small waves were found. The bulk of swell for this area comes in the Hurricane season however and we were out of the Gulf area before then.

The best bit about being on the Gulf coast in Mexico was the coincidence of timing with the Nation's biggest National religious holiday, Semana Santa. Nearly every beach we found ourselves on was in full blown party mode with music, beer and shrimps top priority for all concerned.

One sobering aspect of this universal descent on the water was the complete lack of any lifeguarding system. Couple the mass influx of celebrating humanity with a general lack of water knowledge and skill amongst the inland population and the potential for disaster becomes obvious. On one beach, Monte Pio, two children were drowned in the days before we were there after losing their footing and being swept away by rip currents. We then found ourselves caught up in a similar situation at La Gloria, near Veracruz. Fortunately on this occasion we were able to assist in recovering and rescusitating the young lad, who survived- but the message was clear to us- more money needed both in education and in emegency systems.


Our route took us up the Texas coast and along as far as Mississippi where we decided to duck across through the Mountains of Tennessee and The Carolinas to hit the East Coast at The Outer Banks. Once again the best swell season here is the hurricane season, but at least there was some power in the waves here.

Spot list

Monte Pio (Veracruz state)

This is actually a beautiful area with free camping and a nice estuary. The waves were rideable but lacked power here, but a decent stormswell would make this a good spot to hit.

La Gloria, Veracruz.

Similar set-up to Monte pio and again a lovely spot with potential. We surfed it until the drama ensued (see above).

Costa Esmeralda

We surfed one of the beaches on the way up here. Lots of campsites and seafood restaurants for re-fuelling. Beach breaks all the way up.

Playa Bhagdad (On the border at Brownsville)

The last surf in Mexico- but worth noting as a free beach campsite near the border alas see above for wave and swell conditions.




TEXAS

State parks all the way up the Texas coast provide access to the breaks. Tas and I scored a few waves at North Padre island, and some more at a wierd oil refinery development near Houston, a State park that has been sold off to the Oil guys.



OUTER BANKS


We surfed Okracoke, Cape Hatteras and Cape Hatteras Lighthouse, but the best was at Oregon Inlet where a shifting sandbank had put a little peak right by our campsite. Fast little barrels... we longed for more swell!!


Tas going left on the outer banks Posted by Picasa


Small surf on the outer banks Posted by Picasa

Tuesday, April 11, 2006


Outer reef, Popoyo, Nicaragua...going off. Posted by Picasa

Update from the mountains of Chiapas

COSTA RICA

In no particular order the following breaks were surfed.

Tamarindo Playa, Estero & Playa Grande.

Good swell for two of the five days we were here and a consistent, well known series of breaks. Nevertheless surprisingly un-crowded by UK standards given the reputation of this place as the best known surfing destination in Costa Rica. The house Julie had rented was right on the Etstero which made it perfect for all concerned and the very best location for surfing here.

Playa Avellanas

Just down the coast from Tamarindo, and free camping right on the beach. Loads of easily accessed surf, in idyllic setting, uncrowded, rights and lefts off a series of rocky reefs on long sandy beach. Good for all the family.

Salsa Brava

See previous. After I wrote that blog we stayed another few days with double overhead surf pretty much non-stop. Nothing short of epic to describe this break.

Estrillos Ouest

Free camping under trees, right in front of the break. Mellow rollers for all the family- all the kids scored fabulous waves here. Great bars and restaurants within walking distance of the camp. No crowds,,,, fab spot.

Boca de Barranca

One of the longest left points in the world, and we were lucky enough to see it on a day when it was working. Great waves. Free camping in front of the break, (paid a bit to the restaurant for plugging in the battery charger).

Malpais

This is high on the nice surf holiday destination list- always something rideable, points, reefs, beachbreak all within easy access. The malpais surf camp provides everything you need but anywhere along this stretch is great really. We loved it and had a nice swell come in for two of our 5 days here.

Witches Rock

One of Costa Rica's legendary, but hard to access waves. We camped in the National Park campsite and were ferried down the torturous access track in a 4wd by Eladio, the mad local surf guru. Tent and water, mozzie repellent and surfboards were about all we had room for, so only stayed two days... but what a place! Tas dropped into one of the waves of the year.

NICARAGUA northbound.

Having missed Popoyo on the way south we were determined to hit this reef break of high repute on the way back up. Access from the south turned out to be harder than expected but the reward was a big swell and great surf. Cheap camping and mellowish scene ashore, but not as chilled as Majagual further south so on balance we felt that Majagual edges it for overall fun. Surf undoubtably high quality with some big, tubing A- frame waves on the outer reef, nice lefts and some rights on the inner. The kids enjoyed the lagoon too.

Coming back out we took the torturous dirt road towards Masaya and this turned out to be a real adventure through remote vilages and several dodgy river crossings. Directions for this route are available on the Popoyo surf camp website, but the surf camp itself is a fair distance from the break, so we stayed up by the lagoon in the backpacker's campsite, right by the break.


Tas at Witches Rock, what a place! Posted by Picasa

Tuesday, February 21, 2006


Salsa Brava showing it's teeth Posted by Picasa

Salsa Brava

End of the McCoy.

In some ways it could not be a more fitting end. Not for this board the ignomy of rotting in a dusty garage, the humiliation of spending the rest of it's days as a restaurant sign. This was a true grand finale, the coup de grace delivered by the axe-like lip of one of the worlds most fearsome waves.

This board was shaped by Greg Pautsch, well known amongst Californian surfers for decades, as a shaper with a clear understanding and an instinctive feel for the effect of fluid dynamics on the boards he created. My guess is that this one was built some time in the late seventies, perhaps early eighties.

The shape was fast, sleek and smooth, allowing for heavy drops down vertical wave faces without any flutter or deviation from the surfers' chosen line. The few times that I have ridden it up to it's potential I have been amazed at the way it held to the steepest wave face, responding accurately to the slightest shift in my body weight, guiding me through the tricky sections. It felt almost as though it had learned something over the years, from the different riders that must have used it. Perhaps it simply carried the experienced knowledge of the shaper; whatever- when you were on this board you felt as though you were in good hands at the most critical moments.

Salsa Brava is the name of the break... Wild Salsa it translates as. Hot and wild just about describes it. This is a wave that takes the focussed energy of trade wind swells which have crossed the Atlantic Ocean and Carribean Sea. On this stretch of the Costa Rican coastline coral reef ledges form an abrupt barrier to these often powerful swells. The way in which the wave rears up, doubles and triples it's height; and then throws it's crest horizontally forwards has given it a reputation as one of the most radical and hollow waves in the Country- perhaps in all of central America. Photographs of surfers riding deep in Hawaiian- style barrels have stoked the fire: surfers come from all over the world to ride this wave.

We were exploring the mountains in the central highlands of the country with Julie and Jill, when the weather turned. A cold front gave us torrential rain (our first for five months!) and unsettled weather for a few days. As we drove down the coast from Puerto Limon we glimpsed offshore reefs throwing up walls of water which collapsed in clouds of spray, visible from miles away. By the time we made it to Puerto Viejo, where Salsa Brava breaks, the sea was a heaving, grey monster- a far cry from the crystal clear, blue Caribbean we had been expecting.

Paddling out into the lineup at Salsa for the first time was a nerve wracking experience. The winding, S shaped channel through the reef boils and foams. Rip currents wash from the reef on either side of the pass- the deluge of water breaking over the outer reefs exits back to the sea through this channel. As you are swept out into the incoming swells surfers are visible, dropping into serious Salsa tubes to one side- perhaps every third attempt ending in crushing failure; whilst to the other side of the channel un-rideable mutants crash on the craggy reef lying just below the surface.

I spent a while sitting on the shoulder of the waves, watching and chatting with the locals, trying to assimilate as much information about the break as I could as quickly as possible. There was perhaps an hour till dark and no guarantee that the swell would hold till the morning- it was now, or maybe never.

Salsa Brava peaks in two distinct places, perhaps fifty metres apart. Catch the right one and you can drop in on one peak and fly through under the lip of the next as it pitches forwards; if you make it through theres a long wall on which to celebrate. Make an error of judgement and the punishment can be severe, as the second peak can drill you to the reef, roll you over it's razor sharp teeth, and leave you gasping for breath as the following waves finish the job of teaching you a damn good lesson. Not a place to practice this- it's all or nothing.

After a few testing rides and a taste of what the wave had to offer I paddled in, flushed with the adrenaline overload, relieved to have come through this introduction unscathed. We had an early night- the alarm clock set for 5.45- the swell looked as though it was holding after all-dawn was certain to be epic.

Two hours into the morning session I made the classic mistake. Tired after a few wild rides and some heavy wipeouts, I caught a long ride in, looked at the beach, decided to paddle out for one more before breakfast. It never fails to get me this one... one last ride, just one more! How many times have I regretted making this decision, but still haven't learned to pay heed.

So back out through the channel, back into the lineup, now filling up with late risers. Tired arms, tired mind: I took off on the wrong one, ended up caught inside, reef on one side, big set on the way. No way out but a relentless paddle through the impact zone and a series of deep duck dives under heavy lips, each threatening to take me to the bottom and the teeth below. The third wave was the one that did the damage.

I had lost my grip on the McCoy under the second wave as it rolled over me. With no time to re-mount and duck dive the third, I swum for the bottom, the board trailing behind me by my legrope. I felt my knuckles graze the reef, the wave impact behind me, relieved at first that I was through, felt the tug as it pulled my board,. But somehow I knew something wasn't right- the tug wasn't as hard as it should have been.

I surfaced, grabbed a lungful of air, looked for the McCoy. There it was, trailing folornly from the leash. No longer the sleek, fast looking blade: now a shattered stub of torn fibreglass and foam. Ungainly fins, once perfectly proportioned for the board's length, now suddenly, absurdly oversized for the remaining piece. In the distance, the front section wallowed in the uneasy waters inside the reef.

It was quite a job paddling the little stub back to the shore- through the eddies and currents, to the keyhole in the reef where deep water runs right up to the palm fringed beach. I flopped out of the water and unstrapped the sad remains of the McCoy from my ankle. In the distance the other half was held in a circling eddy of foam, as if uncertain whether to drift to shore, or out to sea.

It took me a half hour to paddle out on my old faithful and retrieve the wreckage, but I was glad I found it. I need the measurements for the replacement- son of McCoy, to be shaped at South Week Farm in time for next autumn- in Devon.


Shredded! Posted by Picasa

Friday, February 03, 2006


Tas has been getting some screamers, here dropping left into a fast Nicaraguan wall. Posted by Picasa


Suzanne's been taking off on some pretty big waves, dissapearing in a cloud of spray and reappearing, standing, to ride all the way to the beach. I'd like to add not a hair out of place, but.... Posted by Picasa


Harriet up and away. Posted by Picasa


Jemima getting the hang of the lefts, Majagual Nicaragua Posted by Picasa


Sunzal, El Salvador. An area laced with long points in warm water. Dawn till breakfast in the water, several hours in the hammock, sunset back in the waves.... it's pretty hard. Posted by Picasa


Majagual, Nicaragua... perfection every day although the water temp plumeted due to a pulse of cold current... had the teeth chattering a bit, we almost got the wetsuits out again, but... nah. Posted by Picasa

Friday, January 20, 2006

Mainland Meanderings

Waves waves waves!! Warm water, sunset over the Pacific pretty much every spot we surf.. truly the Mexico mainland has it all.

Consistent swell even at this time of year, even on the South & Southwest facing coastline between Manzanillo and the Guatemala border. It has been easy to find places to simply pull up and park on the beach, whether at the better known spots, such as Puerto Escondido or at unknown rivermouth villages down the coast towards Chiapas.

Coastal Chiapas itself still bears the scars of last autumn{s hurricane. The road bridges at every major river (and there are a number of these) have all been washed away. At the moment the dry season means that construction and repair work can continue apace, but the river crossings still involve driving over temporary rubble causeways or steel barge bridges. The estuaries and coastal valleys are a moonscape of boulders and debris washed down from the mountains.

We have hurried through this stretch knowing that the swell season kicks in with avengeance in March, when we will be on our way back up in a more leisurely manner... right now on our way to Costa Rica.

Good spots along the way however.. surfed on days off from driving or early mornings and evenings:

Barra de Navidad: excellent longboard wave in the harbour entrance- rights and better lefts over a sand bottom, friendly locals.

Troncones Playa: Long series of excellent beach & reef breaks, free camping, good Palapa restaurants great waves for everyone.

Punta La Manzanilla (just north of Troncones)

Superb left Point over lava rock, running into a sandy bay with a choice Palapa/Hammock set up on the beach.... choice spot. The next village up, even more remote, similar Left Point, plos good beach breaks up the coast.. more free camping. Great area and no crowds.

Puerto Escondido: Oh legendary One!! Surprisingly low key with free camping on the beach, waves for all (not too much swell) and all in all less of a hassle than we were expecting... we enjoyed it even!!

La Bocana, Bahia Huatalco.

A great, and relatively easy right Point in an area otherwise replete with heavy beach breaks.. little Oasis of pleasure.

Brisas del Mar: Rivermouth rights and lefts right on the Guatemala Border... no Tourists in this area but lovely little village, free camping in the yard of the little shop7restaurant in the village centre.


Monterrico, GUATEMALA.

One long beach break all the way down this stretch, but the odd sandbar gives the wave occazsional cause for shaping up a bit. You end up with a lot of black, volvanic sand in your ears as a result of the heavy, closeout tubes... but ashore... the Palapas overlook the ocean and the people are great. To get here you have to put the bus/car on a steel barge and float for half an hour through the mangrove swamp!!! Good spot!!
for further inspection...

Tuesday, January 03, 2006


Mellow end to a long day Posted by Picasa


Backwash Posted by Picasa


Sunset Waves Posted by Picasa


Sunset waves  Posted by Picasa


If not Surfing... Posted by Picasa



Back in more manageable territory

Saturday, December 31, 2005


Swell present from Santa! Posted by Picasa

The Christmas Swell

OK, this one was special.


I feel how a mountaineer must feel when they have at last scaled that elusive peak, a runner who has been training to break a time barrier, a personal goal that has been in the making for over twenty years. This was the fulfilment of an ambition that goes back to those first, floundering attempts to padle out through the shorebreak at Apple Bay, long long ago.

Here was one of those opportunities we surfers dream of and dread: a challenge beyond any we have yet encountered. We know it looks possible, it looks good even. But the sheer size, the overwhelming power, the extraordinary visual contradiction offered by a wave that is travelling faster than any you have ridden before, is higher than any you have looked down from; somehow playing out it's magnificent last moments in slow, slow motion, in front of your eyes. Worse: there is no one else out, you've got a couple of non surfing buddies and a nervous looking wife on the beach wondering why you're hesitating, and theres no excuse! There are boards to hand, time available, nothing to stop you paddling into the maelstrom of the shorebreak but your own pounding heart.

And that same heart chills for a moment when the first wave of the first set rounds the point, pushes out of the deep water over the shelf: that moment of suppressed panic, almost of total disbelief that beyond is another, and then another, that somehow these goliaths are able to defy gravity for long series of seconds before toppling, pitching tens of feet forwards and exploding into boiling clouds of thundering white water.

This all came about because we had been searching the coast South of Puerto Vallarta, and North of Manzanillo for a good place to hole up for Christmas. The surf literature is pretty thin on detail for this stretch of coastline: nothing on the web, nothing in publications like the Stormrider guide. Not even any tell tale boards hanging over the backs of pick-ups on the dirt roads... nothing, not a thing to indicate that there were epic breaks in this area other than a map, showing a hundred miles of very exposed coastline, numerous rocky points and beaches. There simply had to be surf here somewhere!

We had almost decided to stay back to the north, knowing that this next strectch could be trying. Punta de Mita had been pretty good- all the children had ridden waves (Jemima her longest ever), but the whole area was being developed and was one huge clog of diggers and earth moving equipment, villas and hotels. Sayulita looked like a fine wave but sadly overrun with tourists. We made the decision to head into the unknown.

The search began with a hair raising dirt road journey through the mountains to the coast due west of Vallarta. We discovered some incredible beaches with yet more turtle conservation camps, pretty and remote fishing villages; and some tucked-away high class hotels- but the swell was as small as we had seen for a while and any surf potential was hiding out of sight.

At the expense of a tyre and a shock absorber we ploughed on, the children increasingly anxious that christmas was going to be spent on the road and not on a tropical beach! The dirt roads gave way once more to the tarmac as the main road swung back to the coast and we rejoined the traffic heading south. We started to feel as though we would have to forget surf until after christmas, in favour of finding a child friendly campsite to hang the stockings in. This was not an easy moment, as the last forecast we had seen showed 40ft waves in the far North Pacific spread over a vast area- we knew a big swell was on the way some time in the next week.

We decided to take a chance on one more detour before heading for a safe campsite around the tourist area of Melaque- and suddenly luck was back with us again. We had seen noted in one of our campsite guides as an alternative to the more formal sites of Melaque- a place with no facilities, but off the beaten track. It sounded good and looked on the map like an exposed enough place to take in swell from most directions.

We arrived to find the campsite access road virtually impassable for a big vehicle like ours, but somehow scraped through the steep and rutted track onto a sand spit, perhaps a hundred metres long and fifty metres wide, the Pacific on one side, a calm bay on the other; and at the end of the sandspit a large rocky outcrop a hundred metres high, draped in dry tropical vegetation. We were met at the bottom of the access track by a silver haired Indigena who introduced himself as Chuy, directed us to a lovely pitch sheltered by the rock, overlooking the bay and only fifteen yards from the water;s edge. We all knew instantly that we had landed somewhere special.

Just how special was only to become apparent as the long forecast swell finally hit. These waves had travelled a long way, and had mellowed offshore to a long (18 second) period 6-8ft swell. It was when they landed on the steeply shelving beach behind the rocky access road to the campsite that we realised how much energy was still contained in these pulsing messengers of distant turmoil. The beach break was a solid 15ft crest to trough and landing on dry sand- I knew that all we needed to find was a reef, or channel somewhere for this to be a once in a lifetime opportunity.

It happened that we had met a very laid back Alaskan family on the beach who introduced us to one of their friends. Carlos knew exactly where we should go: "I've seen a place up the coast a few miles, it looks surfable to me- but I've never seen anyone on it, I'd love to see someone ride it!". It was enough of a hint to get us in the back of his pick-up for a recconaisance mission.

By now the swell had picked up to the point that it was wrapping a full 270 degrees around our sandspit/rock outcrop and amazingly, the coral reef in front of the campsite was starting to break too! Enough to get the longboards going and even Tas, now confident enough to be skimming over coral heads, was catching waves right in front of the tent.

Leaving the children with our new friends on the beach, we set off in Carlos's pick up, via a series of dusty tracks and through palm fringed fields of avocado trees and tomato vines. Passing through a number of lovely villages decked out in the full christmas regalia of flashy bunting, strung criss cross above the entire length of the village streets and around the main squares; the atmosphere was of a fiesta already gearing up to fever pitch- with a couple of days still to go before the main event.

At last we wound our way down the last few yards of a gorgeous, wide, green river valley, to see the beach ahead steaming with salt spray. Rainbows of sunlight sparkling through the mist told of the immense amount of water vapour hanging over the beach on an otherwise bone dry day.

The surf was huge- a five- wave twenty foot set was running down the point at the far end of the beach and nearer us, on the beach itself a mass of foaming white water was swirling around in rips and eddies. Backwash from the rocks at the point and from the steep sloping sand sent waves hurtling back to sea, and where they met with the incoming swells, the collision would cause explosive fountains of spray to fly chaotically into the air.

It looked pretty intinidating at first, but off the point was a reef, and a channel, and between sets there was a way out through the chaos. It was rideable- there was no doubt about it.

I had broaght along a couple of boards- my tried and trusted friend from England, a 7'4" funshape by Roger Tout of Bude, which had been a good all round board in anything from 2-10ft surf, a good paddling board with plenty of volume under the chest- an oversise shortboard shape really. I had also bought, in Santa Cruz, a 7'2x 19" McCoy semi gun by Greg Pautsch, mainly with Puerto Escondido in mind. I had tried the gun out at Jalama, California and Cerritos in Southern Baja, so I knew it to be a fast and true board... but this was scary stuff, I needed the comfort of my trusted travelling companion. I looked at the waves, looked at my boards, picked up the 'Tout and dived in.

I now know that it was a daft decision- but at the time my chest was exploding with the pounding my heart was giving it- and I was glad to have a quick paddle out between these huge sets. I made it out as far as I thought neccesary, and sat up,trying to control my nerves with long, slow breathing excersises, knowing that even if this didn't work, at least there would be plenty of oxygen flowing around my system when the moment finally arrived.

Which inevitably, it did. The breathing excersises ground to an abrupt halt as I watched, with morbid fascination, the first wave of the set rear up 50 yards to seaward. I could see already the wave behind and knew there was another 3, maybe 4 to follow. I knew the first was going to be an easier option, that the second and third were probably already too far gone for me to contemplate, I waited for the moment turned... and paddled.

The lift, when it came was more like a disney ride than a surfing wave- it took an unfeasibly long time for a start, from the first elevator whoosh to the precarious moment when the up movement slows, the forward movement increases, and the descent begins. Then there was this whole, extraordinary long drop- not a tense, quick bottom turn as required when the drop from crest to trough is a few feet, but a charging sleigh ride of a descent, straightlining down this long stretch of water, which however fast I tried to get to the bottom seemed to continue sloping down ahead of me as the wave sped towards the shore. Several seconds passed, and still this thrilling descent went on.

Eventually the crest of this behemoth pitched above and behind me and I tried to dig the rail of the board beneath me to claw some height back up the face, but the board had red-lined long ago- somewhere on the way down the slope the 21" width had begun overcome the 7'4 length in the unequal struggle with the forces of speed and stability. I popped over a small ripple of foam and flew off the back into the avalanche of white water descending from above.

I knew immediately that my choice of board was flawed- I needed the narrower, more nimble gun, but there was no way I was going back in through the shore pound now- and anyway I wanted another of those crazy sleigh ride drops even If the bottom turn was impossible- the gun would wait till tomorrow.

A couple more of these crazy journeys down this long wave face took another hour- for a start the sets were 12-15 minutes apart, and careful wave selection was required- the wide sets were peaking 50 metres from the "take off" spot, many of the bigger waves were closing out, and I was still nervously shoulder hopping in my quest to balance the needs of safety in this unknown place against the desire to make the most of the opportunity. Eventually I caught a ride in and was dumped unceremoniously on the sand by the shorepound.

Christmas took priority the following day, but the swell held, and we returned, two families and Carlos, on Boxing day, to find the beach as deserted as we had left it and the swell a mellower triple overhead. This time, without hesitation the McCoy was thoroughly waxed and pressed into service.

What a place, and although I have asked around and heard that it has been surfed before, it was still totally empty when we were there. Thanks Santa!!