Thursday, October 14, 2010

Friday, October 8, 2010

Blue Chalk



First five
then three
now one.

October water the color of blue chalk, east wind smooth. 
Can see feet but no further into the blue floor beneath.

Hefty north west swell still, long rights past the north house. 
Head and a half on sets rope-y peels of blue glass.
Warm water gone and duck dives are cold again.

A brown jellyfish with two holes in it's bell drifts in the lineup , we  both wait for a push. 


Sunday, October 3, 2010

Noll final Sunday

Early Sunday inside lefts

North-west 10.5' @ 15secs had some size and some gems.
Three days of quality waves like this made for a great 15th Noll Longboard Classic

Surftwin takes 4th in a competitive gal's final..... sweeet!

I got 2nd with the very cool fin trophy. Good waves with some boomer sets.
On the left side of the photo holding court is Bev Noll matriarch to the event.
Mahalo Bev for a great weekend of surf.
:-)

Saturday, October 2, 2010

Noll-test

Solid waves Friday, small but still peaked walls for Saturday.
PC represented with by winning heats that lead to the semis tomorrow or placing right into finals.
Back to the exclusive gated community for massage and  abalone dinner :-)........

Our biggest worry is making sure the staff  has dry wetties on hand for us tomorrow. Missed the surf celeb welcome by a few minutes as we cruised out for a last light surf check........

Feather bed sleep tonight.....


Finals update on the morrow.......

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

It's time.....



Finally.........

Rock sliced toes

Crushing sets....

Mennonite-roca rolled tourist.

Heaving drops into sandy brown waves....

Ridiculously warm water

Ten and a half at 14....

Winter sized without the forty degree air.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Cauliflower, chantrelles and gun

 


Fall is busting in the door.

 


Time to store up and wax up.

Friday, September 10, 2010

The S.S. Minnow


As near as I can tell, this boat was beached late Monday a week ago. Either gas was low or they were running out of daylight. Not sure.
But that night the surf was small, probably 2'-3' max with light winds. Ding got it good and to himself  but left before this happened.

Tuesday it blew hard from the south so getting it off the beach was a no go. Wednesday was back to sunshine with north west winds. But now the swell was running twice the size it had been on Monday. We saw from the north end some movement on the boat. I had passed a beach ranger on the path and he gave me little info on the boat, but was hoping to get it off the sand before the Labor Day weekend.

Figured it might be the owner, sure enough it was. With two in the boat and two out they began to work the vessel off the bar that formed the mouth of the creek.Rocking it back and forth as the tide pushed in, they got into knee beep water and tried to push it out and over the shore break, but the boat was too heavy and the creek too shallow and despite their efforts they could never get to deeper water.



Thank God too, because between the beers it seemed to require for launch and the lack of life vests on any of them, it was going to go from funny to sad in a heartbeat. Last time I read a FiberForm owners manual they SPECIFICALLY forbade surf launches and I'm pretty sure it voids the lifetime warranty.

There was a solid crowd watching this spectacle but no help was forthcoming  due to the cockiness of the crew. When an old guy said to them "Good luck." the response was " We don't need luck, we got skillz!" forgetting apparently for the moment that those same skills that had beached the boat on Monday would now have to be relied on Wednesday for the more difficult task. Not a good track record. As they pushed it into the creek run-off the first mate(?) flipped off the beach thinking he was headed out to sea, but he had jumped the gun on that one.

The show came to a close just at the top of the tide when it became clear that there was to be no launch and they wrestled the boat back into the creek. And that was when I left, relieved that they had not gotten out. Between 6' sets, the wind and cold water, as well as the beer and lack of surf experience it would have ended badly.

There's a fine line between comedy and tragedy