Book Review: Barbarian Days

Greetings from Costa Rica! 

For the first post of the year I decided to do a book review of William Finnegan's Barbarian Days: A Surfing Life (Penguin, 2015). I have been planning to do so since I first read the book, but other duties have kept it on the back burner. Now I want to give my copy to my brother before I leave Costa Rica, but not before I write this review.

Barbarian Days in the jungle of Costa Rica at Rancho Diandrew where this copy will live after I am gone. 

Barbarian Days in the jungle of Costa Rica at Rancho Diandrew where this copy will live after I am gone. 

I would think that most people reading/following this blog have already read or at least own Barbarian Days. I say this because it was given to me by a CSC member (Paul, who is on his way down here today), and I have had conversations with other members about it on rides to the beach. I see it on all of the shelves and table displays of the local surf shops, and two big chunks of the text have already been published in The New Yorker where Finnegan is a staff writer -- first "Playing Doc's Games" Pts i and ii, August 24 and 31, 1992; second "Off Diamond Head", June 1, 2015 (I have learned that most New Yorker pieces are simply discreet advertisements for future books). 

With so many people having read it or who are planning on reading it, I am not going to give a synopsis of the narrative. And besides it is a memoir so it should suffice to say that it roughly follows the events of Finnegan's life, which has been primarily centered around surfing. This is the first thing I like about the book: it is written by a person who is completely obsessed with surfing. He has structured his life to be able to surf, and even when he has taken hiatuses for work and self discovery, he always comes back to this driving force. In this way Finnegan's book has a legitimizing quality for me. The fact that he has managed to make a career for himself while still structuring his life around surfing assures me that I am not alone. He is also able to articulate the doubts that beleaguer this life choice -- those same doubts that are assuaged when one learns that others also have them. 

The second thing I like about the book are the descriptions of how waves break. After my first read I mused that if I took all the parts from Barbarian Days where he describes breaking waves I could have a handy little guide to surfing. I intend to write some sort of ethics of surfing one day, and so I admire the way Finnegan handles the basics of wave generation and mechanics for his non initiated readers: 

Here's how ridable waves form. A storm out at sea churns the surface, creating chop--smaller and larger disorganized wavelets, which amalgamate, with enough wind, into heavy seas. What we are waiting for on distant coasts is the energy that escapes from the storm, radiating outward into calmer waters in the form of wave trains--groups of waves, increasingly organized, that travel together. Each wave sets off a column of orbiting water, most of it below the surface. All the wave trains produced by a storm constitute what surfers call a swell. The swell can travel thousands of miles. The more powerful the storm, the farther the swell may travel. As it travels, it becomes more organized--the distance between each wave in a train, known as the interval, becomes uniform. In a long interval-train, the orbiting water may extend more than a thousand feet beneath the ocean surface. Such a train can pass easily through surface resistance like chop or other smaller, shallower swells that it crosses or overtakes.  
As waves from a swell approach a shoreline, their lower ends begin to feel the sea bottom. Wave trains become sets--groups of waves that are larger and longer-interval than their more locally generated cousins. The approaching waves refract (bend) in response to the shape of the sea bottom. The visible part of the wave grows, its orbiting energy pushed higher above the surface. The resistance offered by the sea bottom increases as the water gets shallower, slowing the progress of the wave. The wave above the surface steepens. Finally, it becomes unstable and prepares to topple forward--to break. The rule of thumb is that it will break when the wave height reaches 80 percent of the water's depth--an eight-foot wave will break in ten feet of water. But many factors, some of them endlessly subtle--wind, bottom contour, swell angle, currents--determine exactly where and how each wave breaks. As surfers, we're just hoping that it has a catchable moment (a takeoff point), and a ridable face, and that it doesn't break all at once (close out) but instead breaks gradually, successively (peels), in one direction or the other (left or right), allowing us to travel roughly parallel to shore, riding the face, for a while, in that spot, in that moment, just before it breaks (41-2). 

I have read similar descriptions before in books such as Drew Kampion's The Book of Waves: Form and Beauty on the Ocean (1989), Willard Bascom's Waves and Beaches (1980), and H. Arthur Klein's Surfing (1965), and can attest that here Finnegan deftly merges all three. What is of particular importance is the emphasis he places on swell interval, which because the waves are generated as described above, is the most important factor in reading a surf report. Interval, more than wave height, gives us an idea about the size and consistency of any given swell. 

The third thing I like about Barbarian Days is Finnegan's attunement to critical themes having to do with cultural dynamics. Most surf writing, like surf film, is just plain corny and shallow. For some reason the awesomeness of the ocean and the thrill of riding a wave has eluded surf writers for decades. Furthermore, surf culture more generally has a tendency to whitewash its complicity in the continued colonial, imperial, misogynistic, hegemonic, western domination of the known world. The reportage of his early days in Hawaii is a good example:

I already knew, in rough outline, what had happened to the Hawaiians--how American missionaries and other haoles and subjugated them, stolen their lands, killed them en masse with diseases, and converted the survivors to Christianity. I felt no responsibility for this cruel dispossession, no liberal guilt, but I knew enough to keep my junior atheist's mouth shut (17). 

Sometimes it is enough to admit one's complicity. I do not think Finnegan fashions himself an activist here, nor does he have any intentions to, but I do think that he does illuminate the political conundrum of the (especially white) surfer: we benefit from unequal power structures and feel them to be unjust and even though we know this, when faced with a decision to pick up a protest sign or go surfing, we will choose surfing every time. Nonetheless, as Finnegan shows here, we can at the very least learn to identify these dynamics and in paying witness to them try our best not to interfere with codes into which we were not born, or at the very least to learn to maintain a respectful distance. Anyone who has traveled to Hawaii to surf understands what I mean by this respectful distance. There are certain mokes whose waves you do not even look at. It is their land and their waves and if you are lucky and exude aloha (which is also a code of respect) you will get a few of your own--maybe not a ton, but that's part of understanding the history and acknowledging your place in the pecking order. 

The fourth thing I like about Barbarian Days is that Finnegan writes about San Francisco and New York, the two cities in which I have lived and surfed for most of my adult life (10 years in SF, going on 7 in NY). I appreciate his diagnosis of the difference in the two surf cultures: 

Surfers around here--Long Island and Jersey locals--are strangely genial. I've never gotten used to it. There was a baseline reserve in California and Hawaii, an idea of cool in the water--what was worth saying, what level of ride or wave or maneuver merited a hoot of approbation--that I internalized as a kid and can't unlearn. On this coast, people will hoot anyone, friend or stranger, for almost anything that looks halfway decent. I like the unpretentiousness, the lack of snobbery, and yet some unredeemed part of me recoils. Greater New York lineups are, against stereotype, mellow. I have never seen a threat or an angry exchange, let alone a fight, in the water here. That's partly because the crowds are never maddeningly terrible, a la Malibu or Rincon, partly because the waves are usually not worth fighting over, but mostly it's culture. A certain superciliousness and self-absorption that long ago became the norm on more celebrated coasts and islands in surf world have never taken root in these parts. It's easy to strike up a conversation in the lineup with a stranger here--I've done it a hundred times. People are even eager to share detailed knowledge of their local breaks. Another transplant surfer I know calls it 'urban aloha.' But it's really more suburban or shore-town. At least I've never met anybody in the water who said they live in Manhattan. Brooklyn, a few times, yes (419-20). 

This part of the book is clearly dated, either that or Finnegan clearly has not surfed Long Beach or Rockaway in the past couple of years. But the overall emphasis that people in the water are nicer on the East Coast than on the West Coast and in Hawaii still rings true. I know. I just got back from 7 day trip to California. Unlike Finnegan, however, I have gotten used to the genial vibe in the breaks closest to Brooklyn and Manhattan (and of course most of us now know tons of people who surf and who live in both). When I surf in CA I wish people would just get over themselves and share waves. On the same token, I have also seen a bit more gruffness on the East Coast than Finnegan admits to here. I have seen a woman in Rockaway completely scream at two guys for close to 15 minutes straight and have also seen photos of another man from there attempting to rip the fins out of a another guy's surfboard.  But that is seriously nothing compared to the daily bad vibes and heinous stuff I have seen and experienced growing up on the West Coast. In this light, I do understand and identify with Finnegan's reticence to feel more a part of the East Coast surfing culture. There's a part of a West Coast surfer's mentality that makes you feel that people have to earn their excitement about surfing. That's the reserve he's talking about, the idea of cool. You pull into a barrel and come out with your head down as if nothing happened at all, giggling to yourself, and feeling superior in a very strange and powerful way. You are not going to claim it, but you will certainly accept any and all compliments. The truth is though, that there are surfers like that on both coasts. And there are also wild yahoos with no etiquette on both coasts. And the waves are more powerful on the West Coast. And people are more gruff. And when New Jersey is doing it's thing it is as good as anywhere that gets perfect in the world. So is Ocean Beach, SF. But the paddle, like the culture, is concretely more difficult. And yet, both densely populated urban areas are pretty awesome places to be a surfer, especially if you have a lot of drive and a knack for cold water and weather (and a car helps too--for escaping). 

My only criticism is that in many ways Finnegan is a grumpy old elitist fart. He knows that. He is honest about it and it is refreshing, but it is still what it is. He learned to surf in the 1960s in the meccas of surfing, Southern California and Hawaii. His dad was in film and became a kind of aficionado of films made by the sea and so he was always in great locations at a time when there were relatively few surfers around. He went on insane adventures and charges huge surf and believes that you have to take your hard knocks because that's how he did it. He resents how popular surfing has always been, mocks surf schools, and professional surfing. And I get it and I give it to him, but at the same time, at the very heart of it, it is the one thing that I am ambivalent towards in this book. This is probably because it is what I struggle with most with myself. Surfing is both something that I want desperately to share with other people and to keep to myself. But, to be completely transparent, I have found the genial, sharing with others kind of surfing, mixed with the codes of etiquette and respect of the old ways is truly the future of our great language game. This belief is ultimately why I founded Conatus Surf Club. I believe, unlike many old salty dogs, that like any language, the crucial parts of the surfing vocabulary can be and ought to be taught in a roughly formal manner. The wild west individualist approach has its merits, but overall I think that it is possible to integrate it in a more flourishing and communal way. We are capable of sharing waves with one another. We are also capable, still in 2016, of finding moments and peaks without many other people except our good surf buddies. You just have to have the gumption and fortitude to track them down, to choose joy through a certain kind of wild discipline, a sort of barbarian code of honor.  

The word barbarian is extremely loaded. It is not as though barbarians are not civilized, if by civilized we mean having language and codes of conduct. In fact it is kind of a misnomer for any culture outside of the hegemonic fold. In the original sense it simply means 'non-Greeks', at the time when the Greeks were founding all of Western philosophy, science, and history. But barbarians, like surfers, were only quasi counter-hegemonic. Barbarian cultures have always had their own myths, their own leaders, their own norms, their own sectarian squabbles, and even their own revolutions. Like all species and tribes, moreover, they also shift, change, mutate, transform, and ultimately (I like to think) evolve. 

In summation, this is an instant classic of surf literature, if that's even a genre. It is easy to forgive Finnegan for his barbaric prickliness because he provides us the historical coordinates in which we can contextualize it. And it is important for all of us to have this historical scope. Surfing, like everything else in our culture, is easier to access and consume than ever before. And besides that it has always been susceptible to extreme poseurs. This kind of unreflective consumption does need to be avoided and one of the best ways to do so is to arm oneself with a kind of deep historical grit. Finnegan is a forefather of the city surfer, a most civilized barbarian, and it pays to sit and listen to him talk story for 447 pages.  

What A Wonderful End to A Wonderful Year

Seekers of aquatic joy: 

What a wonderful 2015 it has been! And as the year winds down it's gearing up to get even better for 2016. I'm writing to you from PG Juice n' Java in Pacific Grove, CA where I've come to visit my family for a week before heading off to run our first retreat in Costa Rica at Rancho Diandrew. The waves are small here today, but there's a building NW swell in the water. The Surfline camera in Ocean Beach, San Francisco is showing some nice 3-5 foot peaks, which means mostly flat conditions for us in the Monterey Bay unless we seek out the most exposed of spots. If it was not for family obligations I might have mind to drive the two hours north, but sometimes, even for the most surf frothy (like me), you have to put your surf plans on the back burner to be with those who you love. In this case, I'm really here to visit my grandmother, Joanne Mattison. My grandma is still alive and kicking but life is not getting easier for her. She can no longer dive to great depths and take underwater photographs or kayak miles down the Elkhorn Slough or go on photo expeditions to Africa or the Galapagos. But she can share her many brilliant memories and that's what I'm here for. 

Of course I've been able to get some surf. It was really great two days ago! Here's an example of the wave that really groomed my surfing:  

DSC00608 (1).jpg

I shot this with CSC's new Sony a6000 camera. This kind of high quality surf image is a sign of things to come for CSC in 2016! This year we were super fortunate to have a ton of dedicated people come to us for mentorship and now we have a healthy membership base of people advancing their surfing to the level where it is now possible for us to take still and moving images of CSC members as they move forward in their surfing journey. Even though seeing oneself surfing can be painful, ultimately it is the best way to improve timing, style, and positioning. It is all about facing oneself and one's weaknesses with humility and honesty. And believe me when you use all of the technical resources at your disposal to find that perfect peak it will have all been worth it. 

What else? Well I just wanted to say thanks to everyone who made 2015 an awesome year. Thanks to my fiancé, Sophia, for putting up with all of the sand. Thanks to Chris Blotiau who came on board to teach lessons for CSC in Montauk. I am really looking forward to planning awesome stuff with Chris for this coming summer season. Thanks to my brother Andrew Mattison for coming on board with CSC to make these camps in Costa Rica a reality. Thanks to Doug Hwang at Tygershark NYC (a rad new coffee shop/fish restaurant/surf shop on Vanderbilt and Dean in Brooklyn) for hosting our holiday party and being a rad dude in general. Thanks Joe Falcone, Rick Malwitz, and Mark Petrocelli for shaping awesome surfboards. Thanks also to the guys glassing these boards and Greenlight Surf Supply for supplying the blanks. Thanks to all the surfshops in Long Beach, Rockaway, Brooklyn, and Manhattan for keeping all the frothy people stocked and stoked with wax and suits and boards and books and all things surf. Thanks to Johnny, Sam, JP, Juan, Bennet, Gus, Heath, Luke, and Andrew and all the shredders who keep me amped and push me to surf smoother and more radically. Thanks to Julien Roubinet and Manny Angelakis for taking photos. Thanks to Bryan Döring for being a complete frother. And to Kyungmi for videoing us when the surf is too big for her. And most of all thanks to everyone who believes in the CSC vision and who has come to us for mentorship and guidance in their quest to find joy in the surf. Without you none of this is possible. From the bottom of my heart I want to express how happy it makes me when I see your shining faces paddling out, catching waves, getting your first boards and suits, and just generally becoming indoctrinated to the wonderful world of surf. Here's to so much more froth and joy in 2016! Yew!!!!! 

-Dion

Mini Missions and Vids

What a great first two weeks of November! Conditions have been tricky to nail down, but there have been at least 1-3 quality windows for surf every week. I recently ran two off the cuff surgical strike missions with my current roster of students who have purchased packages. Both times we scored empty waves for hours and they were huge successes overall. The first trip was to Asbury Park followed by lunch and a second surf in Long Beach. Both times we found a peak with no one on it and scored it all to ourselves. The second was a one day trip to Montauk where we went into full search mode, settled on a fun little beach break (again, no one out), ate steaming cups of clam chowder on the side of the road, and then traveled back to New York. I dropped everyone off at the subway stops I picked them up at (the Franklin 2/3/4/5 and the Bedford/Nostrand G) and went home and started editing video. 

In between these two extremely rad mini surf trips we had a great day of surf in Long Beach. That was Wednesday this week. One of my most dedicated acolytes, Beccy, got in a lesson in the morning before heading to work. I picked her up at the LIRR in LB at 6:22a and dropped her off at 8:30a. She charged hard and I managed to get her best waves on video. In a relatively short amount of time, Beccy has come a really long way with wave judgment and timing and overall surfing ability. After I dropped her off at the train I went back to the beach to try to get a few clips of the super smooth surfing of my friends Gus and Bennet, who were also getting in a session before they had to run off to their work life obligations. This I did and then I got so excited by their surfing that I had to paddle out again. My friends Bryan and Kyungmi joined in for the second surf and JP was also there. We took a short break in the middle of the day. I downloaded footage onto my computer and ate some bananas. Then we went for our third and final surf. The waves were still glassy and clean. We were joined by my great friend, Juan, who proceeded to shred it up all over. 

These little surf missions, along with more video, are definitely the direction that CSC is headed (along with lots of other cool stuff to be sure). In fact, this is a good example of how I plan for the Costa Rica camps to play out except that there will be a bit less driving and the water will be a lot warmer! There are still plenty of spots for the January camps, and I would like to get them booked asap. If you want to be cruising down the line by the time summer rolls around you need to get involved with these!  

And to cap off this post I'm going to leave you with two little edits that I have recently completed. The first is a compilation of the past two weeks, excepting the Montauk trip. It features JP, Beccy, Mariza, Paul, Bennet, Gus, Bryan, and Juan. The second was taken on a clean day the last week in October and features JP, husband and wife super team Maiko and Shigeru, and a local Long Beach guy named Justin. 



My Favorite Surf Flicks

As per the request of an esteemed student, this is a post about my favorite surf films. Admittedly, I have not seen every surf film ever made. On the one hand, one would have to define the category of "surf film" more narrowly in order to even accomplish that task because if you opened it up to non-published films by local savants the task would be beyond gargantuan. Surfing and photography/film go together like peanut butter and jelly or like mustard and pate, depending on your taste. The ocean and its waves are an endless source of photographic inspiration even for non surfers. This is because ocean waves and thus surfing are so phenomenologically dynamic and elusive. In its essence surfing is a sublime practice and human beings have always been in the business of trying to capture the sublime if only for the very reason that it represents the infinite that we feels ourselves to be a part but which at the same time seems to always elude us due to the consciousness of our finitude (that was a very Kantian formulation -- Kant was on to something there). We want to capture 'the moment' precisely because the moment passes. Furthermore, in the moments that we ride waves we do feel ourselves to be participating in some kind of immortality. Capturing these rides in such a way that we can see ourselves from outside of ourselves, or see others participating in that very act, that gives us so much joy and thus increases our capacity to access not only the memories we have of riding waves, but also the actual rides themselves. This is why video analysis and coaching is becoming such a huge part of my teaching method and my overall blog and brand output.

As most of my readers and students know, I've been surfing my whole life, so there's hardly a time that I can remember when surfing magazines and films were not somewhere in my peripheral vision, if not the objects of my direct attention. But watching surf movies did not really become a huge part of my life until 1991, when my surf obsession began to blossom into a full blown mania. Long before then, however, the local surfers established a Moss Locals Surf Film night at the Elkhorn Yacht Club, and a lot of my introduction to surf films was at this event. We would all gather together for a barbecue, raffle, and a screening both of slides and movies taken throughout the year in Moss Landing and there would also be a screening of a recent or popular surf movie. I remember one such night in 1992, 93, or 94 when they were screening Jack McCoy's Bunyip Dreaming (1990) and Luke Egan launched into a duck dive, a paddling maneuver that had been eluding me, and I turned to my best friend, Andrew Dolan, and exclaimed, "Oh so that's how you do it!" Our lives in the impact zone greatly improved after that night. 

You will see that a lot of the films listed below are from the 1990s. This is because in the 90s I watched the most surf videos in my life. I was ages 10-20 and had the most free time to indulge in a life dedicated mostly to surfing and watching surf videos. I remember whole summers where Andrew and my routine was to wake up at dawn and surf for 2-4 hours, go back to his place and eat breakfast, then watch 1-2 surf videos, then draw a little, then go back to the beach and surf again, perhaps till dark, then go back to his place and watch more surf videos (Andrew lived one mile closer to the beach than I did). At this time, however, I was most interested in what is now called 'surf porn' or 'hardcore surf films', which means nothing but high performance or new school surfing set to music, with a few adolescent male antics, and little to no awareness of issues to do with colonialism and imperialism and misogyny and corporate stench. Some did this better than others. Taylor Steele was and is the master of this genre and we ate up all of his flicks, beginning with Momentum (1990), like candy. I honed in on the Machado sections and emulated him as much as possibly could. For me Rob had the most style out all of Taylor's surf subjects, and I was keen to develop that over all of the other technical stuff.

Because I became (and still am) so obsessed with style, probably the most influential movie of the 90s for me was Andrew Kidman's Litmus (1996). In a recent SURFER magazine article titled "The Litmus Effect" (October 2015), Steve Shearer argues that wasn't just true for me, but that Litmus changed the way "high performance" surfing and boards are thought of more generally. That is to say, Litmus, is not just your thrash bash smash surf porn, but was a move towards a more thoughtful, reflective, and inclusive idea of who and what constitutes great surfing. Shearer writes: "In surfing's most conservative era, Litmus aimed to expand minds and quivers alike. Twenty years later, its impact is still being felt." Both Andrew (Dolan -- my friend) and I were particularly blown away by Derek Hynd's surfing at J-Bay on a variety of radical equipment. The lines he draws in that segment are so smooth and simple yet so radical, and he did the first ever frontside layback in a tube we had ever seen (and I haven't seen another since although I tried to do one last Monday in Long Beach). Slowing down and looking around to speed up became the new money in our game. 

I am starting to realize that, like most things I begin to write about on here, I could pen a whole book on the subject of how surf films have influenced my surfing and where they correspond to certain moments in my life. I suppose film works in this way generally for lots of us born any time in the past 100 years. But I realize that this is the internet and attention spans tend to run on the shorter side, so I'll wrap this up for now with a list on the most influential surf films in my life, with a few highlight notes. Some of these are hard to find. Some you can find on surfmovies.org or thesurfnetwork.com (the former is free and spammy and the latter has an annual membership fee and has a lot of films, but is also rather limited). Others you may find in your local surfshop or on the filmmaker's website or even on Amazon or Ebay. I'm going to list them in chronological order, even though I may not have encountered them in that way in my life. 

The Endless Summer (Bruce Brown, 1966)

However contrived it may be, The Endless Summer remains the classic surf adventure story. It's pre shortboards, pre board bags, pre roof racks, pre WSL and pre huge fashion industrial complex surf clothing companies. I am too skeptical to ever be a purist, but I do believe that there is something quite distilled in Mike Hynson and Robert August's surfing in this film. I find it extremely instructive to watch these guys surfing with the utmost ease and grace without leashes on 30+ lb boards in waves they have never surfed before. Just cover your ears when Bruce Brown says anything about "the natives" or women. 

Style Masters (Spyder Wills, 1979)

I was introduced to Style Masters while working at Aqua Surf Shop in SF in the early 00s. This is a classic compendium of North Shore style gurus. You want to learn to soul arch, barrel ride, and hand jive? This is the film for you. 

Bali High (Steve Spaulding, 1981)

 Bali High is actually the first surf film I have ever watched. My dad is good friends with Steve Spaulding, who hails from Monterey, and is an honorary Moss Landing local. From ages 6-15 it was in a solid weekly rotation with Top Gun (1986) and The Sound of Music (1965). While I learned to sing "Do-Re-Mi" I also soaked in Tommy Carroll's insane tube skills at Uluwatu. Really inspiring for a young goofy foot. But seriously, there is epic footage of unspoiled Bali in this film. Big, perfect, empty waves. Steve helped run the first resort at G-Land in 1979, something I have to pick his brain about very soon. 

Bunyip Dreaming (Jack McCoy, 1990)  

Despite what I said about Litmus in the introduction, overall, I might actually have to say that Jack McCoy's early 90s trilogy, Bunyip Dreaming (1990), Green Iguana (1992), and The Sons of Fun (1993) were in many ways the most influential surf films for me just for sheer amount of hours I spent watching them. Bunyip follows the alter ego of Mark Occhilupo, named Rocky, in a quasi aboriginal 'dream time' where he threads blue tube after blue tube and does the sickest hair whip gouges on boards that look to have little to no rocker. This cemented and made concrete the myth I had heard about in a bar in Costa Rica when I was 11 that Occy is "the greatest goofy foot of all time." (What was I doing in a bar at 11? Story for another time.)  Furthermore, Peter King's help on the soundtracks, turned me on to Concrete Blonde, which has remained my favorite band of all time. These are available in a triple DVD set on Jack's website. I own all three. They're in Costa Rica and we'll be watching them at our camps this January!

The Search (Sonny Miller, 1992)

 Oof, another one that gets damn close to the "most influential" prize. My Uncle Ted (my mom's younger brother) gave me this on VHS for Christmas in 1993. We were in Annapolis. It was snowing. I was wearing my Haut Surfboards sweatshirt, Quiksilver jeans, and Uggs, pretending to be back in CA. When I got this I immediately went downstairs to the entertainment room at my aunt's and popped it in the VHS player and my mind was blown by Tom Curren's psychotically smooth and radical surfing. "The Search" was a concept I think conceived by my hero Derek Hynd who did some work for Ripcurl at the time. Well, as usual, Derek nailed it on the head. Features an eclectic cast including a young Davo and an on his way to writer-dom Jamie Brisick. Hard video to track down. Tom Curren's blow tail with only one or two toes on the board is not to be missed. I must have rewinded and paused and slo-mo-ed that part over 1,000 times.

Momentum (Taylor Steele, 1990)  

Enter the NEW SCHOOL. Every magazine was writing about it. Kelly Slater. Rob Machado. Taylor Knox. Kalani Robb. Shane Dorian. Taylor Steele's Momentum defined the new light equipment, aerial focused, rad shred, southern California punk rock-inspired generation that would lead the way for all surf videos that were produced in the later 90s and early 00s. He literally made the formula for it. Now I can only handle 2-5 minutes of this kind of mindlessness, but when I was a pre-teen and teenager this was manna. 

Litmus (Andrew Kidman, 1996)

I think I may have said enough about this film in the preamble, but it is fitting that it comes after Momentum because there is a sense in which this film is the antidote to the Momentum/Modern Collective ilk of youth-focused, fast, intense, untouchable, radness. In an indirect barb at this kind of mentality, Wayne Lynch says in the beginning of the film, "Surfing has gotten older and it needs to grow up." Don't get me wrong, this is still a film that's pretty much just surfing set to music, but everything about it is toned down and a bit grittier. It offers new perspectives, and perhaps starts to lead us towards less fascistic surfing futures. Definitely a lack of the lady shredders though, which Kidman has sought to reconcile in his recent work with Stephanie Gilmore. 

Thrills, Spills, and Whatnot (Dane Reynolds, 2011)

What, Dion?! No surf films from 1996-2011?!! Well, yeah I guess so. There were tons of films made in that time period. I have seen a lot of them, but none really struck my fancy until Dane Reynolds started putting out films. First of all, this film was free, and came with a certain issue of Surfing Magazine, so good on Dane for that Robin Hood maneuver. Secondly, films just got too rad in the 00s and too slick, too edited, too nonchalantly colonialist. While Dane Reynolds is one of the raddest, if not the raddest, most untouchable, surfers skill-wise, he shows his human side in this film (and in all of his other projects too). He shows the spills and the whatnot that go to make up a majority of our surfing experiences. That's what we bog through to get to the thrills. I love that about Dane's approach to filmmaking. And the other worldly stuff he does on his foam/fiberglass finned contraptions, it's so awe-inspiring I don't mind one bit that I'll never be able to access those lines in my own surfing. Instead it pushes me to push myself to my own limits. 

Uncharted Waters: The Personal History of Wayne Lynch (Craig Griffin, 2014)

For where I am now in my life and in my surfing, this is the best surf film I have ever seen. I suppose I have been inspired by Wayne Lynch since Litmus, but he was never on my radar in a big way. There is so much I like about this film: the surfing, the story of Lynch's outsider role in the surf world, the political and historical sensitivity (i.e. the emphasis on the impact of the Vietnam War), the cultural respect shown for the aboriginal peoples of Australia, stories from great surfers, some whom are not mainstream or well known, just a ton of depth. You can learn very important lessons from this film because Wayne Lynch is a massively inspiring character.  Now I have to go back and see Evolution (1969) and Sea of Joy (1971), the two films Lynch starred in that solidified his idol status in the larger surfing imagination.

This list really reflects who I am as surfer and a thinker. It's very shortboard inspired/focused, so those of you looking to learn how to ride a longboard better, I will have to do a bit more research and write a post in the future about what I feel to be the hottest log flicks. I will say, however, that the films listed here are focused on surfers with great style and are thus highly instructive as to how to steer any kind of surf craft.  

Joaquin and related pulses

Dearest seekers of aquatic joy:

What a lovely past three weeks it has been to be a New York surfer! You know it's been good when you regret taking a day off from surfing just to catch up on work and home life and to let your muscles recover. I have surfed both in New York and New Jersey with a variety of crews, both free surfing and in lessons and various combinations thereof. Stoke and good will are flourishing. These are the biggest waves many CSC members have paddled out in. Beccy did a cutback the other day. Deb charged 6ft bombing Long Beach. Zeke bought an 8'6" Faktion egg I had made for the very purpose of selling it to a CSC member asap. I test drove the board before selling to make sure it was a gem. This was the first day of the swell and there was a hellacious rip pulling off the Long Beach sandbar I was surfing. I rode a few waves on my shortboard but it soon became apparent that I would tire quickly on such small equipment, so I brought out the 8'6" and proceeded to get drained from a few solid tubes. That was a great omen, so I sold the board to Zeke in hopes that similar luck will rub off. That was two weekends ago when Paul, who is determined as all get out to become a surfer, charged some solid Long Beach as well. He made it out the back a few times before getting pulled through the rocks at the next jetty down. He and the board came through entirely unscathed. Such things can happen when you miss waves and a swing-wide-set nails you on the head. Good to test limits and know that one can survive intimidating situations.

In honor of the good waves I made a little video starring mostly myself with a few friends making cameos. My bud, Jon Paul, unfortunately stepped on a piece of glass in the parking lot at National Blvd in Long Beach after a fun surf, rendering him on the injured list for the remainder of the swell. Nevertheless he was keen to get out there and so I put him on video duty. Most of the best waves were surfed on days when Jon Paul either wasn't able to come to the beach or was surfing or doing his own thing. So in many ways what you see below are really the scraps. But I think that overall they're pretty good scraps! 

In other news, the Costa Rica camps need to get booked! Please email me if you are thinking of attending one! We need to get the deposit and travel sorted out asap. I have a full rundown of how travel works on www.ranchodiandrew.com. So please head over there! 


Patience, Grasshoppers

Where did the waves go? Word on the street is that El Niño has taken all of the wind out of the East Coast's sails and puffed it into the Pacific, which has been active as all get out by the looks of the highlight reels on Instagram and Surfline. My Swell Info app is telling me we may get a few waves next week, but I'm not holding my breath. I check that app about 10 times a day and it is different every time that I do. The truth of the matter is that I hope it's right because if it is we're looking at 3-5 days of fun waves, and we could all really use that about right now. By this time last year we had named swells Bertha and Cristobal, which both produced pumping surf in the well overhead range. 

This brings us to the important topic of patience. You have to wait for swell. And then when it comes you have to wait your turn to catch waves. And if you're just a beginner (and by my standards this means a person with less than 3 years experience) that means you're going to have to do a lot of waiting. I have been noticing that people hire me to take them to next level in their surfing -- to start learning to judge and catch more waves -- but then when we get out in the water the reality is that they still belong on the inside, riding whitewater. When we go out the back I can help you judge waves but if you have not developed the paddling ability to go for them (commit to the vertical, as in a previous article), no one, not even me, can do that for you. You have got to want it and you have got to go for it. I am an expert coach but I cannot implant my knowledge in you as if it were a computer chip. And most of all, surfing takes a lot of time and dedication. You cannot only surf once a month, only rent boards, and expect that you're going to improve very quickly. You need to commit all of the way. Buy a board or many boards. Get your wetsuit game down. Go on surf trips. Buy a car for surfing out here or get a Zipcar membership. Go before work. Go after work. Surf all day on the weekends and paddle when it's flat. That's the kind of dedication required to get good at surfing. And when you're out in the lineup remember that as a surfer with little to no experience you're at the bottom of the food chain and not only must you catch scraps, but you must look for those scraps and hunt them down. The better you are at hunting and catching scraps the faster you will improve, hands down. 

I realize that I have just used the command 'buy' here many times. If you have already taken lessons with me then you know the power of putting your money into your surfing practice. It is just as with anything else: the more you invest the better your chances of returns. I cannot think of anything more rewarding to invest in than a life dedicated to riding waves (and getting good at it). To me that sounds better than a fat IRA. What are you going to do with all of that money if you don't know how to surf?! I know, lots of things, but still, they aren't going to give back in pure stoke wattage like surfing will. To my mind, it is just not possible. The other side to this is that if you do not invest in surfing then you only have yourself to blame for not getting good at it. And furthermore, once you start investing if you do not have the patience required to let it grow on its own you will also be disappointed and frustrated. For this reason you must revel in the small successes: paddling stronger, popping up more smoothly, watching the sunrise or set, dodging a huge set, or timing a perfect turtle roll. 

Speaking of patience, there have just been 4 (or 5?) long lay days at the Hurley Pro/Swatch Women's Pro at Lower Trestles in San Clemente, CA. I've watched a lot of the footage from the first few rounds and there's some exciting quarterfinal match-ups on both sides. My call for the men's champ is Gabe Medina and Carissa Moore for the women's. Action should be back on today. As I have written about before, watching the live events is a testament to the patience required to get good waves. I watched Nat and Owen sit for 16 minutes the other day and not catch a wave! Of course they paddled one another out of position for the first set, but still, even that proves that if you miss just one opportunity, that could be the last one in quite some time. 

There are still spots open for Montauk, the first weekend in October. Payment is required in full by next Saturday, Sept 26, to secure a spot. Payment for the CR January camps is due by December 1, and for the March camp by Jan 1.