Wednesday, December 13, 2006
Didn't amount to much
After yesterday , the waves were a disappointment today. Mostly just wind swell remained, so the ocean was full of fluffy little peaks that didn't amount to much.
Tuesday, December 12, 2006
One of the best Hot Dogging Dogpatch Days ever
Whenever the 6 o clock news runs stories on how big the surf is going to be, you can bet the crowds will storm Trestles the next day and you get an instant zoo-like crowds . So the Dogpatch got the call today and it was an exceptionally good decision and a wonderful surf session. Powerful overhead waves made for almost perfect conditions and the NW swell had some real punch to drive around sections and kick it hard in the face. Best move of the day was a huge flying floater and a 6 foot death drop to cap the end. All in all, it was one of the best Hot Dogging Dogpatch Days ever!
Saturday, December 09, 2006
Shape of things to come!
Holy Crap! After weeks of no surf, I finally made it back out in the water today! The crowds were vicious at Trestles, so I went down to Trails and enjoyed some empty head high waves in great conditions! With the worst flat spell I can remember for this time of year since Thanksgiving, I was pleased and relieved to find I could still get up and ride just fine, although I was a little rusty at times. With south wind early on, I waited the morning sickness of wind chop out and luckily got Trail 2 in glorious NW fashion, with peaks breaking right on the main reef and hauling ass all the way to the shore. In what I feared would be another bad surf day, I was instead pleased to find it all in good working order, including me, and hopefully today shows the shape of things to come!
Saturday, November 18, 2006
Cotton candy
For some reason nobody was at the sunny warm beach today. On a week end at lowers, you generally expect 50 or more blood sucking warriors on a day like today. Instead, just a handful of happy folk, mostly the locals I see all the time, shared the sunny conditions easily. The surf was playful , pretty consistent and lots of fun. Several waves peeled inside over the reef for a good 75 yards or so. Today was so laid back, I was just doing the soul arch thing with my hand stroking the underside of the lip for most of the wave. Even if it was a bit fluffy, more like dessert than a main course, today's surf bout was a just a happy go lucky day and the waves reminded me of cotton candy.
Wednesday, November 15, 2006
A decent wave
Even if the waves were small today, Lowers did its best to make the most out of them. With only 5 others out early, the sunny conditions made the wait between sets bearable. The occasional south swell swung wide and gave me a few well shaped shoulder high waves that rocketed down inside point just for me. The ocean was teeming with fish, too, as I rode over what might be seen as my own personal Aquarium under my wave park. I spotted bass, rays, sharks and just about everything in between. All I can say is that, thankfully, Lowers can take just about anything in terms of swell and make a decent wave!
Thursday, November 09, 2006
A little stormy
A change in the weather removed the perfect conditions and replaced them with typical November weather. Overcast and cool, it still was OK for a while a Dogpatch while a storm front was trying to blow over this morning. Mostly just just maintenance day, I can see the uncrowded fall to winter swells are just around the bend, as this is the best time of year for uncrowded waves, even if it is a little stormy.
Tuesday, November 07, 2006
Setting up and pulling in!
After a real sickly week for just about everything, summer returned yesterday and today with hot glassy conditions, offshore winds and Lowers throwing out some really good surf. For some reason, I see more tubes at Lowers at high tides than low tides, and with the full Moon pushing the tide up and several swells to choose from in the water, I found myself slipping into wave after wave, setting up and pulling in!
Wednesday, October 25, 2006
The pick of the litter
Given a choice between great weather or great waves, the waves win every time. It was fugly overcast and drizzly this morning, so I let the fog roll in and out before I went down to check the surf. The silver grey glassy ocean was combed by an offshore wind that switched around just as I got down to Dogpatch. Lowers was completely insane, but the local schools were out today, so Dogpatch got the nod. It was smaller but much better shaped today. I had the pick of the inside bowls and did some remarkably sick insane floaters and lip launch re-entries just to make the wave, but they worked, and I made a lot more of my waves today. With all the locals getting blown out to sea and pushed north by the drift down in the KO bowl, I have to say this cool cat got the pick of the litter!
Tuesday, October 24, 2006
Trying to keep up with the curl
Big powerful waves were still rolling through today. I caught a few nice ones but I didn't make quite a few more than I like, for the swell was still kind of closed out. The old geezers let me have it to myself for a couple hours and I took advantage of everything Dogpatch threw at me. Besides some spectacular wipe outs I managed to pull off a few impossibly deft maneuvers carving in, over and inside the overhead faces trying to keep up with the curl.
Monday, October 23, 2006
Something you only dream about
After a foggy and rather disappointing weekend, today made up for the 2 unsurfed weekend lay days. Howling off shores blew the fog to Catalina and a new NW swell started to combine with the unruly SW so that the waves just got better and better all morning. Sunny and not crowded at Dogpatch, I had my favorite peak starting out to be an occasional freight train and then by the end of the morning session it got just unreal with even a tube opportunity or two on every wave. It was mostly overhead or bigger and the biggest sets when they came were mostly still unruly. Still, when the good ones came, they looked like something you only dream about.
Friday, October 20, 2006
A perfect 10
Today was throwing down 10s and I was grabbing them up as fast as I could. With the tides funky real early, I made it out a bit later today, knowing full well onshore winds weren't going to be an issue. I basked in hot, glassy waves, and 80 degree temperatures on the beach all morning. I even had to use sunscreen! The swell seemed to greet me, a new deep water south, that had head high waves with a bit of wallop. Thankfully, the early morning crowd had retired and the mid morning group was no match for these juicy waves. Today was mostly about flying. I flew over sections, over closeouts, over insane re-entry wraps and just about everything the ocean threw at me. I was doing remarkably well for a change, knocking the bag out of most everything and getting a few tubes as well. I don't think I would have scored any 10's in a contest, but for me at Dogpatch, I'd give today a perfect 10.
Thursday, October 19, 2006
Something for everyone
With 80 degrees on the beach, offshore conditions and butterflies and dragonflies to add to the magical nature of the Santa Ana winds, Indian summer is in full bloom today . Unfortunately, Lower's parking lot was already full before sunrise, so I took a chance on Dogpatch having a few waves like yesterday, and made the right choice. It was a real potpourri of waves all morning; 2 foot sets, 4 foot sets and 6 foot sets broke from just about every angle you can have at old Dogpatch. Being bigger and meaner than yesterday, most of the lightweights got blown out of the water pretty quickly. For myself, I really couldn't catch waves fast enough, for it felt like I had it to myself for an hour, thinking any minute the hordes would attack. I caught one wave after another after another, and luckily the masses just didn't really materialize until I was too tired to fight them off. In addition, each wave I caought today was way different from the last one I just rode, so it really was a good session to size up the wave quickly and decide what method of attack to use to get the most out of the wave. The big south swells were a bit closed out but powerful, so they got the big hacking slash and an flying whitewater re-entry. The mid sized SW lined up so they got the haul-ass-floaters-over-the sections trick. And the smaller remaining NW were just perfect peaks and received the square bottom turn then the square off the lip treatment. All in all, there was something for everyone.
Wednesday, October 18, 2006
Real peeling fun ones
It was a spectacular sunrise as I got out very early hoping to beat the crowd. Heading down to Dogpatch I found my favorite little spot infested with butt boarders and stand-ins, which is what I call the guys who go out in Kayaks and the new-fangled craze of standing up on your board and paddling with an oar. Undaunted, a new south swell was strong enough to beat those guys up pretty quickly and a nice 270 degree west swell and strong offshore wind meant there were honest to god tubes on the inside reef. I inspected several nice waves from the inside out and blew the bag out of a whole lot more until the local geezers made the place less fun than it should have been. Still, for a couple of hours, it felt like a wave machine turned up to medium-well done and sunny offshore conditions made some real peeling fun ones.
Monday, October 16, 2006
The Waiting Game
Well, it's been 2 long weeks of being sick and not being able to make it out in the water to surf. An uncomfortable bout of the vapors kept me from surfing, but the ocean also took a turn for the worse, too, and really I didn't miss all that much as weather, tides and swells conspired to produce some pretty weak conditions for last couple weeks. Being able to surf today, I wasn't about to take no for an answer, so I had to wait for the tide to drop, the crowd to disperse, and then paddle out into a misty drizzly Lowers point with only 4 guys out and take my chances. I wasn't expecting much, for even Middles wasn't breaking, but in the truly strange form that only Lowers seems to do, waves for a short while during optimum tide just popped up and broke pretty well, all things considered. I was a little rusty, but I stumbled into some pretty peaks at my favorite spot that lined up much better down the point than even the ones breaking on the point itself. I got swallowed up by more waves than usual, but having my favorite peak to myself, flying lessons included, and picking off a dozen peeling waves made it easily worth the waiting game
Monday, October 02, 2006
Another grom playground day
After spending much time and money to set myself up to live a few minutes from Lower Trestles, it never seems to amaze me how difficult it is to get it on a good day. After a weekend lull, today should have found it in top form, and it was , except it resembled a day care center. It seems vans full of tiny tots were dropped off with their boards, lunches and all their friends. They proceeded down the path, into the water and almost immediately ruined the spot for surfing, turning it into a cross between a "Chucky Cheese" and an after school playground game of kickball. Not just a few, I'm talking 40 in the middle school age zone. I sat off the point in my usual spot, fending off a couple of munchkins who could barely stand up, and yet they still surrounded me, along with their their posse, trying to herd me around and off the takeoff spot. I do wish they would keep the little maggots in school. Somehow, I managed a few waves that swung wide and kicked a few turns around the floating squeaky hazards, but what could have been an extraordinary day fizzled into a yet another grom playground day.
Friday, September 29, 2006
Fall is starting to show its colors
The water temperature dropped to 60 this morning, fog shrouded the horizon and the crowds slept in a bit, leaving me with a open field for a very early dawn patrol at my favorite peak in front of Dogpatch . Even if the old SW swell is a bit doggy, too, I still managed at least 3 turns on the usual wave and got a few peaks to stand up on the reef for a while while I plowed over a couple of floaty sections. As the tides and crowds added to the mid morning breaking sunshine, I eased out of the lineup and back to the beach, remembering now that early sessions are better than later when fall is starting to show its colors.
Thursday, September 28, 2006
To the beach in one easy motion
Not wanting to fight the crowds at Lowers again, particularly when the local high school has a play-day off today, I took a shot at Doheny at the crack of dawn, hoping the shabby swell might shape up a bit there. Turns out I was almost right. The SW swell, sometimes between close outs, offered a few maddening well shaped but slow waves that rolled into the beach from all way outside at one turtle pace speed, cutting across the little jetty and onto shore. So the amusing part for this morning's adventure was practicing this several times so when I finally caught my last wave I rode it onto the shore, stepped off the board and continued up the shore to the beach in one easy motion.
Wednesday, September 27, 2006
While I still can
People always ask me what the big deal is about saving Lower Trestles. It is kind of a two edge sword. On one hand, like today, you get perfect overhead peaks on the outside and lightning fast walls on the inside where most other spots nearby are closed out and funky. On the other hand, you draw in the worst of the worst types of surfers who take off 2-3 deep on every single wave and make life miserable if not impossible for everyone out, so almost every wave goes to waste. So, if you ask me if saving Trestles is worth it, I'd say not for this pack of mongrels. I sat way inside and picked up the smaller and better shaped ones while watching in horror as wave after wave was completely wasted by one guy ruining it for another. It always happens after the big contest; all the wannabes surf down at Lowers pretending they are Kelly Slater and tear up each other for a couple weeks, then they all get weary of each other and go home to surf their local spots, leaving the place for me for the Winter. And Winter can't come soon enough. In spite of the crowds, somehow, I managed to get some really beefy head high waves today in pretty good conditions. A couple of gouging turns, full speed runs for 100 yards down the inside point and a few long rock and roll floaters would make up the highlight reel today. So, even if I doubt if Trestles is worth saving for the motley crew that surfs it, until the Toll Road construction, I intend to make as many withdrawals from the Trestle's Banks while I still can.
Monday, September 25, 2006
Always a good thing
It always seems the weekends are crowded when the weather turns fair, but this weekend was really beautiful, so it was just a little too crowded for me. Today was wonderfully free from the elbow to elbow weekend warriors, and I just paddled out into empty peaks for the most part under sunny skies. The shape was not so great, but there were lots of waves. All the Geezers sat outside for the most part complaining of no waves while I rode wave after wave on the inside. The Southwest swell was a bit closed out, but the other 2 little south swells would sneak into the inside reef and stand up over the point pretty well at times. Not the best session, but I probably rounded up more waves in an hour than I could wrangle from the crowd if I had gone out all weekend. Also, at this stage of the game, a couple of days off to let the internal bleeding stop is also always a good thing.
Thursday, September 21, 2006
The last day of summer
What should have been really good surf seemed to avoid me most of the morning. I paddled out to an empty line up of overhead waves and just couldn't find the right place at the right time. Then the masses came out to join me and everyone else seemed to be at the right place at the right time except me. The swells slowly switched around, making the big close out sets more manageable in the sunny offshore conditions. Only in the last 45 minutes or so did things really come together. The higher tide pushed the breaking waves from the gutless outside breaking walls to a pretty snappy pitching inside break over the reef and proceeded to serve up some of the tasty hollow waves on, sadly, the last day of summer.
Wednesday, September 20, 2006
Just to good to be true.
There are only a few things Sano can't handle. One is a south wind. One is a Southwest swell. The other is more universal-crowds. Today the SW swell and crowds made most of the spots just a bit more in the no-fun zone than I consider worth the effort, so I traveled a bit north to a Dana Point. What I though was a small miracle had me staring at head high walls racing down the by the jetty with only a couple guys out. I pinched myself but hurriedly put on the wet suit and paddled out. Almost immediately I launched into a real beauty for a great start to the morning. Then, as if somebody let out an invisible signal, the crowd swelled from 3 to 15 in the time it took for me to get a couple waves. Not just your average annoying crowd, these guys were old geezers on floating barges gladly taking off in front of you and never looking back. I got a few more waves and then out of frustration I just sat inside and cut them off for a last few waves, then left. Alas, sometimes it is just to good to be true.
Tuesday, September 19, 2006
Icing on the cake.
Indian Summer continues to produce some outstanding surf. Although the word and crowd was out and about at Lower Trestles this morning, nobody was out at Dogpatch for an hour or so, letting me vacuum up head high wally waves zooming over the inside reef as fast as possible. Although not the quality of wave you find at Lowers, I'll take uncrowded over crowded any day, because I've never found adding people in the water ever added to the surfing quality experience. Anyway, I had a great time until the high tide put a cork in it. I waited it out today, though, finding time to repair a ding and having a fine breakfast bar breakfast. Paddling out again for a rare second morning session, this time in the spring suit, it really felt like summer as tons of groms paddled about crashing into each other and running over everyone else. I rescued a hat from some poor girl who ran over some poor geezer and brought it back into the beach, noting that I prefer the summer like conditions without the summer like crowds, if you please. As it stands, the morning go-out was full of tubes and turns while the second session was merely a sunny bit of icing on the cake.
Monday, September 18, 2006
Really nothing short of epic!
Conditions are so temperamental in surfing that rarely does everything hit opus at the same time. Today, fortunately, everything did. Hot offshore winds, perfect tides, a number of well shaped deep water swells, and a light crowd produced some extraordinarily screaming 100 yard long tubey little freight trains at Lower Trestles this morning. Surfing in the crack between when the early morning locals get a few before work and before the drunks stagger back down to the point, I had my favorite peak to myself as set after set of big deep water swells pushed past the main point and right to me. Aside from a couple of dozen waves including the double tube ride and several full tilt power turns to catapult me up, over and down the point, today was really nothing short of epic!
Sunday, September 17, 2006
Pretty good Sunday service
With the lousy drizzly and windy weather, not to mention the ASP contest crowds behind me, today opened up with some really good Indian Summer weather and some pretty fun waves down at the Dogpatch at Sano. With cool yet strong offshore wind conditions, the tourists were blown out to sea so as to let me have an hour and a half of pretty much everything that came through, some waves producing some fun walls and little hooks with which to play. Once again, the inside sections opened up a few to climb into or float over, making an unexpected but welcomed pretty good Sunday service.
Wednesday, September 13, 2006
Between the cracks
I got out predawn-early into the contest carnival that now exists at Lowers and got a few excellent waves today. The lulls were painfully long, but every 10 minutes or so, 5 waves or so would go charging through the point. I picked off a few side-shifters that were pretty sweet. It seems the luck that the ASP brings with the contest spins off a few epic wave events for me, too. I watched the contest from the seal eye view I like at the corner of the contest while picking off a few peaks, but the south wind was on the rise and I didn't think those winds boded well for the contest or me sticking around to watch. I do enjoy the parking lot access, so it is just a hop, skip and jump over the trestle tracks during the contest. I'll have to wait until the winds stop, but with the swell as fun as it is, a nice soundtrack playing through the PA speakers, I'll have to sneak out in between the circus clown crowds like today to get waves between the cracks.
Tuesday, September 12, 2006
Dancing with the Devil
After designing machines to extract nickels from retired old ladies for a while, I finally made it back out today into some Dopatch mushy lines. The contest for the ASP, or Asshole Surfing Professionals, have taken over at Lowers for a week so it's best to give them a bit of room as their moniker of A.S.P. , or asp, belies their ability to snake just about every wave away from you. Still, I got some better than expected waves on the inside reef at good old Dogpatch. The gezeers stayed way outside and I picked up lots of inside waves that actually got pretty interesting on the shallow reef. When the waves stood up on the reef, the waves got a nice hollow hook to them that kept me in lots of long waves just barely skating over the rocky racetrack which I call Dancing with the Devil.
Tuesday, September 05, 2006
Tourists and trolls
Indian summer has finally arrived. Kids are gone, the air is a bit crisper and crowds are small. Today's little 2-4 wind swell and a couple of head high SW bombs for fun proved fun. I find by sitting out at my favorite spot all by myself and picking off the good ones that peel off and leave the one-peak one-turn ones to pass by is the way to go. Surfing is a matter of hustle and flow, and at Lower Trestles, it's almost all hustle, and that usually means hustling waves from someone else. Off peak, I get more into the flow of the wave and most of the time the swell winds down the point much better anyway, letting me set up sequences of things and not just one big move or another. The thing is, most surfers are retarded, not Rain Man retarded, Paris Hilton retarded. I'd just as well avoid them than let them embarrass themselves trying to string words together, and let them surf on the main peak with all the other tourists and trolls.
Monday, September 04, 2006
I'm looking forward to a raging Fall
Labor Day means everyone drags their old dusty surfboard out for its yearly rinse. Lucky for me, even if all the campgrounds are full, all the parking spots are taken and all the slots are filled on the main breaks, there remains a few less traveled places along the Trestles area. One of them being the San Onofre Trails area. I looked at Trail 6, but trusty Trail 2 offered an empty lineup, which is good enough for the lackluster 2-4 wind swell that rolled through. Not many memorable waves came, so I worked out a few inside lefts with cutbacks into the whitewater and out again just for jollies. Tomorrow, all the dustless surfboards return to their garage rafters, school is back in session, and I'm looking forward to a raging Fall.
Sunday, September 03, 2006
The only game in town
Tropical pink and blue mackerel skies got me into the water today more than anything. With just a hint of a hurricane in Mexico affecting the weather, but not the surf, I paddled out on the inside left of the main Lowers point and picked off a few little bowlies for breakfast. A few bigger sets appeared out of nowhere, so I went outside and picked up a couple of beauties, a couple of unlikely hollow lefts and a couple of rights. As is customary on the weekend, I was joined by tourists and trolls of every sort, from Japanese tourists to Father and Son tag teams, and everything in between. The tide push gave up only an hour of waves, but they will have to do for now, for when it the swell gets as small as it is, Lower Trestles is the only game in town.
Saturday, September 02, 2006
Galactus would be proud
The first post on a blog is usually a long drawn out wordy diatribe so let's keep this simple. I surf. I keep track of the waves and conditions for each day's session here. I usually only post on days I go out. I surf in and around San Clemente's Trestles area . There are scores of breaks of differing size, shape and quality around the area. Plus I feed on the local Nuclear Power Plant at San Onofre to keep up my cosmic energy. Galactus would be proud.
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