| Barry A. 
 
Select Nomad
         
 
 
 
Posts: 10007
 
Registered: 11-30-2003
 Location: Redding, Northern CA
 
Member Is Offline
Mood:  optimistic
 |  | 
| PERFECT WAVE---VIDEO LINK 
 
 Hope this works-----------awesome very-short video
 
 http://vimeo.com/53727966
 
 barry
 | 
|  | 
| David K 
 
Honored Nomad
           
 
 
Posts: 65348
 
Registered: 8-30-2002
 Location: San Diego County
 
Member Is Offline
Mood:  Have Baja Fever
 |  | 
| 
 It did work, and that was a great wave... weird only one guy caught it... the others were afraid perhaps?
 
 The flag on back of the panga looked to be FIJI's ...?
 
 
 
 
 | 
|  | 
| Ateo 
 
Elite Nomad
        
 
 
 
Posts: 5927
 
Registered: 7-18-2011
 
Member Is Offline
 |  | 
| 
 tavarua cloudbreak Fiji. Nice.
 
 
 
 
 | 
|  | 
| willardguy 
 
Elite Nomad
        
 
 
 
Posts: 6451
 
Registered: 9-19-2009
 
Member Is Offline
 |  | 
| 
 I would kill for a wave like that!
 well if it were shoulder high, a right, and kind of crumbled over instead of that barrel looking thing!
   | 
|  | 
| landyacht318 
 
Nomad
    
 
 
 
Posts: 247
 
Registered: 7-28-2007
 
Member Is Offline
 |  | 
| 
 
 | Quote: |  | Originally posted by David K weird only one guy caught it... the others were afraid perhaps?
 
 
 | 
 
 This  statement shows how little you understand surfing.  Perhaps you would prefer to see a bunch of surfers dropping in on each other?
 
 Just because every surfbreak in California seems to have nobody that can be bothered to respect etiquette or priority, and 10 people ride each wave,
poorly, does not mean that is the way it is supposed to be or that it is acceptable.
 
 Crowds ruin surfing.  All it takes is one person to ruin the whole vibe.   Surfers go to great lengths to find a place to ride waves without having to
share it with 5 dozen greedy narcissistic 'dudes'.
 
 Had somebody else dropped in on Reef on that wave, they would have been ostracized for the rest of their pathetic existence.  The best part about
being able to watch that session go down via a live webcast, was not only the fact that the waves were phenomenal, but also that there was enough
respect among the participants that no drop ins really occurred.
 
 A large percentage of the worlds best competing surfers were there that day for a contest.  The winds were not quite right  for the contest, and they
called it off.  Within 30 minutes the winds shifted back to near perfect, and many of the world's best big wave riders who went there on their own
dime, had the session of a lifetime, because the contest was called off.  It was epic.  Had they tried to run the contest, so many of those once in a
lifetime waves would have gone unridden, instead of ridden by a big wave devotee.
 
 Only a small handful of the 'world's best' competing surfers were out that session.
 | 
|  | 
| monoloco 
 
Elite Nomad
        
 
 
 
Posts: 6667
 
Registered: 7-13-2009
 Location: Pescadero BCS
 
Member Is Offline
 |  | 
| 
 Yeah, I kind of doubt any of those guys were "afraid" of a perfect wave.
 | 
|  | 
| JG 
 
Junior Nomad
   
 
 
 
Posts: 49
 
Registered: 1-29-2005
 
Member Is Offline
 |  | 
| 
 The Other Side Of Tavarua
 
 http://www.outsideonline.com/blog/teahupoos-big-waves-in-sup...
 | 
|  | 
| Bob H 
 
Elite Nomad
        
 
 
 
Posts: 5867
 
Registered: 8-19-2003
 Location: San Diego
 
Member Is Offline
 |  | 
| 
 That was GREAT!  Thanks
 
 
 
 
 The SAME boiling water that softens the potato hardens the egg.  It's about what you are made of NOT the circumstance. | 
|  | 
| JG 
 
Junior Nomad
   
 
 
 
Posts: 49
 
Registered: 1-29-2005
 
Member Is Offline
 |  | 
| 
 Bob, Thanks.... My Cousin In Mainland  MX. Tow In
 
 http://www.pendo.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/Chapman-Pend...
 | 
|  | 
| Barry A. 
 
Select Nomad
         
 
 
 
Posts: 10007
 
Registered: 11-30-2003
 Location: Redding, Northern CA
 
Member Is Offline
Mood:  optimistic
 |  | 
| 
 
 | Quote: |  | Originally posted by David K It did work, and that was a great wave... weird only one guy caught it... the others were afraid perhaps?
 
 The flag on back of the panga looked to be FIJI's ...?
 | 
 
 David---------I surfed thruout the '50's and early 60's in SoCal and thought the same as you when only one person ended up on that wave-------but then
I never surfed anything even close to "that one".  There were not too many surfing back in those days, especially in the '50's.  Last Feb. we saw some
big waves off the northwest end of Maui being ridden by from 10 to 15 folks per wave.  Love seeing it, but that many people do cause problems.
 
 Many are "afraid" of waves as big as that one in the video, no matter how "perfect" they are, in my experience.
 
 In any case, it was a beautiful wave.
 
 Barry
 | 
|  | 
| Bruce R Leech 
 
Elite Nomad
        
 
 
Posts: 6796
 
Registered: 9-20-2004
 Location: Ensenada formerly Mulege
 
Member Is Offline
Mood:  A lot cooler than Mulege
 |  | 
| 
 one word       WOW
 
 
 
 
 Bruce R Leech 
Ensenada
  | 
|  | 
| monoloco 
 
Elite Nomad
        
 
 
 
Posts: 6667
 
Registered: 7-13-2009
 Location: Pescadero BCS
 
Member Is Offline
 |  | 
| 
 Wow, I don't know who has the bigger
pair, your cousin or the guy on the jet ski.
 | 
|  |