Is that a barrel? Nope just a “PGCB” (don’t know what that stands for yet? Read this.)
Its sort of funny how fast this summer deteriorated on the surf front. Usually it is the opposite. June and early July are the hardest months for surfing here. So far it being ten days into August and I have only surfed twice and both were in waves just over waist high I will be the first to declare that I have officially given up on the summer 2013 as being anything more in the books then marginal at best. I thought July was pretty fruitful, but as I just looked over my stats I beg to differ.
I will say I was rather diligent and made the most out of just about whatever ripple the Pacific did decide to send my way. I got off my lazy ass and even did a bit of surf adventuring first up in San Francisco with Mauriello (if you missed the tales read here) and immediately following, Bizarro and I cruised down to San Diego for a few days where I met up with West for some Blacks Beach action (for that scoop read here). With out jumping on a plane and traveling half way around the world or to a different hemisphere I did my best to stay wet. Here are the numbers and top surf sessions from July.
Surf Sessions: 27
Days Surfed: 18 Total Time Spend in the Water: 47 hrs Total Waves Surfed: 788 Average Waves Surfed Per Hour: 17
Spots Surfed: Blacks Beach, San Diego: 7 Emma Wood: 4 Santa Clara River Mouth: 3 New Jetty: 3 Grey Whale Cove, San Mateo: 2 Waddel Creek, Santa Cruz: 2 Lower Trestles, San Clemente: 2 County Line: 1 Oxnard Shores: 1 Scripps Pier, San Diego: 1 Davenport, Santa Cruz: 1
Top 3 Surf Sessions:
3) 7-21-13 PM Session: 3-5+ ft, Blacks Beach , San Diego
Time in Water: 2.5 hrs Waves Surfed: 31 West and I wanted to grab one more session together before I leave town tomorrow. After the terrible morning session I was not expecting anything. I figured worse case scenario we go out there and shoot the shit while we grovel. As it turned out the wind died, the swell was holding and the crowd was slowly dropping off. Everyone was sitting on the north peak so we went and sat the top of the canyon. There were plenty of really fun ones. As the evening wore on it just got more glassy. I managed to get a barrel down the entire length of the canyon and came out. The swell seemed a bit stretched on many of the set waves. Still it was prob the most fun I had of the trip surfing.
2) 7-22-13 AM Session: 2-4+ ft, Blacks Beach, San Diego Time in Water: 1.5 hrs Waves Surfed: 22 I find it very fitting that on my last morning here Blacks was about as good as Blacks gets condition wise. The surf was solid chest to head high, glass, nice lines, good corners and pretty consistent. The crowd was on it making it a bit rough at times to get a good one. I paddled more down on the north end of the canyon. There were really good rights and lefts. This was finally after days, the Blacks I drove 200 miles to surf. I had one really deep sick frontside barrel, stuck a few good airs and overall was finding plenty of good ones. The wind came up around 11am and that was fine cause I had already gotten more then my fill. Good times. Looks like I am back on the road home again. I can’t wait to get home to the Barb and see my lady.
1) 7-13-13 AM Session: 3-5 ft, Waddel Creek, Santa Cruz
Time in Water: 2.5 hrs Waves Surfed: 42 Once again Waddel looked the best. I was feeling a bit hung over after last nights little visit to Fancytown. This time we gave the reef a go where we saw a fun looking left peeling down the north end of the reef. Turns out it was a bit soft, slow and lully. After three waves I floated to the beach break which was a barrel fest. I had the place to myself the whole session while everyone else surfed the mush burger on the reef. Then John paddled over and it was a full on froth shred sess. I can’t remember the last time I enjoyed a session with so many barres and kill-able sections. So much fun. And we got to heckle Nat Young in the parking lot cause we are stupid like that. Most likely they just thought we had a learning disability.
There you have it another month of surfing in the can. As you can see its been nothing but monkey cock her in the 805 considering my top three sessions all came from out of town. Please feel free to follow along with both my surfing and life adventures in the surflog. Get the full scoop on July there.
The theme of July was GROVEL. Photo: Christopher Dunlea
Could this have really happened? That was my first thought as I compiled June’s surf numbers. I put an unprecedented amount of time in for a month that is usually barely ride-able at best. The north pacific decided to keep the ball running through the bulk of June. At the same time the south pacific graced us with just enough magic to remind everyone here in central California that south swells actually do exist north of Point Mugu.
Besides mother nature who is not even close to making up for the skunking we faced here in the 805 this past winter, there are a few other factors I need to acknowledge that allowed me to maximize the most out of my surfing in June. First I must thank America for their great unemployment system, sure I only get around $230 take home a week, but I don’t have to work either. Although it is a pain in the ass to fill out the five question form, put it in an envelope adhere a stamp and take it to the post office. First off I am unemployed, so why is it that the government thinks I can afford a packet of stamps? That shit ought to be postage paid. Then do you know how hard it is to find a mailbox these days? The post office near my house closed down. How the fuck a U.S. Postal Office closes is beyond me. Damn broke ass government.
I think they do it on purpose to make things more difficult for free loaders like myself to get those unemployment forms in. I have to give a shout out to my girlfriend Heather for keeping me out of the Wild Cat more times then not. I had no idea how much more time I could spend surfing and how much better I can surf when not hung over till 5 pm everyday. My overly stoked surfing buddy Trevor whom with out his blind love for absolutely terrible waves and grom like surf stoke kept me in the water more then a few days I would have not even bothered. Besides all of that it was a super fun month of average to good California in surprisingly warm water. Here are the numbers and as usual feel free to enjoy daily surf updates in the surflog.
Surf Sessions: 34
Days Surfed: 24 Total Water Time: 62 hrs Total Waves Surfed: 932 Average Waves Surfed per Hour: 15
Spots Surfed: Emma Wood: 9 New Jetty: 6 Santa Clara River Mouth: 6 Mesa Lane: 4 Lower Trestles, San Clemente: 2 El Capitan: 1 Rincon: 1 Hammonds: 1 Leo Carrillo, Malibu: 1 Oxnard Shores: 1 Pitas: 1 Solimar: 1
3)6-27-13 AM Session: 4-6+ft, Santa Clara River Mouth
Time in Water: 2 hrs, 45 mins Waves Surfed: 33 I knew it was going to be solid today. Everything just depended on the wind. I got to the Harbor and there was some WSW wind on it and things were really foggy. New Jetty had a wave but it looked average at best and bit on the crowded side for what was coming in. I took a walk down to River Mouth and sure enough there were clean enough peaks coming in. It was hallow as hell. I saw a wave spit while I was checking it. I paddled and it was way heavier then I had expected. Full on double up bowls and some creepy rouge close outs from the west. I managed a handful of crazy barrels the first half of the session. As the tide came up it became a rip fest out there. It was solid and super fun to surf in waves of consequence again. I came in due to exhaustion from fighting the current. I decided to kick it in the lot for a chance at another session in the afternoon.
2) 6-29-13 PM Session: 3-5+ft, Santa Clara River Mouth
Time in Water: 2 hrs 15 mins Waves Surfed: 36 I got a late start today courtesy of a full black out at the Wild Cat. I don’t even remember walking in. I was hung over as fuck all day. The surf was firing so finally I manned up at the end of the day grabbed Heather and headed to surf. Luckily the wind decided to stay down and the surf was firing. Ryan met up with us and we trotted down to the reeds where it was going off. Barrels, kill-able sections everything you would want out of a surf. There was almost no crowd. The sunset was amazing and water was warm. I must say it was another great day of surfing.
1) 6-28-13 AM Session: 3-5+ft, Oxnard shores
Time in Water: 2 hrs Waves Surfed: 38 I decided to check Rincon first thing this morning and seriously almost vomited at the destruction the new highway expansion program has done to the sanctity of Rincon. Of course it will not be till the winter when we find out if the sea wall extension will cause extra backwash in the bottom of the Cove. Lets hope not, but hey who cares as long as there can now be three lanes of bumper to bumper traffic instead of two. I was at the bottom of the trail when I ran into to regulars, die hard Rincon locals and good friends of mine. Both were not very enthusiastic. We were chilling up in the lot for a spell when I got a text from Ryan that Oxnard Shores was on. Considering the tide and swell direction I figured he was spot on. I booked it down there and as I was changing all these guys were getting out. I was afraid it had already turned off. The Shores is one of those very fickle spots. To my shock they said it was firing and that they were just too tired to surf anymore. Gordo pulled up and we paddled. Sure enough it was about as fun as waves can get. Head high to over head, glassy, perfect A frame bowls up and down the beach. I got my first ten waves before the half hour mark. It was amazing, not a drop of water out of place. Not really hallow although there were a few shacks. Just completely rip-able surf. I went to fucking town. Might have been one of the best sessions I have had all year. Soo much fun.
Just another perfect end to another perfect day of surfing in the month of June.
What can I say about the month of April for surfing other then it was yet another month full of let down and frustration. After a terrible winter I still had a shred of hope that it might be a good wind swell season. Sometimes I get my best waves in the hard gail force north westerlies. Wind swell with its shorter period allows certain mysto or novelty spots to come alive for a brief moment. There are literally dozens of spots up here that only break once or twice a year if at all. When they do break it is always a treat to surf them. Of course this year with the exception of one very weak ass surf at Summerland Beach there were none of the above mentioned sessions.
I did my best to stay wet sandwiching in surf time between my work and hectic party schedule. Here is the month of April by the numbers. Enjoy my very sick OCD. As always visit the Surf Log daily for the full scoop on my surfing, party and life in general.
Surf Sessions: 17
Days Surfed: 16 Total Time Spent in Water: 27.5hrs Waves Surfed: 474 Average Waves Caught Per Hour: 17
Spots Surfed: Rincon: 4 Santa Clara River Mouth: 4 New Jetty: 3 Emma Wood: 3 Summerland: 1 Cstreet: 1 Pitas: 1
Top 3 Surf Sessions:
3) 4-18-13 AM Session: 2-4+ft, Santa Clara River Mouth
Time in Water: 1.5hrs
Waves Surfed: 24
River Mouth fucking delivered! What a barrel fest. I got the call from my boy Ryan at around 7:30 that the wind was off shore down south. With some small south and fading NW in the water the combo action was just screaming beach breaks. Throw in a lower tide and things were finally looking up. I got to River Mouth and it looked a little smaller then I was hoping. The sand bars were as I had expected a bit torn up from all the wind the past week. Still there were some solid chest to head high pits to be had. There were plenty of guys out, but plenty of peaks spread up and down the beach. I suited up and was stoked for some fun waves. I started at the north end of the reeds where I found a sick little left sand bar that was hallow as hell. I picked off three really fun ones there before running further down the beach where conditions seemed a bit larger and more heavy. My boy Ryan was sitting on a suck up little A-frame all to himself and I joined. We traded some good ones although the current was a bit tricky with strange rips and it was a bit lully. None the less I went to work super pumped that morning.
2) 4-12-13 AM Session: 2-4+ft, Rincon
Time in Water: 1hr 45 mins
Waves Surfed: 23
I don’t know what came over me that got me out of bed before 9am but somehow I was up and ready to surf. I had checked the buoys the night before and noticed a real jump in the swell. As I was cruising down south I saw that Santa Claus had some waves indicating a possible wave at Rincon. I pulled off and sure enough the Cove was going off with a very light crowd. I ran back up to the lot, texted Trevor that he was blowing it and paddled. What a session. I can’t remember the last time I had that much fun. There were at least a handful that went to the high way. My legs were killing me by the end of the session.
3) 4-30-13 AM Session: 4-6+ft, Santa Clara River Mouth
Time in Water: 3hrs
Waves Surfed: 53
What a fucking session. Man I am so glad it is finally south swell season and I have a feeling the summer may just make up for the dismal winter we got stuck with. I slept in a little bit being still a tired from the weekend festivities. Trevor and I met up in Carp and rolled south with the intentions of checking the River Mouth and if that was sub par possibly running to Malibu. On first inspection although plenty of size things looked a bit walled with the occasional scattered corner. We gave The Shores a look over at Fifth St, that was looking more organized but a bit on the weak side. The debate was then River Mouth or the ‘Bu. I hate driving away from potential thus we suited and charged the Mouth. As it turned out it was a very good decision with tons of really good left and right corners. I had some cherry ones and I stuck the biggest full rotation ally oop of my life. What a session.
Since the surf sucked and I spent more time at the club then in the ocean here is a picture of my crew and I traveling down the road to Fancy Town.
In the land of the right there exists at least one goofy foot’s last stand.
This week’s UCB makes a winner out of Mauriello taking a break from giving out lessons in good morals and instead throwing down good UCB topics. He asked I write about a certain little wave that both of us have a spot for in our heart. A surfing spot like none other. One that has teeth, one that has its own certain charm of gnarl in and out of the water, a surfers surf spot, Santa Clara River Mouth in Ventura California. I have decided the best way to explain this place is by giving you a run down of an average summer morning for me.
Summertime
An fun looking morning at the River Mouth
River Mouth (that is what the locals call the break) is located about a 45 minute drive south of my home here in Santa Barbara. On a nautical map it exists a few feet below sea level and sticks out a bit further then most beaches in the area allowing it to pull in swell from all angles and then amplify its intensity thanks to the bottom. In the Late Spring, Summertime and early fall River Mouth goes off courtesy of south swells that sweep down the beach and usually barrel. Even if its not hallow the waves still throw out like a mother fucker. On just the right swell angle the place can almost break like a pseudo left hand point break.
In the summer I have to get up pretty early if I want to score the place without wind. Although Ventura Harbor, where the River Mouth is located is a swell magnet its also a wind magnet. Usually by 10 am the wind will get on it and by noon the surf is completely blown out. River Mouth is not one of those waves that you can surf when its windy. Most of time it gets so messed up getting a ride is impossible.
My first alarm goes off at around 6am. I like to call this alarm my ambitious alarm. It was the time I used be to stoked to get up and surf at when I was really fit and living the surfing lifestyle. These days I hit the fuck you button usually because I am fighting off a hangover from the night before. The next alarm goes off at 7am, but usually I field at least two calls from creditors before who I owe money to since my pro surfing career went up in smoke back in 2008. I mean seriously who would extend a $10,000 credit line to a guy who barely made $20,000 a year? I think if your that stupid you get what is coming to you. My credit rating is fucked for life at this point anyway so I say suck it. Thanks for the wake up call though.
At seven I poke my head out of the covers, but summertime is also fog season meaning more days then not its all grey, damp, cold and nasty out. This makes getting out of bed rather difficult. Usually I crawl back under the covers for a spell till Alfie decides he wants breakfast and is all over me meowing, clawing my face, licking my face, basically letting me know if I don’t get up and feed his ass soon I am going to be his breakfast. Not wanting to be eaten I usually comply by 7:30 unless I’m really hung over and then its every man and beast for themselves. If I am really hung over it means I drank enough to kill most human beings and I feel so sick that I hope Alfie will eat me alive.
By eight I am finally out of bed. I pull out my computer and check the buoy readings to see what the day is going to have in store for me. Driving to River Mouth costs me around $10 in gas round trip so I like to make sure I am actually going to be able to surf. I am not going to give away the readings I look for cause it took me years to figure that out and it is something that has to be earned. If things look appealing to me. I pack my board, suit, booties, fill up my water bottle, grab a banana, brush my teeth then cruise. Usually I hit my boy Ryan up to let him know I am coming if he has yet to get me a surf report.
On the way down I let my ipod shuffle take over. I skip all the slow tunes only stopping at pump up music. As I am coming up the hill past Sharks Cove in Montecito I do the look back of death. Ofcourse it’s flat. It is summertime and there is no way there is enough north west to break the place. It is one of my favorite waves so I can’t help but pretend just for a moment that it could be going off. As I drive by Summerland I check the beachie down there and although too small to surf it is a good indicator of the swell angle. If things look good there I may pick up the pace.
Then when I get to Carpinteria Santa Clause Lane becomes my next indicator. This is more or less for both wind and swell size. If its at least knee high there I know River Mouth will have chest high sets. If things look good there I pick up the pace even harder. By this point I am cruising at 80mph weaving in and out of traffic pretending I am in the movie “Ronin” most likely singing at the top of my lungs to whatever music I am blaring. I have the heat blaring as well cause I hate to be cold before a surf. It just puts a damper on the whole thing.
Nothing like brown water to make you feel safe and healthy and remind me of home.
At this point my boy Ryan has most likely gotten back to me on what’s up. His intel is very important cause I have to make a decision once I am past Rincon and La Conchita if I should exit at Sea Cliffs and go surf Emma Wood or continue on to River Mouth. Rincon and La Conchita are also good indicators as well. By this point I start getting sleepy and have to pinch myself, pull leg hair, pluck eye brows, whatever it takes to not fall asleep behind the wheel ending up flipped in a ditch somewhere.
Rincon can be a good indicator too if the left up top is breaking. From there I drive past Stanley’s, Hobsons, Trailers, Father John’s and Pitas. There are usually terrible little waves along all these spots that come winter can be all time. Pitas actually does get south swell it just does not break well on them. From there I pass the palm tree nursery before getting sight of both the Gold Coast and Emma Wood. This is the moment of truth right here. If there are waves at Gold Coast then there are definitely waves at River Mouth.
I drive past Emma Wood and laugh at the near thirty guy crowd. South of Emma is Ventura Campgrounds or the top of the point at Cstreet. Depending on how this spot looks I can pretty much tell with absolute certainty if I am going to score. I always make sure to flip off Cstreet on the way by cause I hate that wave. I get through the town of Ventura and the stub jetties of the state beaches and Pierpont come into view and always entice me with their siren song of waves that always look good from far but are far from good.
Finally I exit off the 101 and work my way to the Harbor at this point whatever direction those flags are blowing will make or break my morning. If they are slack then its going to be glassy. Usually they are blowing north west. I pull into the Harbor and drive north toward the dunes. I park in front of the highest dunes that are located halfway between New Jetty and the Surfers Knoll. From up there I can see all the breaks of Ventura harbor and decide where I want to surf.
My surf check dune.
This dune and I have developed a very personal relationship over the years. It has seen me jump for joy, cower in fear, vomit from the night before, drop to my knees and cry back when Adrienne and I first broke up. I have taken many of pisses up there. There is five years worth of decomposing banana peels up there because I eat my banana while checking the surf. I have thrown a few angry tantrums up there. Like I said its my dune. I once whipped Mauriello really hard with a long dune grass vine and got all mad about it. In consolation I whipped myself just as hard and he was right it hurt like hell. I think we both had welts from the whipping for a week or so.
This mornings banana discard.
Looking North you have New Jetty and the far big jetty is South Jetty a wedgey right that almost never breaks and when it does is super hard to surf. New Jetty is one of my favorite waves in the area but unfortunately due to poor sand distribution it has been a deep hole all season.
This is looking south from the dunes. The closest wave is called Surfers Knoll which can be really fun in the late winter early spring, but usually too washy in the summer. Past that is the River Mouth sand bars which stretch about a mile or so south till you get to McGrath State Beach.
If I decide I am surfing River Mouth I repark my car either in the Knoll lot if it is a week day and uncrowded or in the marina lot across the street if I am looking to be low pro and stealth. The funny thing about parking in the marina lot is that there are all these no beach parking signs, but everyone parks there any way and they are not “strictly enforced”. I also like to park in the Marina lot cause there are less crack heads, meth heads, bums and heroin addicts hanging around there. My old photographer Dave and I once saw the cops come arrest this crack head in the Knoll lot.
It was pretty funny. The dude broke free and took off to the bath room and flushed his stash. When he came out there were six cops guns drawn. Then they took him down with very excessive force. He made some really strange grunt like squeal when then tackled him to the pavement then bashed his head. There are robberies in the knoll lot at least once a week if not more. I just try and stay out of that parking lot. I have been robbed three times there. It has gotten to the point where I have hallowed out a spot underneath my driver seat where I stash my phone, Ipod and money. Its not quite north shore bad where you have to leave your windows down and your car open so they wont get smashed, but there is for sure a large number of degenerates who coagulate in that vicinity.
“Strictly Enforced” ha, the harbor patrol is too busy busting crack heads to worry about parking issues.
There are always sketchy things going on in the parking lot and in the marsh reeds that line the river mouth. From what I have been told there is pretty much an entire bum civilization back there who feed off all the dead marine life and sea birds that constantly line the beach. I literally saw five dead birds there today. Four pelicans and duck. Last year there were tons of dead seals all over the beach and I once saw a dead dolphin as well. All the currents flow towards that place and the water quality is far from ideal.
Bum food…another one bites the dust…
Usually I surf a section of sand bars called the Reeds just before the actual river mouth. I always seem to get my best waves there and its easy to line yourself up because you either sit on the north, south or middle of the reeds. It is also a bit of a hike from the parking lot and most don’t bother to walk past the first few sand bars.
This is the reeds I like to line up with. Behind those reeds is Bumville.
Sometimes the banks further south in front of the River Mouth can be better on long period swell. If your willing to walk that far you can be sure to beat most of the crowd.
Hmmm whats that in the far left corner you ask? Let me answer: A power plant and an oil field. Oxnard is a beautiful place.
The Tar
The 805 is constantly riddled with an abundance of tar that naturally and most likely not so naturally courtesy of all the oil rigs seeps up from the ocean floor, coagulates into balls and finds its way to the beaches. River Mouth is one of those beaches that is especially bad. Once on the beach the tar heats up from the sun and becomes a gooey mess just waiting for you to step in it. I have giant tar stains on just about everything I own. My boards are constantly riddled with the brown mess. As a matter of fact I stepped in a nice ball of tar yesterday before my session.
Currently my wax is all black and gooey with tar. The only way to get tar off is with baby oil which works fine, but also makes the shower floor slippery as hell. I once went down head over heels nearly hitting my head on the tub faucet. That would be a really shitty way to be found dead naked on the bottom of the tub in a puddle of blood and baby oil. The authorities would with out a doubt claim I went out in a crazy freak masturbation mishap.
Winter Time
In the winter its a whole different ball game out there.
Winter is not really River Mouth’s best season. For the most part the swell direction of the NW’s seem to just come into there as one giant close out as far as the eye can see. The water is freezing, colder then any other spot in the area and there is no one around. Even the bums hunker down for the most part. The only upside to winter is the Off shores. Ventura Harbor really kind of is the start of the flat plain that runs all the way till Mugu and as a result hard offshore wind sweeps across the open space grooming the surf.
You know the winds are going to be good if all you can smell is manure from the fields. Yeah it stinks but the air in the barrel is always nice. On the whole even with the winds it is still very closed out and usually on a swell anywhere from double to triple over head and stacked as far as you can see. If your getting out there you are going to take a serious beating. You will get pitted, but it will most likely just be a big close out tube. This is the place where the term PGCB (perfectly good closed out barrels) was coined. You can read more about that in my “I Heart PGCB’s” blog. It makes for good wide angle barrel photos except for the fact that the current is so bad out there its nearly impossible to stay with your photog. Dave and I had many of frustrating sessions where we were both getting worked super hard and did not get one decent shot out of it.
Usually by late winter some really good sand bars can set up more near the knoll and upper River Mouth. If it is the right swell with the right tide and the wind is offshore you will get some of the best sessions of your life. I have had some really amazing session on such. It can be really frustrating too though if you get there too late. Lots of times those sand bars only turn on for a few hours at best and if you get it at the end of the window you may get one or two amazing ones and then just be back in close out land. The rips are really bad on theses bars as well. You will spend the entire session paddling.
If your diligent and you get first dibs on a good bank you will have it to yourself for maybe a day or two. Once word gets out all of Ventura, Oxnard and Santa Barbara will be there. On the whole these bars only last for a few days anyway before the wind goes bad or too big of a swell comes in and tears it apart. When it happens it can be all time, as good as anyplace. Here is a video of possibly the best the River Mouth has ever been courtesy of just the right swell angle, wind, rain and sand. It happened in 2005. I was lucky enough to get two days of this cause I just happened to be here picking up some boards from Jason Feist over at J7 surfboards.
The reality of the winter is more times then not its nothing more then a big close out and if I am going to drive that far I am most likely going to go surf Hollywood or Oxnard Shores where the banks are a bit better that time of year. The water quality is very poor in winter due to all the rain run off.
Opening the Mouth
The really cool thing about River Mouth is the fact that it is one of the few unfortified river mouths in a heavily populated area. There are no jetties or controls on it of any kind. The water flows under the sand naturally allowing for tons of great banks to get created. On occasion as a result of heavy rain fall it will burst open and when it does great sand can be created. That does not always happen. Sometimes it opens and throws out too much sand ruining the spot for weeks. If it opens and there is not a good swell direction or bad wind the bars wont form good. This year we got screwed double. First the mouth opened up way too far to the south and second when they dredged the harbor, which they do every year the sand from that got badly dispersed completely ruining New Jetty for the entire spring, summer and most likely fall season.
Forget about water quality when it opens. I have had so many bad sinus infections, diarrhea, fevers and other complications as a direct result of surfing in the black water that is created when it opens. There ends up being dead frogs, fish, birds, tons of trash that all floats out a river that flows for miles inland. The pesticide run off from all the farms is intense. We refer to surfing there during such times as “Brown Town”. Its pretty disgusting. If its on its totally worth the chance of contracting Hepatitis though.
For a while a bunch of locals would get together before a swell and actually dig out the mouth to make good sand. About three years ago Robert from Roberts Surfboards used to rally the troops to dig it out for every good south swell. That was one of the best spring/summer seasons out there ever. Even the fall was sick thanks to all the good sand. I guess the harbor patrol cracked down on it and the last crew to attempt it got arrested and fined. I don’t think there has been a dig out attempt since. In the summer and fall it doesn’t rain so its not going to naturally open.
There you have it, my home away from home Santa Clara River Mouth. I am sure I just pissed off everyone in the 805 for writing this. You know what I don’t give a fuck. I am there nearly everyday all summer long and surf the place in both the good, the bad and the ugly. Its a tough wave to surf. I would not recommend it to beginners, but more moderate to experts. There are usually tough currents and rip tides so if your not a strong paddler/swimmer drowning can be an issue. Its an unprotected beach and out at the River Mouth there is not many people around so getting you medical help will take longer then most spots.
The wave itself is very heavy and even on a two foot day can pack a punch. I have broken six boards there, creased a handful more and taken some heavy wipe outs. It is sharky too as any river mouth can be. Although I have never had an encounter I have heard stories and most of the larger marine mammals that wash up dead on the beach have giant bites taken out from them. Half seals are not uncommon to see. The water is murky thus confusing the men in grey suits.
River Mouth is an acquired taste suited to the elite hard core surfer. If your dedicated you will score. If you read this and are stoked to come down for a surf good on ya. I will gladly hoot you into a wave. Please show respect and don’t pull up with a van full of dudes like a certain Santa Barbara surf school has been doing. At Santa Clara the rule of two is in full effect. Follow the code and I will be more then stoked to get tubed with you.
The lay of the land just to give you an idea of what we are talking about. I took this during a solid south swell last Summer 2011.
This is Christy’s my favorite janky luncheonette in Ventura located right across the street from the River Mouth parking lot. This place is rad all the tables have collages of pictures of their customers under glass. Kooky and I wanted to go put a picture of us under the glass. I still may. Waitresses are surly, customers strange and food incredible. I have ended more then one session there. Yum!
Its not all sunshine and roses out here. If you don’t like mornings then this is what you will be greeted with usually by 11am everyday if not earlier.
This is two trees in Ventura California and where I took that aerial photo of River Mouth. I had been surfing there for years looking back a these trees and always wanted to go up there. Finally I did some exploring and found my way up to them. Its really cool cause from that vantage you can see all the way to Pt.Mugu in the south and Emma Wood in the North. I met some old guy the last time I was there and he said the trees were planted in the late 1800’s so Mariners could find the way to the harbor. Its really cool there and a nice hike. I do it regularly.
Cant afford Christy’s no worries there is plenty of good eating up and down the beach. Looks like someone has already been gnawing on this guy though. Don’t fret I’m sure there are plenty of other dead animals with in striking distance of this unfortunate.
October is usually a crazy month for surf around here. This one was rather average, although there were some choice days. I had a few keepers at Rincon and plenty of beach break action. I think this may the be winter of the beach breaks unfortunately. October marked the return of Kooky Kyle to Lisanti Land, this time joining the court at the Palace for an extended stay. You can check out Kooky’s Korner for his take on things from time to time. Kooky and I went on a 24 hour idiot mission up to San Francisco to surprise our boy and UCB all star John Mauriello, surfing a few spots on the way up. Besides that I kicked a second heroine addict roommate out of my house. Third time is a charm I guess. Business as usual here in the Land of Lisanti. Here are the stats and yes I know I am posting October’s stats in December. I am month behind. Always a day late and a dollar short.
Number of Surf Sessions: 21
Days surfed: 20
Time In Water: 34hrs
Number of Waves Surfed: 497
Average Waves Surfed Per Hour: 15
Spots Surfed: New Jetty : 8 Rincon: 7 Waddel Creek, Santa Cruz: 1 Moss Landing Montery: 1 Surf Beach: 1 Santa Clara River Mouth: 1 Emma Wood: 1 La Conchita: 1
Top 3 Sessions in October:
3.10/27/11 AM Session: 2-3+, New Jetty
Time in Water: 1.5 hrs
Waves Surfed: 25 You know those sessions when you feel like God? I had one today. It was only about chest to head high and a bit crumbly with the wind on it, not to mention a larger then optimal crowd. I was on and that was all that mattered. Every good wave seemingly came right to me. All my turns were crisp. I stuck a bunch of airs. It was just one of those days.
2.10/18/11 AM Session: 2-4+ft, Surf Beach
Time in Water: 1hr 50mins
Waves Surfed: 27 Ahhh, Surf Beach and just about the one year anniversary of the fatal shark attack that happened there. With minimal swell and a need for adventure Kooky and I threw caution to the wind and went up to the wild north. Upon pulling into the lot we were greeted by fun looking glassy chest high plus bowls with out a person in sight. As we got changed this crazy old man who had to be over eighty and was born in Lompoc in 1924, lived there his whole life, began telling us all these gnarly stories of way back in the day. He lost his wife of like thirty years last year and found himself a bit lonely these days. I always find it really sad when old people lose their spouse after all that time. I could not imagine the heart break. Turns out he should not drive cause he has dementia but does anyway cause he does not give a fuck. First thing he said to us was “I’m 86 years old and lost in life, maybe I always had been”. Those words always win me over. Then as we were about to paddle out this lady whom I have surfed both there and Jalama with claimed some guys saw a 12 foot great white there yesterday. I told her “well that was not today now was it” and paddled out. Turns out the session was super fun and both Kooky and I scored some sick waves. I got a few barrels. We stopped at the Jalama Cafe for Lunch, my favorite eatery in the area and ran into that same old guy. What an awesome day.
1.10/13/11 AM Session: 4-6ft, Rincon
Time in Water: 2hrs 45mins
Waves surfed: 27 Oh man, Rincon. Today was the first day I have to say Rincon really cooked for me this season. Kooky and I got there and the lot was packed. I was going to drive away, but my rule of thumb is that if I can get a space in the front lot then I will surf the place regardless. I ended up snagging a spot and was stoked I did. The place was on. I started up at River Mouth and surfed from there down three times. I had some sick ones. Out of the 27 waves at least twenty had no less then 9 turns. I got two from high River Mouth to Low Cove and called boxed one from high cove. Killian was out and had some guy filming him with a 35mm. I had so many sick ones it was incredible. I love Rincon.
Well there you have it the month of October in surf sessions. As always if you enjoy reading these little session reviews check out the surflog where I post some type of insanity about both my life and surfing every single day.
Alright this was not taken in the month of October. My boy Dave's girl Roo shot it at Santa Clara River Mouth back in March. Its still a sicky though.
This weeks UCB makes a victor of my boy Scotty B. You have to watch out for those sleeping giants and back in the Myspace days Bees ran the show in the UCB franchise. It seems we have a new challenger to the Kooky Kyle dynasty. I thought for sure it was going to be a two way race between Kook and Kooky, but now a new contender has stepped up. I must say I am rather amused by the whole UCB process, too much probably.
A New Proclamation
Before I get into Scott’s topic I quickly wanted to make another UCB announcement. This one is sort of a counter action to last weeks rule of 5: One can only make 5 UCB suggestions in a 7 day period (See the first two paragraphs of Pitching a Tent blog for a better explanation of the new rule). Last week I wrote a really fun bonus UCB entitled You’re a Fucking Idiot, But So Am I in which I took ten one word topics from Nick the Kook and wrote ten short responses to them.
I did this sarcastically because I was angry about all the serial suggesting going on. It turns I wrote one of the better blogs and definitely one of the more amusing in a while. As I result I am making a new blog rule: Once a month I will write a special double points UCB where I will take ten one word suggestions made by one reader and write ten short answers. Everyone can submit one set of top ten topics a month and I will write about my favorite ten. Read the above linked blog to fully understand.I think it will be a ton of fun for all of us.
Now let us get back to Scott’s blog. He proposed I write about my thoughts on surf forecasting. I am almost sure I have touched on this subject more then once here, but redundancy is what makes America awesome!
The Double Edged Sword
I love the advances in modern day surf forecasting. As a premium member of surfline.com I can get a very accurate three day, an accurate five day, reliable seven day and a 14 day speculation. For a surf addict like myself, I must admit I have become quite the frother again; it makes attempting to live in the non-surfing world a tad bit easier. That being said my life is still planned out by the five day forecast and I still find that I’m reluctant to make any long range plans for fear of missing it, although I have gotten a lot better as far as blowing things and people off to surf. But this is not about my onerous surf habit.
Thanks to the accuracy of forecasting today you can plan trips on the fly and know you are most likely not to be skunked. I remember a few years back Sean McGrath and I pulled the trigger on a trip down to Puerto Rico after getting a favorable long range forecast and we scored some of the best Wilderness and Table Tops I have ever seen down there. We did not quite get it as good as we were hoping, but it was a ton better then the times I just blindly went.
Of course there is the inaccuracy as well. There are so many factors that effect quality to surf that I am amazed at how often they get it right. I mean wind, tide, global currents, water temperature, air temperature, frontal systems, El Nino, La Nina, all these factors mess with a swell realizing its full potential at a certain location and on the other hand allow for other less likely swell events to pleasantly surprise. That is what has always made surfing the true oxymoron both frustrating as hell and extraordinary.
Sure when Surfline.com is claiming for Tuesday to be the day of days and I clear my entire calendar out on that day and its two foot and onshore, I am more then disappointed. Usually I am on the dunes at Ventura harbor kicking sand or at Rincon throwing rocks spouting more then a few displeasing to the ear four letter words.
Then there are those times when the opposite happens and I had expected very little, show up and score it. Two weeks ago actually there was some local NW wind swell and west groundswell combo. Surfline.com was calling flat for Rincon all weekend, as would be expected for the time of year. As it turned out the place broke in the very legit chest to head range for three days (see the surflog for more details on that). There was nobody there but the hardcore crew of people who check the place everyday no matter what. This leads to the next and final topic.
The Fucking Hype!!!
Remember a paragraph ago or so when I was talking about that epic Tuesday that I cleared my calendar out for. Guess what? I’m not the only person to have that idea. The Internet is a highly traveled place and there are hundreds if not thousands of sites dedicated to letting everyone know when the surf is firing and where it will be on. That being the case on that faithful Tuesday when I show up at the crack of dawn (ok, more like after 8ish. I live in Santa Barbara and have to drive 45 minutes to surf on most occasions) I am not by myself, not even a little.
There will be a guaranteed grip of people looking to get their surf on. It will be a grand melting pot of the surfing spectrum, the hard core, the pros, the kooks, the valley guys, the weekend warriors taking a day off for a change, photogs and everything in between. We will all be out there enjoying the same blown out two foot surf. Then on Wednesday when it was suppose to be down, the surf is sure to be six foot, offshore and barreling. God bless the great advances in modern surf forecasting.
Forecast or not, the potential to score is out there. The question is what length are you willing to go to find it?
December was all about periods of fun surf followed by periods of flatness. There was tons of rain and wind bringing near toxic water conditions and tricky surf conditions. Crowds were lighter then usual thanks to the weather not to mention that I think a bunch of people have already given up on surfing this winter it has been so bad. As far as Im concerned I had some great sessions in December. Unfortunately I was also plagued by a host of surf injuries mainly my lower back, knee and neck causing me to worry that my years of misuse are finally catching up to me. Here is how I made out in December of 2010 surf wise.
Number of Surf Session – 21 Days Surfed – 19 Average Wave Height – 3-4ft
Spots Surfed:
Rincon – 9 Juno Pier, Florida – 2 Civic Center, Jupiter FL – 1 South Jetty – 1 C Street – 1 Loons – 1 Sharks Cove – 1 Sand Spit – 1 Santa Clause Lane – 1 Stanley’s – 1 New Jetty – 1 Dredge – 1
Top 3 Sessions
3: 12/8/10 – 3-4ft, Loons Loons is a magical wave and a very secret and fickle one at that. When and if you happen to find and score it the reward will more then equal the toil. This session was solid chest to head high plus with a light crowd, glassy conditions and lines running an easy three hundred yards down the point. Read Sometimes Miracles Happen Blog for more on this stellar session.
2: 12/16/10 PM Session – 4-6ft, Dredge
My afternoon surf was purely based on the wind dying out, which luckily it did. I cruised to Rincon where it was perfect oil glass but only around chest high or so at Indicator. Discouraged I called my boy Ryan down in Ventura who was claiming Dredge was solid and no one out. Dredge never has no one out especially in the afternoon. I mean the place is the exclusive surf spot of the entire Pierpont community, a society made up of 90% surfers. Dane Reynolds lives there along with my good buddy Adam Virs. With no better options I took the advice and tipped my boy Kevin off as well who was just getting off work from making mass quantities of food. I got there and it was definitely well overhead on sets and although fast more then make able if you chose the right one. Of course by this time there were 5 guys out and about another ten in the parking lot frothing. There were plenty of waves and with the strong southerly current that always plagues Dredge the crowd was not a big issue, still I managed to get a long board to the head courtesy of this decrepit old guy who was blowing every set wave he paddled for. He very courteously ditched is board right in front of me after straightening off on an overhead close out. I came up from my duck dive into his board. Besides that I managed to get a ton of great rides and boosted a few huge backside airs but came unglued on the landings. I would have to say it was by far the best session I have had since Loons last week and one of the best in December.
1: 12/20/10 – PM Session – 6-8+ft, Rincon
Sometimes Christmas comes early and today it came early at Rincon. Epic Rincon is one of those things that happen at best a dozen times or so a winter and today my friends was just that. The day had a slow start with a super high tide, small swell and rain. I decided to stay in bed and wait for the afternoon of which I knew more swell would fill in. I checked the buoys at breakfast and it was 8 ft, by noon it was ten, by 2pm it was twelve by four, 14ft. The swell grew six feet in a matter of hours and that set the pace for the entire session. I got in the water at 1pm and it was about chest to head high and every hour it grew by two feet till the occasional ten foot clean up set would wash through. Up until today I had yet to legitimately call box a wave. My first three waves all went double call box and then I had about a dozen more that were single call box. I think the worst wave I caught all session I still managed to hit ten times, on average I got around 15 hits a wave. Soooooooooooooooo Gooooooooood!!!!!!
I think this picture embodies December perfectly here in Santa Barbara.
I think this guy needs to slow down and enjoy a little famine. Maybe that is metaphoric for how I look when Im frothing on a good day at Rincon
As always if you liked this blog visit the surf log where I update my surf sessions daily.