Imagine for a minute you are a Portuguese contractor, hired to build a contest site on the beach. The eyes of the surf world will rest on your handiwork for the most important two weeks of surfing to go down in Portugal for well over a decade. Your little empire on the sand gradually comes together over the months until, with gleaming coffee machines, double-story portable offices for the judges, secure media rooms and a comfy and expansive lounge for the surfers, it is complete.
Then imagine you're woken at 4 am by a phone call from an event staffer who is on the beach in the dark, just one day into the waiting period. They describe the sound of metal being twisted by whitewater, and eco-loos floating out to sea.
First call today was at the backup site, Lagido, some three miles north of Supertubes and the town of Peniche, a location marginally more sheltered than the main contest site. Even before we got there, we were hearing the destruction was of Katrina-esque proportions. Photos, as they tend to, tell a thousand words. But then, so does the phrase “worst storm in 20 years.”
So we had swell today. But, clearly, the contest went on hold. Thirty-mile onshores will do that to a contest. Immediately, Mick Fanning and Taylor Knox rounded up the Ringrose brothers (legendary Australian water safety guys) and went towing. They’d seen a huge right, sheltered from the wind on the other side of a small peninsula, and were out there.
Back towards the main site at Supertubes, in the corner of the beach next to the breakwall is a wave called Molho Leste. And it was there, in wedgey head-high rights, that a good chunk of the top 45 chose to take to the water, ignoring the carnage at the main contest site a mile away. Walking across the sand at Molho Leste we found Luke Egan watching his boy Parko. Louie wasn’t interested in going on record to speak about Parko’s injury problems, but while the notebook stayed in the bag he was happy to have a chat. “Joel just needs to concentrate on doing what he’s doing. He doesn’t need to read any more speculation on what’s going on,” Louie told us.
Watching Parko tearing the wedgey rights, it was clear Joel’s concentration wasn’t an issue. In a session packed with fellow Aussie pros Bede Durbidge, Dayyan Neve, Tom Whitaker, Kai Otton and the rest of the boys, Parko’s turns stood out a mile. What also occurred to your correspondent while watching these waves was just how well-suited they were to a certain gentleman named Dane. Mr. Reynolds, however, was nowhere to be seen. Neither was Mr. Slater. He’d drawn a crowd of hundreds to the beach for a quick freesurf the day before, but today he was a ghost. It’s been pumping everywhere in Europe except Portugal this week. Ireland saw biggest evers. England’s been pumping. Most ironically of all, Mundaka was the best it’s been in three years, but there was no Kelly sighting there, either.
Will Kelly and Dane be present if the comp gets underway tomorrow? Of course they will. Until then, check out Joli’s images, and imagine you are that poor Portuguese contractor.
READER COMMENTS
Wed Oct21, 2009, 8:53 PM
HEAVY!
Wed Oct21, 2009, 10:40 PM
I lived in Miami Beach for four years. I got to experience two hurricanes. We boarded up our windows, and everybody headed inland and higher ground. Guess where all the surfers went. I didn't go out those times, but as I stood on the beach at the jetty (1st St.) a reporter from a local paper asked why would we go out in storm conditions like that? I just pointed out to those hurricane generated waves being shredded by some hot locals and said "If it's on, we're on it! It's what we live for!" There were no problems, no casualties, just a lot of very stoked surfers..........and maybe a few frustrated policemen who got stuck in the sand, cause actually I don't think we were, uhhh, supposed to be out there? Peace to all, keep surfing! MICHAEL V
Thu Oct22, 2009, 4:49 AM
Shame about the damage but this is meant to be the dream tour not the cafe latte tour - forget the coffee machines and judging towers. Create a 1 month window for the European comps, get those webcast trucks and get mobile and not just 3 miles away but to the whole of Europe, Morocco etc. I'm sick of hearing how Mundaka or Hossegor were sick last week but suck today. The dream tour has ended up the dream corporate marketing tour.
Thu Oct22, 2009, 1:46 PM
how tragic surfers loose their breakfest (bar) man that is real serious