December 6th, 2008 by admin

Adam, Bob and myself hit Jordan River by about 7:45 -8:00. The waves were shaping up and looked promising but there were already a few people out in the water so we decided to go check out China. We hiked down and saw there was only one guy out there. We figured we could definately surf here but we would give one more look back at Jordan River before we committed. JR was about the same so the decision was made, we drove back to China Beach suited up and hit the water.
The waves were not all that big (4 to 6 ‘ers) but provided for some fun rides. There was barely any wind whatsoever and the waves were rolling in from the Northwest. The tide was all the way in but just starting to head back out. The waves were swelling up best right in the heart of Rock Piles so that’s where we rode for the majority of the day. The Rock Piles may be one of my new fave spots. When your out there you can easily identify the huge piles of rock that sit just below the surface, through the crystal clear teel green water. You just gotta make sure you keep your head on a swivel and always know where the rock piles are when your charging through on a wave.
Adam gave me a few really great surf tips that made an immediate impact on my surfing. He suggested I pull myself up higher on my board and then really lean back when getting up to my feet. The reason why I have been further back on my board is because I have been nose diving when I put my front foot down, but when you lean back you eliminate that problem. My pop up is all of a sudden beginning to feel very natural and less forced which also results in my footing being in exactly the right place on the board which makes my turns much more comfortable as well. Thanks Triple-A.
November 23rd, 2008 by admin
Adam and I left around 5:45 and headed up to Port Renfrew. This is my first time ever being to Renfrew, what an awesome spot, definitely coming back camping.
There was a pretty thick layer of frost covering everything it was a bit nippy but a beautiful day, not a breath of wind. Unfortunately there were no waves either.
We could see the lines approaching in sets of 4 or 5 coming in from the Northwest. They were sooooo close, they were breaking pretty much right on shore but you could see the potential. We hung around for about an hour or so and watched the tide come right in with our fingers crossed but it just didn’t happen. I talked to a man who was camping on the beach and he said the waves were three times the size for the last four days. That was the last kick in the nuts with a frozen moccasin we could take, we headed back to Sombrio. SKUNKED!
The pic below is what the waves are supposed to look like at Port Renfrew.
At Sombrio the waves looked alright but as usual there were far too many people out there trying to catch them to be even worth suiting up.
China Beach was a mild lake. The highlight was that some way, some how, someone got a car all the way through the narrow winding trail all the way to just before the steps to get on the beach and that’s where they left it. I really have no idea how they got it down there or how the hell they will get it out.
Jordan River looked like it was going to be alright when we first past by at day break but when we got back they had died right off to the odd white cap.
The MagicSeaweed report called for 9.5 footers which was obviously way off.
November 15th, 2008 by admin
Razor and I hit up Jordan River Camp. We got out there around 10:30 and it looked very flat and there was no one around. After watching for a few minutes we noticed there was actually some nice sets rolling in from waist to shoulder height coming from the Northwest. (MagicSeaweed called for 7.5-8 footers.)
We went in straight off the parking point and got some nice little fun ones right off the bat. It is quite shallow right off the point so we would have to bail off after a fairly short ride.
There was a graveyard of logs, drift wood and debris floating around in the water. We were a fair ways out from the point now and I was riding a wave in when I looked down and saw big jagged rocks maybe 6 inches below the surface of the water. I kept cruising and luckily a couple seconds later it got a little deeper again so I bailed off, “sacrifice the body and save the board” is what was going through my head.
After a short break we decide to venture across to the center of the bay. Razor stayed and surfed here, where he said he got some nice rides in and I continued past the bay to a rock bed break.
Great waves about shoulder height. My arms were feeling the burn from being out of shape and paddling so far but I stayed out for a few hours and caught some really fun rides. Fairly shallow on some spots and big boulders rather than the gravel that makes up most of the bay. Worked a lot on my turning and feel like I am getting a much better feel for controlling my board under my feet. There was no wind at all which made it very enjoyable no fighting against the white wash coming in, it was perfect.
It was a long paddle back after I had worn myself our catching waves. When I finally got back to shore Razor told me that there was a sea lion that tailed me all the way across the bay just a few feet behind me. I imagine that the flailing of my rubber arms and my out of breath grunting probably mimicked a wounded seal pretty closely.
October 18th, 2008 by admin
Adam and I left Nanaimo and got to JR point in real good time. Tide was on it’s way in so we stayed in the truck and examined the waves while we were waiting for Lanny, who camped over at Renfrew but woke up to a glassy lake so he was on his way to meet us.
We checked out JR camp which also looked decent and then LilChina which looked to be shaping up but was breaking to shallow.
Lanny arrived so we did a recon on the beaches again before deciding JR point would be our best bet. The waves had definitely begun to tame down, but Adam and I got suited up anyway hoping for the best. After about another hour of sitting in the truck (sweating with our suits on) the waves progressively got worse and worse. There would be 1 set of 1 or 2, 4′ waves every 15-20 minutes coming from the Northwest. Anger.
Oh yeah, we did see a whale though, that was pretty cool.
