Wet and Wild with Rockin Fig
The first big northwest swell of the season hit theWest Coast with
some sizable surf at a lot of breaks last week.
Our first indication was over in Hawaii,where the surf was macking.
That sent big-wave surfershere scurrying and plotting out prospective
trips tothe big-wave venues. I heard Mavericks, up past SantaCruz, was
huge. Santa Barbara, which claims the fame ofRincon, was working with
some long point break rights.
Huntington had some eight-foot-plus sets, although I was ready for
some perfection waves on Turkey-day, but the south wind was on it.
Friday was cleaner and way fun with some freight train rightys and a
few walls too, but it seemed like the swell wasalready dropping.
Meanwhile, a group of the Huntington Beach storm troopers, decided
that this was the perfect swellfor that island off Mex. to be happening.
That littleisland known for big surf is Todos Santos.
And by all indications, it would be picking up those wideopen ocean
swells bigger than most breaks. A coupleyears back, pro hottie Taylor
Knox was photographedon the biggest wave ridden that year at Todos and
won some big cash, $50,000. That broughtthe spot light on the famous big
wave break.
Two car loads of surfers and boards weredown on the docks and ready to
go at 6 a.m. Twoboats heading toward Todos Santos on Thanksgiving hoping
to score some big ones.
When they arrived to the break, called Killers they could tell it was
pretty huge out there. There were some giant waves breaking right on the
boil. Surf City surfer/shapersBarry Deffenbaugh and Sean Jensen, Mater
Dei surfcoach Randy Garret, along with Brett Swartz and Indo.boy Timmy
Turner, were checking it out.
Fifteen- to 25-foot Todos, and maybe a little bigger thanexpected.
Already out in the mack attack lineup wasbig-wave-rider extraordinaire
Mike Parsons, being towed intothe sets by pro ripper Keith Malloy. Randy
Laine wasalso out on a jet ski, catching some biggies on thattoo.
A few other standouts were the Long brothers,Rusty and Greg of San
Clemente, who make the tripoften, and Mike Todd, another ripper.
Well, the timewas now, everybody all suited up, they surveyed
thelineup and decided to do it, paddling out.
At about three-quarters the way out, thehorizon started looking like
the big daddy sets werelooming. No place to go, no place to hide in front
ofthe 30-foot close-out cleanup set -- nothing but to try to makeit over
the top.
I saw the pictures and this wasdefinitely a 30-foot set, with an even
a biggerface. Not just one wave, but six in a row.
The boystried to make it over, but almost everybody gotstuffed.
Somehow Garret made it over the top, D-Baughgot worked pretty bad, but
his leash didn’t break,meanwhile Turner lost his board and was caught in
theimpact zone and was getting hammered and swepttoward the rocks.
It was looking like a life or deathsituation, as Turner was trying to
stay calm, but he wasstruggling.
Out the back, Parsons -- who had caught someof the biggest waves of
the day, like six timesoverhead in one shot I saw -- saw what was going
on.
Malloy was on the ski, but wasn’t quite as much of theveteran as
Parsons is.
Parsons waved Malloy off theski, and without hesitation went right in
thebreaking zone to save a life, not even thinking abouthis. He jammed in
and got Turner out just in the nickof time.
Everybody was trying to regroup back at theboat, but were a bit
shellshocked from what hadhappened.
Garret caught a couple nice ones before hebroke an 8-foot-10 in half,
and Swartzcaught a couple big corners too.
Then it was time to go, the crew had enough. They headed back toward
the coast and wanted me to mention that Big Red, sometall guy, an
unknown, was charging out there on someof the biggest sets. The thrill of
excitement poweredall and now it was time to get back home
forThanksgiving. So stuffing in the morning and turkeyfor dinner. Hope
everybody had a good one. Rockin Figover and out.
* RICK FIGNETTI is a six-time West Coast champion, has announced the
U.S. Open of Surfing the last eight years and has been the KROQ-FM
surfologist for the last 15 years where he’s done morning surf reports.
He owns a surf shop on Main Street. You can reach him at (714) 536-1058.
Fig is one brain cell from retardation
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