Surf Contests: Popular Surfing Competitions

There are scores of popular surfing competitions around the world these days and surf contests are a part of the billion-dollar surfing industry.
Surf Contests: Popular Surfing Competitions
Surfing:
The first time I ever saw someone surfing was in the Old Spice advertisement to the score of the 'O Fortuna' chorus from Carl Orff's Carmen Burana. Orff, of course, didn't write his music with surfing in mind, but the piece 'O Fortuna' or 'Oh, Mistress Fate' is entirely appropriate for the sport. Surfing is not an easy sport to master and has more than its share of pitfalls – drowning, collision with other surfers, crashing into sandbars, rocks and reefs, attack by sharks, sting-rays and jelly-fish, etc. Many surfers regard surfing more as a life-style than as a sport. For others it is more or less a case of making an occupation out of a favorite pastime and these professional surfers participate in surf contests and surfing competitions around the world, act as representatives of businesses touting surfing clothes and gear, and are a part of the billion-dollar surfing industry.

Surfing was developed originally by the Polynesians and when they migrated to Hawaii, they brought the sport along with them. By the time Captain Cook arrived in Hawaii, surfing had become deeply embedded in the local culture. Hawaiian chiefs were required to display their surfing prowess and the kahuna chanted prayers to bless the surf-board and the surfers. Captain James King, who became the captain of the Discovery after Cook's death, wrote about surfing in the ship's log. This was the first written record of surfing by a white man; the Hawaiians, who did not have a written script, had recorded their surfing history in songs and chants.

The advent of the white men took a toll on Hawaiian culture and surfing lost its significance. By 1905, when some local youth in Waikiki formed a surfing club, there were very few Hawaiian surfers. In 1907, Jack London, the celebrated author of 'The Call of the Wild', 'White Fang' and 'The Sea Wolf' came to stay in Waikiki and met up with the local surfers. Two in particular, the journalist Alexander Hume Ford and the Irish-Hawaiian surfer George Freeth, particular impressed him and he wrote about them and surfing in his article 'A Royal Sport: Surfing in Waikiki', which was published in The Lady's Home Companion' in October 1907 and included in 'The Cruise of the Snark' in 1911.

The real estate magnate, Henry Huntington, read London's article and hit on the idea of inviting George Freeth to California to give a surfing demonstration as a promotional stunt for the Redondo-Los Angeles Railway. This demonstration was watched by thousands and inspired many Californians to take up surfing themselves. Meanwhile, back in Hawaii, Alexander Hume Ford was trying to get the Queen Emma Estate to grant a land for surfers' club. They approved the land grant in May 1908 and a piece of land next to the Moana Hotel became the home of the Hawaiian Outrigger Canoe Club.

Surfing spread to Australia thanks to Duke Paoa Kahanamoku, a Hawaiian surfer and Olympic swimming champion at the Stockholm Olympics of 1912. The New South Wales Swimming Association invited him to Sydney in 1915 for a swimming exhibition at the Domain Baths. While there, Duke made a surf-board out of the native Australian Sugar Pine and surfed on it at Manly's Freshwater Beach. With that performance, the Australians too caught on to the surfing craze.

People like Tom Blake and Doc Ball, who were both avid surfers and the first two people to photograph surfing from the water and to document the surfing life-style of the 1940s, made the sport seem more attractive and appealing to newcomers and as a result more and more people began to take up surfing. Some of the well-known surfers of the 1950s-1960s were John Kelly, Rabbit Kekai, Woody Brown, Peter Cole, Fred Van Dyke, Eve Fletcher, Anona Napoleon, Buffalo Keaulana and Eddie Aikau.

Surfing competitions:
Surfing competitions began in an easy-going way. After the formation of the Hawaiian Outrigger Canoe Club, this club and the already existing local surfing club began to hold friendly surfing competitions with one another.

In 1928, the avid surfer and photographer Tom Blake – who, incidentally, was the first person to photograph surfers from the water - began the Pacific Coast Surfriding Championship, which attracted surfers from all around to Corona del Mar. This surfing competition lasted until the Second World War put an end to it in 1941.

The Makaha International Surfing Championship was held in Makaha and attracted scores of surfers. Now there are scores of surfing competitions around the world at well-known as well as less well-know surfing destinations for both professional and amateur surfers. At surf contests, each contestant is expected to display his/her surfing skills in an allotted amount of time. They are judged according to their competency in catching and riding the waves, in using various types of surfing maneuvers and in executing the difficult maneuvers without hitch.

Some popular surfing competitions are -
  • The Bells Beach Surf Classic at Bells Beach, Victoria.
  • Billabong Pro Teahupoo at Taiarapu, Tahiti.
  • Pipe Masters at the Banzai Pipeline, Oahu.
  • The Red Bull Big Wave Africa at Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa.
  • Surfest, at Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia. This is moving to Merewether in 2008.
  • East Coast Surfing Championships at Virginia Beach, Virginia.
With corporate sponsorship and TV advertisements, surfing competitions these days are about big time money and media exposure.
   By Sonal Panse
Published: 2/14/2008
 
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