The Leash Killed Surfing



Somewhere in my past I have uttered this phrase.

On the surface it's hyperbole, something that is said to get attention or make some other usually obvious point.

Looks good as a bumper sticker.

Yesterday, I paddled out on a board, with leash attached and my friend mentioned that I had made the statement previously and so I was forced to think about what it is I was trying to express at the time.

All without the benefits of coffee mind you.

So I stammered something unintelligible, further cementing my reputation as a babbling old fool whilst making a case for the immediate elimination of all blogs whose owners can't pass some sort of basic cognition testing.

So now with a little time to reflect and a good strong cup of tea, let me begin.

IT'S BULLSHIT!

No one thing can kill surfing, let's get that over with right away.

But the widespread use of leashes changed our collective approach to surfing in such a basic way that it deserves some thought and discussion.

Not that the all changes were bad.

Surf spots are ridden today that, do to shoreline or approach conditions, would be out of the question previously.

There is a very real safety benefit too.



A loose long board in the soup can do enough damage to visiting tourists that the local city fathers might want to reconstitute the black ball.

No one wants that!

What saddens me is that with the advent of the leash whole generations of surfers learned to surf without learning to body surf. No time spent in the water without their boards at hand. The time spent swimming and body surfing in to retrieve your board gave you time to analyze your mistakes and did a fair amount for your overall conditioning as well. By the time you developed average surfing ability you were a better than average swimmer and had some knowledge of the local ocean. The time in the water also gave you a quick education in the motion of side shore currents, riptides and may have introduced you to a cute little sea creature we like to call the jelly fish.



Perhaps one of the most troubling effects of widespread leash use is on the crowd factor.

Let say you have a group of 30 surfers surfing a lone beach break peak.
(I live in SoCal so this is entirely in the realm of possibility)
In the pre-leash days, you might have 10 surfers sitting and waiting for the next wave, 5 surfing, 5 paddling back out and 10 beginners swimming in after their boards.

Since the leash, you have still have 5 surfing and 5 paddling back out but now there is 20 people waiting for the next wave.

And half of them are kooks!

If you are talking about the summer months and live in Huntington Beach just add a zero to all the numbers and you have some idea of why I like the fall.


But that said, leashes are here to stay.

I even use one at the local sandy beach break, on occasion.


But if you could stop ditching your board right in front of me just because you get you board back right way I would appreciate it ;)

Comments

Anonymous said…
In the age of the corporate sponsored surfcam ithe truth of your post is getting harder to remember.... There was a beautiful accountability in the pre leash era,... making your wave, hanging on to the board, general water skills, paying the price for poor judgement. Tim Dorsey once told me that a good “pre-leash” session at Sunset was three waves and that one swim in on a big day would usually conclude a sesh, even for the elite guys. Thanks for all the great writing Bruce!
pranaglider said…
Surfing was a different experience PLE (pre leash era), for one surfers could swim...
f.zare said…
I see your point, but living in Byron Bay I surf the Pass nearly every morning and despite being fairly new (grew up in the desert) I rarely lose my board. But ... without a general rule of telling tourists hiring boards to always use a leggie, it would be bloody carnage ... 20 waiting for a wave? We have 30 in the line up, another 10/15 or so paddling back and usually another a few surf school classes in the water further down, then maybe a few random single instructors.

Only the locals, and the good ones go without leashes and even then it’s risky.... because if you have to bail when some kook can’t get out of the way or drops in ONTO you, your board could hit several people before you get it back! Ever searching for a little coastal paradise to call my own... until then, Byron is as close as it gets!

Popular Posts