Barbarian Days: A Sufing Life

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Mark Rodell

Trad climber
Bangkok
Topic Author's Original Post - May 15, 2016 - 08:35pm PT
I read this book by William Finnegen and found it a strong work. It is an adventure tale but written so well that it didn't matter that I no next to nothing about the sport. Anyone else read it?
Contractor

Boulder climber
CA
May 15, 2016 - 09:45pm PT
The Autobiography won a Pulitzer.

I generally don't go for anything that attempts to capture surfing culture, for obvious reasons, but I've had a buddie tell me it's a great read.
ontheedgeandscaredtodeath

Social climber
SLO, Ca
May 15, 2016 - 09:49pm PT
Finnegan is good- track down his New Yorker article on surfing OB in San Francisco as a sampler.
Gregory Crouch

Social climber
Walnut Creek, California
May 16, 2016 - 09:16am PT
By far the best thing ever written about surfing. I couldn't put it down.

Made me absolutely seasick green with envy, on two fronts.
Bldrjac

Ice climber
Boulder
May 16, 2016 - 04:45pm PT
It was great....very engaging! Most "surf literature" is pretty poor. This is a solid memoir. Read it!!! :-)
Pam
David Knopp

Trad climber
CA
May 16, 2016 - 05:33pm PT
i read it-and i don't surf at all. I read it on the strength of Finnegan's non fiction on war zones, etc. I thought the strongest part was the reporting about relationship-especially on his friendship with Mark Renneker.
dfinnecy

Social climber
'stralia
May 16, 2016 - 07:06pm PT
The New Yorker article by Finnegan is here:

http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/1992/08/24/playing-docs-games-part-one

A long read in two parts (30,000 words?), a great primer on true surf culture. The personalities profiled will be familiar to climbers, as will the themes of obsession, risk, and ambivalent dedication to questionable pursuits.
drljefe

climber
El Presidio San Augustin del Tucson
May 16, 2016 - 08:56pm PT
Thanks for the rec.

Maybe in a totally different category but I liked
"Welcome To Paradise, Now Go To Hell" by Chas Smith

And actually pretty old now-
"The Search for Captain Zero" by. Allan Weisbecker

Kem Nunn has some excellent ones as well - surf noir.
Check out "Dogs of Winter"
Peter Haan

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, CA
May 17, 2016 - 06:11am PT
Great read; Finnegan went to UCSC for awhile btw. He is an important New Yorker contributor and quite political. I recommend this Pulitzer Prize winning book to even non-surfers.
matlinb

Trad climber
Fort Collins, CO
May 17, 2016 - 07:17am PT
Started reading this last night, can't put it down. What would be equivalents in the climbing world. For example a "Conquistadors of the useless", written in the modern era?
skcreidc

Social climber
SD, CA
May 17, 2016 - 07:55am PT
If Gregory Crouch and Peter Haan (no offense to anyone else here) recommend it, I guess I will have to pick up a copy. I personally found surf writing to usually be boring and not well written (not that I could do better). Although, there are some real gems (short stories) in "The Surfers Journal", and I did like "welcome to paradise, now go to hell" (lol). There are some great short stories out there about surf culture, like what happened to Rick James'(the shaper) thumb, and the tale of Woody Brown and Dickie Cross. A collection of these little vignette's would give a pretty full picture of surf culture and where peoples heads were at during the different periods.

as will the themes of obsession, risk, and ambivalent dedication to questionable pursuits.

Hmmm. Ambivalent. I don't see any ambivalence at all personally. The exact opposite actually. A dedication bordering on the psychotic maybe, but ambivalence never had anything to do with my, or any of the others I hung out with, drive to surf various waves. Shoot, your from 'strailia; Bra Boys anyone?


OK, sorry for that digression...and thanks for the book recommendation.
Gregory Crouch

Social climber
Walnut Creek, California
May 17, 2016 - 08:15am PT
Surfing Tavarua for three months with just your traveling partner when you are two of the nine people on earth who know about that wave would be like being an excellent climber and discovering Patagonia with just your partner when nobody else in the world had ever seen the place.

And then having a repeat performance at Lagundri Bay on Nias.

Envy does not even begin to cover it.

skcreidc

Social climber
SD, CA
May 17, 2016 - 09:14am PT
Oh shoot, it's THAT Finnegan. NOW I gotta get the book. He's one of the doods to inspire me to go "feral" that first time. After that I was hooked on surf travel.
le_bruce

climber
Oakland, CA
May 17, 2016 - 12:23pm PT
Since these guys were not, I knew, San Francisco surfers, of whom there were only a few dozen...

Just imagine if that were true today.

Now you can find "a few dozen" SF surfers within 10 sq ft of Bolinas or Pacifica water on any given weekend

Edit to add: Holy smokes is this amazing writing. Thank you very much for sharing it.

The first wave snapped my ankle leash—a ten-foot length of polyurethane, strong enough to pull a car uphill—as if it were a piece of string. I swam underneath that wave and then kept swimming, toward the open ocean. The second wave looked like a three-story building. It, like the first wave, was preparing to break a few yards in front of me. I dived deep and swam hard. The lip of the wave hitting the surface above me sounded like a bolt of lightning exploding at very close range, and it filled the water with shock waves. I managed to stay underneath the turbulence, but when I surfaced I saw that the third wave of the set belonged to another order of being. It was bigger, thicker, and drawing much more heavily off the bottom than the others. My arms felt rubbery, and I started hyperventilating. I dived very early and very deep. The deeper I swam, the colder and darker the water got. The noise as the wave broke was preternaturally low, a basso profundo of utter violence, and the force pulling me backward and upward felt like some nightmare inversion of gravity. Again, I managed to escape, and when I finally surfaced I was far outside. There were no more waves, which was fortunate, since I was sure that one more would have finished me. Mark was there, though, perhaps ten yards to my right. He had been duck-diving and escaping the unimaginable just as narrowly as I had. His leash had not broken, however; he was reeling in his board. As he did so, he turned to me, with a manic look in his eyes, and yelled, “This is great!” It could have been worse. He could have yelled, “This is interesting!”


matlinb

Trad climber
Fort Collins, CO
May 17, 2016 - 01:16pm PT
http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/1992/08/31/playing-docs-games-part-two
Gregory Crouch

Social climber
Walnut Creek, California
May 17, 2016 - 02:29pm PT
Although crowds are certainly worse in recent years, I strongly suspect that Finnegan wouldn't consider either Bolinas or Pacifica to be "San Francisco surfing."
Gunkie

Trad climber
Valles Marineris
May 17, 2016 - 02:46pm PT
For $12 on Amazon Prime and these ST reviews, I'm getting a copy.
John Morton

climber
May 18, 2016 - 08:21am PT
Finnegan is one of those adventurous New Yorker contributors that keep me hooked on that magazine. Here's a recent favorite, where he visits the amazing Peruvian town of La Rinconada: pop. 50,000, altitude 17,000ft.
http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/04/20/tears-of-the-sun
le_bruce

climber
Oakland, CA
May 18, 2016 - 12:05pm PT
Yes I think you're probably right about what constitutes a San Francisco spot. OB or GTFO (plus a few by the bridge). Since I am always too intimidated by OB, spots like Marin and Pacifica are my only reference haha.

Still loving this read, spread over a few days. First Sierra snows generally mean the end of our climbing season in the higher range, but the beginning of good days for the OB surfer.

There are great days in the fall, when the first north and west swells of the season meet the first offshore winds. Offshores—winds that blow from land to sea—are the wonder drug of surfing. Because they cross so little water before they reach the waves, they create no troublesome chop, and because they strike the waves from the front they don’t force the waves to topple prematurely and haphazardly, the way onshores do, but instead delay their breaking, letting the power of a wave rise, gather, and concentrate in the crest before it can overcome the wind’s resistance. Offshores thus make waves hollower (more concave) and cleaner (more regular) and faster. And yet the sum effect of offshore winds is greater than any of its parts. On a good day, their sculptor’s blade, meticulous and invisible, seems to drench whole coastlines in grace. In San Francisco, the winter offshores start to blow after the first snowfall in the High Sierras. Fall surf benefits in the local estimation from the inevitable comparison with the months of fogbound, onshore slop that an Ocean Beach summer entails. And the first large swells of the season actually do arrive in November, often before the sandbars are ready to turn them into ridable surf. In December and January, though, the combination of huge winter storm swells and local beach and weather conditions frequently produces waves that beggar description.

Thanks again for the share, never would have found it otherwise.
skcreidc

Social climber
SD, CA
May 18, 2016 - 12:31pm PT
OB (not the one in San Diego) IS intimidating. My first time at the spot was during my first sojourn up to just below Vancouver Island in 1977 or 78 in late December/early January. A few years earlier I had punched a hole in my skull with an early leash someone had talked me into trying. The one that I had was like a 7 foot bungee cord; not the best idea. So I showed up with my 2 buddies with a 7'6" round pin and no leash. I remember it being up to over double overhead and kind of shifty looking. It was a tough cold paddle out wearing long johns and a beavertail jacket. I was trying to pace myself energy wise while fighting off this ice cream headache when something large loomed ahead of me. I hit the gas and paddled my ass off to get under it and ended up right under the lip as I tried to duck dive my board last second. The lip exploded right on my shoulders and slammed my face into my deck, but I held on with a death grip (and wrapping my legs around the board too) that left major finger marks on the bottom next to the rail. I came up bleeding from my lips and nose, but had to stay focused on the next 3 or 4 waves as I somehow had not been drug back very far. Not wanting to go back in immediately (after my buds told me I didn't look too bad), I had a somewhat subdued session where I caught only 2 or 3 waves that were maybe double overhead. Had a much better session, albeit in overhead surf, on the trip back down. Definitely surfing that spot helped raise my comfort level in larger surf.

edit. Actually, those early trips to Nor Cal, Oregon, and Washington had some scary good surf. Cold and heavy is the surf up there.
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