Surfside Beach – Back in the surf
June 10, 2010 by Don C
Filed under Surfside Beach
After pushing myself pretty hard over the past few months getting in shape for kayak surfing season and then the past few weeks actually kayak surfing, I was forced to take some down time by a bad case of strep (like they are not all bad.) There at the end I had been surfing or offshore kayaking for 7 out of 8 days. On calm days I paddle to the rig to stay in shape for the day when the big waves finally come.
After that particularly long stretch of daily paddling I took a couple of days off during the Memorial Day holiday. Surfing for just a couple of hours a day for that many days in a row will start to make an old fat man tired. Eventually the body says to rest. Sure enough that following Tuesday I wasn’t feeling very good. There was slight wooziness and the beginning of that little pain in the top corner of the throat and I was certain an illness was imminent, which I knew would mean another several days before I could get any quality ocean kayaking time… so I took a handfull of ibuprofin and paddled out to the rig. That night I was sick as a dog.
Of course if you follow me on twitter you know all this already and have seen the pictures.
So I’m laid up till last Sunday when I couldn’t stand it any longer and went out and tried to get on top of some lazy rollers. The water was blue green to the shore break and was full of bait, mainly schools of mullet. It was like floating in a big fish tank. The were some decent sized waves capping out beyond the 3rd sandbar but they just weren’t breaking and would roll lazily by, leaving you in it’s wake. The shore break was big enough for beginners to play around in or to just catch a glider but I don’t like surfing in the shore break that much; I’m there for the big stuff.
So back to the present day, some decent surf is beginning to build with persistent onshore flow. The steady SSE winds yesterday had the surf sloshing around like a washing machine but there were some loggable waves if you could get on top of the right one, otherwise the chop was too nasty to get a nice long clean ride. You could see the wave you wanted to be on all around you, but the inconsistency and sloshiness made being in the right place at the right time difficult.
I don’t know how many miles I paddled right there in front of my truck to log three decent rides but It was great exercise and well worth it. Today should be slightly better than yesterday so after my chores I’ll be heading out sometime later this afternoon with the wife and kids.
Check my twitter feed for updates.
Surfside Surf Report
September 14, 2009 by Don C
Filed under Kayak Surfing, Photography, Surfside Beach
There has been a couple of low pressure systems hovering around Texas and with all the rain we have been having over the past few days it was a nice break yesterday to have some mostly sunny conditions. I was out visiting a friend at Bastrop Bayou where I store my kayaks and decided it was a good idea to throw a yak into the back of the truck and shoot down to the shore. I keep a close eye on the surf charts and I knew there had been enough surf to make the ride out to Follets Beach worth it. I have been jonesing for several weeks as all we’ve had is flat surf conditions. Typical summer conditions, I know, but come on. Where are all the tropical systems caused by global warming when you need them? I was really counting on surfing some tropical waves this summer.
Coming over the Surfside bridge I could see the water was beautiful; blue and green with tiny flecks of white caps interspersed as far as the eye could see–a result of the stiff SW breeze blowing at15-20 knots. Yes there were several kiteboarders out too.
I was in the water by about 2:30 and surfed for about an hour and fifteen minutes before tiring out. With such a stiff breeze you have to paddle constantly or you will quickly be a few miles from your truck. It’s best to have someone follow you in a vehicle so you can expend your energy on surfing and not so much on fighting the wind and current to stay in the vicinity of your ride. I can usually paddle for quite a bit longer but the lack of any surf over the past 8 weeks has me out of ocean kayaking shape.
There were some rideable waves ; nothing too big but past the 3rd sandbar on the outer sand banks you could catch a nice wave if you were patient and got lucky. There was almost enough punch in the waves to get you to the reform, but not quite. If you can get on a wave on the outer banks and stay on it to the 3rd sandbar, stay upright through the breakers and catch a reform on the 2nd sandbar… let’s just say you will be out of breath, literally and figuratively. It’s a lot of work, but it’s a hell of a ride.
Wait for your wave and get on it!
Kayak surfing at Big Brother
June 23, 2009 by Don C
Filed under Kayak Surfing
Check this out!
Surfside surf report
June 10, 2009 by Don C
Filed under Kayak Surfing

Catching a wave – Kayak Surfing at Surfside Beach Tx
For the patient surfer there were some fairly big waves breaking on the third sandbar yesterday, which is notable since there hasn’t been anything breaking out there at all for a couple of weeks now. Today and the rest of the week is predicted to be about the same as yesterday but you never know until you hit the beach.
Over the past few weeks I’ve been spending a lot of time in a kayak. I’ve done some fishing when there was no surf but when there has been any rideable surf I’ve had the kayak out catching waves. I’ve seen a lot of kayaks out at the beach but I haven’t yet seen anyone surfing in one. Once I caught that first big wave I was hooked.
I have two Ocean Kayak Drifter’s and a Pelican Castaway. I don’t use the Pelican except for as a spare and it is definitely not seaworthy. Take the Castaway on bays, lakes, and creeks only–and that’s if you already own one. I wouldn’t buy the boat. The welded seam and the front hatch of the Castaway absolutely will NOT keep water out and in anything but flat surf you will sink the Castaway.
The Ocean Kayak Drifter on the other hand is great in the surf. You can flip the boat several times before needing to drain water from the inside. The Drifter is nice and wide with a flat bottom, but not completely flat so there is some control once on a wave; but not much. Once you commit to a wave you are at the mercy of the wave. A bolt-on skeg would help with the control but I don’t think it would survive in rough surf since you get slammed into a sandbar quite frequently when you crash.
I’ve been trying to take some kayak surfing video but the footage so far is not too impressive. Don’t get me wrong, kayak surfing is a wild ride so I don’t know if the ride is just funner than it looks or if the effect is lost at such a long zoom, but eventually I’ll get some good stuff if it’s only a crash compilation.





