Punta Roca, El Salvador. |
I flew three days from Bali through
Malaysia, the United States and into San Salvador, El Salvador
overnighting in Kuala Lumper and Los Angeles. My friend James had
arranged a pick up for me at San Salvador, so I headed straight to La
Libertad, a little town on the east coast. Without exception every
one of my friends who had travelled to these parts had told me not to
stay in this town but James was staying at one of the surf camps and
I was excited to hang out with a friend from home.
Punta Roca and La Paz were the two
local breaks, both right handers breaking over rocky bottoms. La Paz
was the easier of the two capable of holding a nice sized, very fun
wave that you could ride from the point to the shore. Punta Roca on
the other hand, is a nasty bitch of wave. It has a horrible entry over
barnacled covered rocks with a nasty shore dump. It is super fast, a
little critical and crowded with rippers.
I was pretty scared. Punta Roca really
pushed all my buttons but I surfed it twice a day with James and
managed to take a few nice ones each session. I found the entry
incredibly quick and could do little more then speed down the face
holding on. The wave in the photo above was taken by an American
photographer, Seth. I remember that particular wave so clearly as it
was the first one I made without going oner the falls. I was stoked that I looked relaxed as I
certainly didn't feel it.
Going right has always been one of my weaknesses. Although I am regular (my right foot is at the back of the board) I spent my formative surfing years in Western Australia (lots of lefts) and surfing around Indonesia (amazing lefts). I am so much more consistent on my backside particularly at the pop up and feel more in control when turning. El Salvador has a lot of rights which means I am forced to spend more time facing the wave and working on my rhythm.
Going right has always been one of my weaknesses. Although I am regular (my right foot is at the back of the board) I spent my formative surfing years in Western Australia (lots of lefts) and surfing around Indonesia (amazing lefts). I am so much more consistent on my backside particularly at the pop up and feel more in control when turning. El Salvador has a lot of rights which means I am forced to spend more time facing the wave and working on my rhythm.