Surfing Long Beach Island
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About this ebook
This book is a must read for all East Coast surfers who may have felt at sometime that they should apologize for where they are from. The stories and pictures in this book are sure to make the East Coast surfer proud, while sharing a universal story line with surfers all around the world. These stories could very well have taken place in Hawaii or California but, they didnt. The major theme is an eighteen-mile barrier island off the New Jersey coastline known as Long Beach Island (LBI). Every individual in this book is somehow connected to the island. Through a series of short stories from the 1930s to the 21st Century, you will be moved by what these individuals have accomplished in the surfing community as well as the real world.
Turn the pages to find out who is an innovator of snowboard technology; a photo editor for Surfer magazine; writer/producer of a Nickelodeon cartoon; and an award recipient from the president of the United States. Meet local surfing legends: Wimpy, Tinker, and Huckleberry. Find out what surfing pioneers did in the days before surfing wetsuits and wax. Travel around the world and through time for: Surfing in Vietnam during the Vietnam War; Running a surf hostile in Puerto Rico in the 1990s; Capturing storm surf on film for the last twenty years from all over the globe. Learn what unique surfing product came to a local surfer in a dream and how the internationally known franchise - Ron Jon Surf Shop, got its start on LBI.
Youre sure to enjoy the Why We Surf section with unedited material from our local surfers, ages fifteen to sixty-three. Hear about some of their most memorable surfing experiences and gain their deepest insights about this incredible sport and lifestyle.
The book has over one hundred pictures from family collections, 60s surf magazines, and professional portfolios of some of the top surfing photographers. Surfing collectors will especially enjoy some of the vintage material.
Surfing the Web will give you the links you need for everything from weather information to lodging on LBI. For those of you who are still learning about LBI, Local Breaks gives you the low-down about surfing conditions and even parking.
There is something in Surfing LBI for surfers of every age and level of expertise. Its a feel good book that will leave you stoked every time you open it.
Caroline Unger
Surfing has been a part of Caroline Unger’s world for as long as she can remember. She grew up hearing stories about boards her father built - a hollow wooden board in the 1940s and the Collier and Matador foam boards in the early 1960s. She has been involved in her family’s Long Beach Island surfing business since it began in 1966. Caroline works as a physical therapist and has written several fitness and rehabilitation articles. For this book, she combines her love of writing with her passion for surfing and affection for LBI.
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Surfing Long Beach Island - Caroline Unger
Copyright © 2003 by Caroline Unger.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any
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or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing
from the copyright owner.
This book was printed in the United States of America.
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Contents
Forward
Introduction to Long Beach Island
The Long Beach Island Surfer
The First Wave
The First Surf Shops
Sixties Long Beach Island Surfing Contests
Ladies of Long Beach Island
Local Surf Legends
Southern Regional High School Surfing Team
Holyoke Avenue Surfers Alliance
New Jersey Surf Club
Local Boards
Local Breaks
Surfing the Web
Why We Surf
Acknowledgements
Forward
This book is written for every Long Beach Island surfer who has ever had to answer the question, often spoken with a condescending inflection, You mean there’s surf in New Jersey?
Not only is there surf, brudda but I’ll be so bold as to say that our little island has influenced surfing history.
Several LBI natives have achieved national status in the amateur and professional surfing ranks. Others have surfed throughout the world, holding their own in expert
conditions. More than a few locals have tried their hand at surfboard design and manufacturing. LBI was the birthplace of a retail giant that is known throughout the international surfing industry. From cartoons to photography, movie production and offshoots of the sport like snowboarding, LBI’ers have been making their mark on surfing culture since the 1930s, and are still going strong.
The names in this book have not been changed to protect the innocent. These are hard-core surfers, individuals whose commitment to surfing is a lifestyle, not just a hobby. I can vouch for that, because I had to find them in order to write their stories. I was often delayed because of their surfing commitments. Chuck Barfoot was away surfing in Brazil and Bill Kretzer was in Puerto Rico. Jamie DeWitt was competing in surf meets in North Carolina and Bob Nugent was working a hundred hours a week in the summer to support his surfing habit.
So, what makes a soul surfer? There is a lifelong quest to pursue happiness, in one of its purest forms. There is less encumbrance to the material world and a heightened awareness of the need for preservation of our natural resources. Surfers,regardless of age, possess the energy and antics of youth. There is a drive for adventure and the desire to travel, travel, travel, in the pursuit of waves. These characteristics often make it necessary to adopt different work principles from mainstream society. Regardless of which era the surfer is from, what walk of life or educational background, you will see that these are common threads that connect the surfing community.
This quest to enjoy life, through the medium of the ocean, has resulted in some bad press from the real world.
The surfer is often ridiculed as having a poor work ethic or being a beach bum.
Even Bear, in the classic surfing movie Big Wednesday, observed That’s what I get for hiring surfer labor.
During an interview for the surfing documentary Liquid Stage: The Lure of Surfing, Steve Pezman, publisher of The Surfers Journal, explained why he thought surfers of his generation were labeled as rebels:
Against the larger societal push for conformity which characterized the 1950s, surfers’ priority of riding waves was not warmly embraced by mainstream society. They were viewed as rebels. For surfers of the late 1950s, their parents were children of the depression. Like my father, they were conditioned to get a job and keep it at all cost. Life was about being white-knuckled to an income. As a surfer, those rules and paranoia were not worth worshipping for the rest of our lives.
Surfers don’t necessarily work less, just differently. Do you want to tell surfers who are seasonal business owners, that they lack a work ethic? They work seven days a week with fifteen hour days. in doing this, they put themselves in a position to take time off later, to enjoy their favorite winter surfing spots. It is really all a matter of priorities. Surfers, somehow, some way, find a way to fit their work around their passion.
The surfing culture on LBI in the 1950s and 1960s was closely connected to the clamming industry. Many a surfer spent his time treading for clams in the bay. It was an appealing job since there wasn’t a nine to five schedule that conflicted with the most opportune surfing conditions. Those who needed more money just stayed out in the bay a little longer. In those days, the bay was bountiful and the pay was good. Many a surfer worked his way through college working in the bay. Commercial clamming is still a source of livelihood for surfers like Chill Paul, Bill Willem, and Bonnie Roth.
In recent years, with the boom in property values in Ocean County, many surfers have found a way to make a comfortable living around their surfing schedules while working in various aspects of construction or real estate. Sure, surfers can be doctors and lawyers, too, but a good day of golf still can’t compete with a good day of surfing.
Surfers have always had a strong connection to the environment and a commitment to its preservation. You will find that most surfers engage in environmentally-conscious activities. After all, when something is wrong with the ocean, surfers are often the first to know. Paddling above and through the waves, sometimes hours at a time, every sense is aroused. The surfer tastes the water, smells it, hears the thundering inside break. When he sees the spray from an off-shore wind, he knows that catching the wave will be just a little more work. The surfer submerges his whole body and feels the ocean’s invigorating briskness. When the ocean is sick, the surfer feels sick.
Some people experience heightened spirituality through their surfing. Sitting out on the water inevitably arouses a sense of awe for the natural environment. Being able to see and experience the world’s oceans becomes more important than amassing worldly possessions. The finest hotels and five-star restaurants are a distant second to being able to live in primitive accommodations in a third-world country if there is surf to be had.
Surfers have been known to sacrifice financial security to maintain their surfing lifestyles. Mickey Munoz, in an interview for the Today Show, was asked: For fifty-four years you’ve devoted yourself to this (surfing) . . . Why?
Mickey, as you may recall, was the body-double for Sandra Dee’s surfing scenes during the 1959 movie, Gidget. He was also a pioneer big wave rider, who, along with Greg Noll, was one of the first to ever successfully surf Waimea Bay. It was pointed out to him that many of his contemporaries were now getting ready to retire on healthy pensions, in big houses and with fancy cars. Without thinking twice, he proudly told the world:
When the waves are good, the waves are good. It’s such a rare opportunity that I don’t want to have to wear a watch, I don’t want to have to be anywhere. I love just being in the water and the rhythm. The positives are so positive and the highs are so high . . . they far outweigh the negatives.
One of the comments I heard repeatedly from those I interviewed was their shared pride and joy to be able to pass on the surfing experience to their children. There was also the thrill of traveling to exotic places with lifelong friends. Unfortunately, there was also an underlying tone of apprehension. Many fear the devastating impact that pollution will have, not only on surfing, but on the environment as a whole.
One of my favorite sections of the book is the Why We Surf
chapter. For one thing, I didn’t have to write anything. It’s all unedited material from a wide variety of surfers—all different ages, occupations, and surfing experience, albeit with an LBI connection. Admittedly, I copied the idea from the April ‘95 edition of Surfer magazine, where there were eighty-five reasons from individuals who read like a Who’s Who
in the surfing world. I’d like to think our chapter reads like a Who’s Who on LBI.
What I did learn from trying to get the surveys back is that most surfers aren’t exactly type-A personalities. When I asked folks to get them back to me in one month, I was pretty lucky to get them back in two. You know who you are out there—now aren’t you glad that I nagged you?
My sincere thanks to all of you who so graciously allowed me into your lives. Thank you for the opportunity to enter your homes,your photo albums, and your hearts. For some, I hope these next chapters will bring back many fond memories. I think you will agree that despite all the changes through the years—huge product merchandising, more crowded beaches, new surfboard design and technology—the stoke is still the same. I hope that the next generation of surfers will feel empowered to promote the positive aspects of this incredible sport and lifestyle, and to keep the aloha spirit
alive. For anyone who is still new to the sport, I offer one additional insight from the character, David, in Disney’s animated film Lilo & Stitch·.
I may not be a doctor but I know that there is no better cure for a sour face than a couple boards and some choice waves.
References:
Big Wednesday. Warner Brothers, Inc., 1978.
Lilo & Stitch, Walt Disney Pictures, 2002.
Liquid Stage: The Lure of Surfing.
KPBS Television San Diego, 1995.
Today Show, NBC, August 28, 2002.
Introduction to Long Beach Island
Image525.JPGLong Beach Island is an eighteen mile stretch of fine beach sand, shifting sandbars, and man-made wooden and rock jetties. Traveling to this barrier island, one must drive through rich acres of preserved pinelands. It feels
far away from the two large metropolitan areas that are within driving distance-New York City (90 miles from LBI) and Philadelphia (60 miles from LBI).
Long Beach Island comprises only a small segment of the 130 miles of New Jersey coastline. For all intents and purposes, it is an obscure coastal town. It doesn’t have a boardwalk or the nightlife
that many of its counterparts boast. It certainly doesn’t have the glitz and glitter of Atlantic City. Nevertheless, the people who are attracted to LBI are richly rewarded with its natural resources. Even the researchers, like Stephen Leatherman, a.k.a. Dr. Beach,
agree that LBI is something special. LBI has twice been selected as one of the Top Twenty Beaches in America. The study conducted by the Laboratory for Coastal Research at Florida International University uses fifty criteria from water quality to sand condition. LBI is the only New Jersey beach to ever make the list.
Most people enjoy LBI between June and September. The year-round population is about 8,000 people. During the summer, that number can swell to 140,000. The island is reached by a two-mile, four-lane causeway which is located at just about the island’s mid-section. There are actually six separate towns on LBI, each with their own governing bodies. Moving north to south, the first town is Barnegat Light. Like all good shore communities, LBI does have a lighthouse and conveniently, it is located here. Other towns include: Harvey Cedars, Surf City, Ship Bottom, Beach Haven, and Long Beach Township.
Long Beach Township, the largest municipality on LBI, consists of seven small towns north and south of the Causeway. The twelve-mile township includes North Beach at its northernmost point, but there is also a North Beach Haven south of the Causeway but north of Beach Haven! Add to that, towns like Beach Haven Park, Beach Haven Crest, Beach Haven Gardens, and just for a little diversity, Haven Beach. The names of the towns are important as we talk about some of the different surf breaks. Don’t worry if you’re confused by all the names-you’re not alone. These little subtleties contribute to greater than fifty percent of the nervous breakdowns by postal workers.
People on LBI make their living providing resort-type amenities. Many locals own restaurants, retail businesses, or provide the means for recreational activities (sailing, boating, fishing, crabbing, windsurfing, parasailing, kitesailing, surfing, biking, and putt-putt golf). Folks involved in all phases of construction are also in demand as beach bungalows are being torn down, one-by-one, and replaced with pretentious dwellings. Then there are the realtors, who outnumber year-round residents. Another island industry, although less well-known, is the commercial fishing fleet in Barnegat Light. It is one of the busiest on the eastern seaboard with over five million pounds of seafood shipped every year, to places as distant as Europe and Asia.
LBI is also known for its good surfing conditions, although this is not something the average summer visitor knows. Sure, surfers can be found during the summer months, but usually out of desperation. Except for occasional low pressure systems, the prevailing southerly winds result in waves that have a closer resemblance to boat wakes.
The surfing community has a better understanding of how coastal areas can have seasonal Jekyll and Hyde personalities. On LBI, surfers start thinking about heading out in the water just as normal people start retreating to the warmth and comfort of their homes. The surfer may be pelted by rain, perhaps from the remnants of a hurricane that is headed out to sea. At other times, gusts of wind from a blustery winter nor’easter threaten to snatch the surfboard from one’s hands. It doesn’t matter. If nature brings surf, the LBI surfers will be there . . . celebrating life the best way that they know how . . . in a harmonious dance with the waves.
The Long Beach Island Surfer
The Long Beach Island surfer must be patient to wait through the sweltering heat and humidity of an East Coast summer. Air temperatures range between 80° to 100° while the water temperature may rise as high as 75°. The typical lull in the waves is really just the gestation period for the beast that is about to come. It’s when everyone starts to go home, after Labor Day, that the tropical storms and hurricanes begin to pass offshore. Even a storm that is hundreds of miles away will churn up worthwhile swells.
Image532.JPGThe crowds have gone . . . Soul surfer and an autumn swell
As the winter solstice approaches, frequent nor’easters become part of the weather pattern. These destructive Atlantic storms have been wreaking havoc on the northeastern seaboard for centuries. Surfers are well-aware of the powerful punch that they pack into the waves. Part of that punch is also the painful temperatures of air and sea. Temperatures are lowest in January and February. Water temperatures have been known to drop below freezing. Add to that, blustery winds that may bring wind chills below zero degrees.
Nevertheless, the hard core East Coast surfer can not pass up these bigger, more consistent waves of winter. Like knights, clad in armor of neoprene from head to toe, they launch their attack. Unlike their medieval counterparts, however, their face is left exposed to the wind and wetness. The beautiful spray from a strong offshore wind adds to the throbbing. The infamous ice cream headache
is inevitable with too many submersions. The whole feel
of surfing is just a little different. Is it possible for water to feel harder? All movements are just a little slower with the 5mm outer covering. All sounds are muffled through the hood. People who think you’re crazy don’t understand that for the most part you’re actually pretty warm inside. The coolness that you do feel invigorates you and makes you feel alive through all your senses. It’s something you take home with you as you paddle in, and the seal that has been swimming with you wonders why you’re leaving.
As the earth begins to thaw in the spring,