sexta-feira, 8 de outubro de 2010

To change the tone, some lecturing… or maybe not



Yes, it’s that time of the year when everyone, including the posh boys and girls that never set foot in Peniche, is comfortable in town and wants to see and be seen… The pro’s are in town, Dane Reynold’s in town, the TV’s are in town, the crowd is in town…

It’s definitely a special moment during the year. We can understand all the hype and some fancy clothes inclusive. We can also understand that some surfers who can hardly make a decent takeoff will be in Lagido barking at some pale faces, pretending to be locals. We do understand that some of that socialite, who on a normal basis despise Peniche and what it represents, suddenly have this overwhelming urge to make the hour drive up here, even if they just hang around the VIP tent adding some extra fat to the wannabe slim figures.

What we don’t understand is that while free surfers and some pro’s at Supertubos are putting on a show like last October 6th these people will still rather do what they usually do…but then again, who cares?


Photos: Sandra Stubenvoll @ www.balealsurfcamp.com
Words: Marcos Bairros

quarta-feira, 15 de setembro de 2010

It's alive! It's alive!

Like Dr. Frankenstein when he first saw his creation come to life, I had to shout out loud the very same words. Besides the somewhat scared look from the occasional surfer tourists at the beach, the local crew new I had no serious mental problem and in fact it was a perfectly reasonable behavior considering the recent past. Perhaps the lunatic look in the eyes could have been avoided.

The reason for the awkward scream was the vision of a surf spot that had been hibernating for such a long time (I'm a liar, I just wasn't there...) that for a while I thought it had passed away. But it hadn't. In fact the vision before me was of a very alive creature, one that already had claimed a victim, half a surf board left behind by the unlucky challenger.

Later that day I saw a local body boarder going for a double up. As it went onto the shallower part of the sandbar he free felled halfway through the drop. It threw a square barrel over him and he made it out. Later I paddled by on the way back from another wipeout on the shallow Supertubos, his face still had the same words written all over: "It's alive, it's alive!!"

Supertubos is not dead, September 2010
Photo: Sandra Stubenvoll Words: Marcos Bairros

segunda-feira, 12 de julho de 2010

Another year, same routine…

Years go by relentlessly and as I once heard: days go by slowly, the years go fast. One year nowadays seems to feel like a 365 days ritual with the right fruit to go along as well as the right fish. As surfers we also look upon the year with the anticipation of the right swell, the perfect day, in between the slow days without surf and that’s it, happy New Year!

Now it’s summer and there’s a promise off an arriving swell, it’s been flat, seas are calm, moon is getting bigger and chances are that the Atlantic throws at us another great summer session.
I for myself always miss the winter and all that it represents. Feels like it was yesterday we saw this break on a perfect winter swell, the perfect wind direction.

Somewhere in Peniche, not small for connoisseurs of this break.

Photo: Sandra Stubenvoll -Baleal Surf Camp - Peniche, Portugal
Text: Marcos Bairros

quinta-feira, 24 de junho de 2010

Meaningful to some

This is a photo I like because it means something, though it might not to most people.
I’ll explain why. This photo from Sandra shows a lot about being in Peniche. Besides the gradient from the background in the top to the lower part with the foreground with colors I like it also shows some unavoidable Peniche features.

The photo was taken from Molhe Leste beach just south to the East pier at Peniche’s harbor. There’s the fishing boat coming back to harbor, probably with this year’s first school of “sardinhas” in it, which reminds me that I haven’t had yet and must soon. There are the persistent seagulls looking for some opportunity in the boat’s trail, a must have you ever stared at Peniche harbor entrance. There’s the “nortada” and not so mild by looking at the various “carneirinhos” and there’s a summer sun showing the deposited algae from the storm the week before, this means as much “iodo” as possible in the sea water . For a surfers’ eye there’s also some lines coming in strait from west. If there would be some more feet on those waves this shot would probably be of a “tubo” a few hundred meters south, but that’s another story.


Photo: Sandra Stubenvoll Text: Marcos Bairros

sábado, 22 de maio de 2010

El Niño vs Azores High

It's already known by surfer communities’ worldwide. This winter (northern hemisphere) or summer (southern hemisphere) depending where you have been, has been dominated by the El Niño climate pattern phenomena. To make it short, in what surfing wise matters, this means that Hawaii had the best season in the last 10 years, California was pumping, and Western Sahara had classic weeks after weeks. The other side of this coin is that many locations around the world had an unusual poor season.

The case of the Western Portugal coastline was one of the latter. This winter indeed brought our way countless storms and swells; the problem is that part of the El Niño influence in the North Atlantic the normally mid north Atlantic position of the Azores High pressure system went south! By making so the Azores High pressure system cleared the path for the storms that are generated in the Caribbean region.

So, instead of their normal path towards the north Atlantic, they just crossed the same ocean straight into our exposed western coastline, threw the swell north and south (we’ve hear western Africa was on fire) but by landing straight on our backyards, many time, stormy conditions did not provided the right wind direction to make the best of the plentiful swell offer.

Not a drama, especially in Peniche where we could still surf regularly, as usual. But when Spring arrived and conditions finally allowed for Supertubos to show a little of what it can do, some of us have wondered what winter season we could have had, had El Niño have not shown its power once again.


Supertubos spring 2010. Photo by Sandra Stubenvoll, Baleal Surf Camp

quinta-feira, 11 de fevereiro de 2010

Closeout


Photo by: Baleal Surf Camp - Peniche Portugal

Not just the perfect barrels deserve the spotlight. Some lesser creations from Nature are as divine as the more frequently captured A frames. In the end, and this literally means the beach, they are all, and as they break they all were, unique. Each and every one of them.

segunda-feira, 21 de dezembro de 2009

Perfect Winter Lineup @ Secret Spot

First time I saw this wave was from a 12th floor hotel window, just after waking up... Could not believe in my eyes!! It was one of the most perfect lineup´s ever seen on the portuguese coastline and i´ve been looking for lineups in the last 30 years, and totaly empty... One month later I went back to the same spot, but this time with a surfboard, and that´s the type of pearls I got that morning!


Photo: Sandra Stubenvoll, Baleal Surf Camp - Peniche