After what seemed like an interminable summer of really ordinary surf, I decided to take action. I have been dreaming about a surf trip to somewhere that has uncrowded consistent waves for almost a year now. I took up supping about two years ago and as I have steadily improved, I have of course got greedier for good waves. And part of the problem is that, whenever the surf actually does get good, all the usual places I surf between Sydney and the Gold Coast are too crowded, especially on a SUP.
At some point I subscribed to email updates from World Surfaris and the range of surf destinations is bewildering. Between unlikely places like Taiwan, to more remote places like PNG and colder climes like New Zealand, there is of course the vast array of all the Pacifc and Indonesian Islands. It is a bit overwhelming knowing where to start. Maybe if I was a wealthy retiree (which I'm not!) with a bucket list, I could just start at the top of the list and work my way through every destination before I die. But due to limited available funds and time, I have to make a choice.
Then I received a notification that a brand new resort had opened at Nias
www.worldsurfaris.com/surf-trip/kabunohi-sorake-resort-nias . I have long had my eye on this spot since I rode short boards many decades ago and first heard about it as an idyllic right-hand Indo wave in the midst of so many Indo lefts. Then I heard as many other surfers did, that it had been adversely affected by the 2005 earthquake which raised the seabed by a metre. But on the spur of the moment I booked in to KabuNohi (which means coconut grove) resort at Sorake (which means broken coral) right on the point of Lagundri Bay Nias and took my son Daniel with me who surfs a short board. It is the last time I will see him for a while as he is leaving for Europe shortly.
With some nervousness in the pit of my stomach we head off to the unknown. Mark and Debi who live on-site were fantastic, hospitable hosts. Dan and I hit the surf as soon as we arrived and we surfed ourselves to a standstill. Every morning and afternoon the water was glassy and I mean like clockwork. The swell started to pick up on the Monday afternoon and I took off on a slightly bigger one and was caught off-guard by how fast the larger waves were. I made a mental note to paddle hard and go hard if I ever managed to paddle in on a big one.
Next morning, just before dawn I was the third guy out to the main outside line-up and the sets were almost double overhead. Before I knew it, as I was hanging out a bit wider than the short-boarders, I had paddled onto a good size set-wave. When I got to the bottom everything was going really fast and the thought flashed through my mind: "you could be in trouble here" but I managed to do a bottom turn and saw a big curling lip up ahead, overhead. Somehow I made it through to the end of the wave unscathed and still standing. My legs, flushed with adrenaline were now shaking involuntarily. I had to sit down for a while before I paddled back out.
Unfortunately it was too early for the boat photographers who sell you photos after your session, but my son Dan happened to see his old man take-off and make the wave. Even he thought "whoah dad what are you doing? " until I just cleared the crashing lip and sped through the final section. Over the rest of the week, the swell subsided but there were always some uncrowded fun waves to be had. Three sessions of surfing a day, great food and entertaining company, especially from Mark who was one of the early guys to surf Nias back in 1980, and who has run boat-charters in the area over a long period of time, made for an enormously memorable and satisfying surf trip. I thoroughly recommend it to all SUPsters!
www.worldsurfaris.com/blog/first-ever-kabunohi-resort-surf-report You can see some more photos below.
By the way if you want to give to a worthy cause, an Aussie eye surgeon Raf Ghabrial, who also surfs a lot in Indo is trying to raise funds to help this unfortunate lady from Nias who needs eye surgery in Oz. Raf is donating his skills but needs support to fly her in and out etc. You can donate here
www.gofundme.com/f/help-save-fitirias-eye



