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Hitting Tavarua

Created by photosbykarlo photosbykarlo  > 9 months ago, 23 Oct 2012
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photosbykarlo
photosbykarlo

236 posts

23 Oct 2012 2:27pm
Hi

Thinking about hitting Tavarua (Cloudbreak, etc) Late Novermber 2012.

Any thoughts about surfing there this time of year.

Also apart from the Surf Travel Co. (I tried the island website direct but no response) who else could I book through. Just don't want the first quote.

Cheers
Scotty88
Scotty88

4214 posts

23 Oct 2012 3:51pm
How long have you been waiting for a reply from the island website ?
Have you heard of 'Fiji Time' ?
The Fijians are very laid back and don't appear to be in much of a hurry to go anywhere or do anything - therefore any response is delayed compared to what service you may be familar with in Australia. Trust me it's farkin frustrating when you order a Fiji Bitter around the pool and die of thirst before you get it.
We live in a rat race and we want everything yesterday - Fiji is much more laid back. This is 'Fiji time'. Bula Vinaka.
photosbykarlo
photosbykarlo

236 posts

24 Oct 2012 7:53am
I guess it's like 'rubber time' in Indo then
newguy
newguy

654 posts

24 Oct 2012 8:55am
It's a good read although the majority of you guys are probably seasoned pro's. Ironic you are a photographer too mate.

http://www.surfermag.com/features/mortal-compass/

Tavarua Island, 1990: one of my first official photo trips for Surfer Magazine. I'm pumped as you can possibly be.

I'm not only excited about shooting talented surfers in photogenic surroundings, I'm secretly amped about something else: my own surfing. The opportunity to ride Tavarua. A possible chance to get pitted at Cloudbreak.

As soon as the lighting gets bad, or when it rains even the slightest amount, I'm clocking out and I'm out there. I'm on it.

It's Day 4, and my opportunity comes. Light rain, light offshores, and Cloudbreak is about 4- to 6-foot Hawaiian.

I'm on the first morning panga to Cloudbreak with two boatmen and a Tavarua resort guest: a surfing plumber named Rob from San Diego. I thought I was amped-this guy is frothing-he's had to snake a lot of drains to get here.

We pull up to the reef, jump off the boat and paddle out. With gray skies and glassy conditions, it's kind of hard to see sets coming, and it's even harder to figure out where to sit-the inside ledge isn't consistent enough, and the outer point isn't really connecting with the middle section. There are perfect waves, but it's random. Really random.

I sit wide on the middle section and stay cautious. I keep my eyes open, trying to study the sets. My new plumber friend, meanwhile, makes a beeline for the outer point.

I grab a set wave and get a fairly long, decent ride, but as soon as I kick out, I see that I'm in the middle of the inner ledge impact zone. A set comes, and I barely scratch over it. As I paddle over the last wave, I look behind me. I can see water draining off the reef. It looks shallow and scary in there. No wonder they call it Shish Kebabs.

Back outside, I look up the point just in time to see my plumber friend get pitched and subsequently pummeled by a set. He paddles over to where I'm sitting and looks rattled. He seems to carry a forced smile on his face, and then he asks me how it is over here and I say something to the effect of, "kinda gnarly." He doesn't say anything. He just stares at me, paddles up the reef, eats it on a late drop, and wears another set on his head.

I catch a few more waves, but they're disappointing because the whole time I'm riding them I'm paranoid about what's coming after and I'm looking behind the wave while I'm surfing. I want to make sure I kick out at the right time and place so I don't get smashed by a set and become a human shish kebab myself.

Adding to this disappointment is the fact that the boatmen we're surfing with are currently getting shacked off their gourds. Worse yet, they look completely at ease-air drops, casual stalls, deep cover-ups. Even getting caught inside doesn't seem to bother them: they just paddle aggressively straight at the foam, violently duck dive to the bottom, and pop out the back. No worries.

I paddle back to the boat and watch for a while. Plumber Rob gets a couple more waves, and then a set swings wide. It's the wave of the day, and he's in the perfect position. He pulls in to a nice section but ultimately trims too high, gets sucked over the falls, and then dragged over the reef face-up and backwards. He paddles back to the boat cut and bleeding. His back is hamburger.

Back in the boat, Rob is crestfallen. Not because of his injury, but because of his situation. His once in a lifetime opportunity-his dream trip-has become a nightmare.

Although I'd like to tell you that this Cloudbreak story is an anomaly, I have to report that I've seen it repeat itself the world over. All over the planet, traveling surfers are forcing themselves into waves and conditions they probably shouldn't be surfing. Not if they actually want to enjoy the experience, anyway.

That day at Cloudbreak made it painfully clear that there are certain waves on the planet that surfers like Rob and I should probably stay away from, or at least not purposely seek out. When they're breaking properly, waves like Cloudbreak, Teahupoo, Pipeline, Desert's, Kandui Lefts, Green Bush, Coxos, The Box, Ours, and Shipstern's are basically double black diamond mountains that should only be attempted by pros, hellmen, and masochists.

Why this isn't common knowledge isn't perfectly clear, but to be honest, the surf media is at least partly to blame. Because of visual one-upmanship, the surf magazines have created a misleading reality by constantly publishing photos of big, hollow, razor-sharp, shallow reef waves and promoting them as dream locations. Unfortunately for normal surfers-for mortals like you and I-they're anything but.

The problem is that surf photos don't come with a rating system or a disclaimer. The truth is that many of the 'sick' waves you see in magazines are only sick in the sense that that they would make you puke if one broke in front of you.

So given this reality, here's what I suggest: choose your next surf travel destination based on your surfing level. Assess your talent, and be honest with yourself. Even if you are an experienced surfer, chances are very slim that you should be going to Tahiti, Western Australia, The Canary Islands, The North Shore, or much of Indo and the South Pacific.

The good news is that there's plenty of incredible 'mortal' destinations all over the planet. Some of them include Costa Rica, New Zealand, Baja, The Maldives, Peru, El Salvador, Eastern Canada, and most of the Caribbean and Europe. If you're a really good surfer but not quite a pro or hellman, you can step it up a bit and try places like G-Land, Southern Mexico, Chile, Ireland and Nicaragua.

The bottom line is to talk to fellow surfers and ask them about their experiences and really think about where you should be going. Study guide books, and read online testimonials. Do your homework.

Pick your destination based on maximizing your potential surfing experience, not on a misplaced Pipe dream.
photosbykarlo
photosbykarlo

236 posts

24 Oct 2012 2:16pm
Good read, but there seems to be a few more breaks around the place that won't kill your dream.

Plus, Nov & Dec look like the swell drops
blueball
blueball

WA

87 posts

24 Oct 2012 4:29pm
I can see the point of that story and it certainly has some merit but some people also like to push their limits. I bet that guy who got smashed would regret for the rest of his life if he didnt go out that he should of, sounds like he had a fair old crack as well. I think its good to try and experience those spots listed instead of dreaming about it. I remember when I booked the north shore last year I was thinking the north shore doesnt even exist, its just a dreamland you see in mags and vids. I also reckon the wipeouts are just as memorable as the sick ones. I often flick through the couple of pics of sunset the day I went out when it was way out of my comfort zone, i got caught inside, totally smashed, and I now giggle picturing where i was in the pics when at the time i thought i was gonna die and just wanted to get the hell out of there! If i never went out I would always think what if, the only wave I got was the one I got in after the hammering but that was enough for me. Life's pretty boring if you just sit in your comfort zone all the time. Like with most things, once you get used to something you always want bigger and better.
Indodreaming
Indodreaming

379 posts

24 Oct 2012 6:03pm
Its nice to work you way up into more challenging waves rather than straight into thick and gnarly. Specially on OS trip.

There was a similar story about Skeleton Bay Namibia. Amazing looking left but only certain ones kegged and then you had the pro's and critical takeoff to deal with.

Most perfect looking waves I think are not perfect in that you are dealing with sweeps, big amounts of water moving through, sketchty take off, sharp reef and tuned in locals.

Having said that the most perfect wave I have surfed is Desert Point outgoing tide at 6 feet. Finish your wave and drift back out with the tide. Just dont go past end of take off area otherwise hard to get back.

Takeoff off was easy grower section different story. Might be a different story for late forties me now versus mid twenties back then.
branch
branch

WA

7 posts

24 Oct 2012 9:50pm
Great wind / weather that time of year although surf dropping.
Stay @ namotu ( book direct ) as you are closer to more consistent small wave spots ( wilkes pass & despo's ) and still close enough to cloudie should the conditions turn on.
I have had great waves & fishing that time of year..
You never know??
TimKay
TimKay

752 posts

30 Oct 2012 9:30am
I remember when I was there one of the big issues besides the swell was the wind
I went in June
A lot of days the boat drivers rightfully didn't want to take the boats out because of the wind
The reefs seem a long way out from the land and are blown out really easily
A lot of unhappy customers except for the Aussies who just hit the piss
If I was to go back I would sus out the shoulder season months hoping to score some swell with light winds
November could be good
photosbykarlo
photosbykarlo

236 posts

31 Oct 2012 11:49am
Thanks for that, we were told because we had an infant with us we would have to heli in, at $200US each one way, kind of killed it for us.

So now I'm looking at Lombok instead, staying at Novotel, bit of comfort for both the wife and little one.


Cheers
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