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Saltwater Pilgrim: Tofo Chicks let loose in Indo

Tofo Chicks Let Loose in Indo

Lucy Small can wield a keyboard as good as she can a surfboard. She also strikes a good pose! However, it was on that headland behind Lucy, that she was attacked and soome creep in undoes tried to rape her. She bravely decided that this was not going to happen, and fought back, beating her attacker off and back into the bush where the savage came from! Nice Lucy, girl power!
Introducing surf adventurer and scribe – Lucy Small (Saltwater Pilgrim)

International surf adventurer Lucy Small (Oz) can wield a keyboard as good as she can a surfboard. She also strikes a good pose! Lucy and her friend Anna MaCauly have been chasing the dream all over the world, but as you can clearly see from Lucy’s writing, Africa is calling her home. So we’ve added a new column called Surf Travel and Lucy is about to fire that up.

All this travelling and high adventure comes at high stakes though. It was on that headland behind Lucy in this shot taken of her paddling on my inside (Tofinho Point, Praia do Tofo, Inhambane, Southern Mozambique), that she was attacked and some creep in undies tried to sexually assault her. She bravely decided that this was not going to happen, and fought back vehemently, beating her attacker off and back into the bush where the savage came from! Nice Lucy, girl power!

Lucy has recently joined thesardine.co.za as a scribe and her very nicely put together blog can be read right here…Follow Lucy Small at her Saltwater Pilgrim blog.

In the meantime, her latest caper, involving none other than Tofo girls Mel Rodriguez and Ghiz Laine – an unbelievable crew, is in and around Indonesia scouring the place for waves and kicks…reads below.

Imagine bumping into that bunch over there hey?! Wowser!

And over to you Lucy (in the sky…)…

“I touched down in Bali at one in the morning. A small guy, probably called Made, flagged me down and drove me into the wet streets of Denpasar and eventually a dark complex somewhere vaguely near Dreamlands.

 

I was greeted in the driveway by Renet, Plettenberg bay native and stewardess of international waters and Melanie, Spanish surfer babe and longtime resident of Tofo, Mozambique.

 

I didn’t really want to be in Indo. To be frank. There were a gazzilion other destinations with far greater allure that I could think of going with the limited cash in my bank account, but I was never going to let the debauchery of the paradise islands slip by without my attendance.

 

So there I was. Sitting on the floor of an apartment, blurry eyed and sleepless, with familiar faces and mosquitoes lurking all too close to my ear lobes. For all I knew, I could have been right back in Tofo.

 

We had one scooter between us. The following evening saw us missioning to Dreamlands, three chicks, three boards and one scooter wandering through the jungle. The waves were cooking, the post sunset drive home was a hazardous one. Eventually, after a few wrong turn, no phones, no money and no petrol, racing to get back in time to dance the Sunday night away, we ran into some friendly South Africans who pointed us in the right direction.

 

“What on earth are you ladies doing out here?” they said.

 

Not sure.

 

It was a good way to kick off the trip.

 

We had to bail from the party after a few days, heading west to the quiet village of Balian. The wave is an A-frame peak, set against a black sand beach and murky rivermouth. It breaks over river stones, having a distinctly sharky vibe, made even worse by the stories from the locals – probably made up to keep the wave count up and the surfer count down.

 

There were a few days that it cooked, our lives became early morning stumbles to the waters edge, lunch time mie goreng in a tiny warung with the same sun affected Australian and backhand hacks as best we could.

 

Collapsing in bed as the sun disappeared.

 

We drove into the jungle one afternoon. Craving the wind in our hair as we flew into the mountains on our break-free, automatic scooters. Cocks fought in the street and people waved at us like they had never seen foreigners before.  Eventually, after frantically pointing us in the direction of fried rice, we sat in a tiny shop, eating some version of strange food and taste testing samples in plastic bags, which could have been pretty much anything.

 

Bali has the kind of views to make you wet yourself. Some might say that you want ‘drink in’ the scenery, but I’m more inclined to say I want to chop it up with my credit card and put it up my nose. It’s addictive to say the least. This impromptu drive into the mountains was no different.

 

Eventually we got sick of the simple life and took a boat across to Nusa Lemongan. A tiny island just of Bali, undergoing some drastic developments as more and more cashed up foreigners make themselves comfortable.

 

After our transport boat nearly getting dumped on a reef we were amping for the swell on its way up from Western Australia. Spending the afternoon nearly getting washed off the island in a turning tide current, the following day was a whole different story.

 

The island is basically set up with three main breaks next to each other -each varying in direction and difficulty.  We stayed in front of Shipwrecks, a hollow right-hander where we pretty much moved only between the waves and the bar.

 

With the arrival of Ghizlane, our fourth counterpart – Moroccan seastress and Tofinho local, along with some serious swell, we all spent some serious time with the reef on our second day. Stumbling up the beach one after the other, our dreams of barrels for breakfast all but shattered.

 

By the following day though, I had it wired. Some of the bombs of my life. A half hour dream session with only girls out and water so clear I could see sharp fangs of coral through the wave face.

 

We returned to the mainland that afternoon, in the pouring rain. Dancing the Sunday away over the cliffs of Uluwatu.

 

There were no more waves to speak of, so we turned to the bottle (long-neck Bintangs specifically) until finally we our last night took us to the fish market. South African expats, Marshall living in Sumba, Lance in Bukit, Sue and Rohan, at Dreamlands, all of whom had been to Tofo, Sue and Rohan having lived there in a past life as well.

 

Krusty, also a part-time resident of Tofo, played his guitar as the sun sunk below the shimmering waterline. Blocking out the stench of decaying fish was the six kilogram tuna before us and the mountains of shellfish. Delicacies in numbers I would never see at home.

 

I could have sat at the table forever.

 

Krusty’s voice fading in and out of the conversations, occasionally accompanied by the others that knew his songs.

 

I flew out early in the morning. Teary at saying goodbye.

 

Wishing my flight was to Africa. Not bloody Australia.”

 

Hey Krusty you got a mention man! Nicey nice!

Thank you Lucy, for joining up with thesardine.co.za and sharing your awesome life and views with us.

Your Czek is in the mail!

Another Lucy Small anecdote, My Last Day in Africa, can be read by clicking right here… My Last Day in Africa by Lucy Small

 

 

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Cape St. Frances in the mist

Cape St. Frances in the mist

Cruising the St. Frances peninsula in the mist as a cold front chills the warm land makes for some amazing vistas.

Having Mr. Bruce Gold along as company paints an even more interesting set of pictures…

The lighthouse is undergoing some much needed refurbishment, and the penguin station is full of people and penguins. Fishermen were enjoying some good brusher / musselcracker action on the point in the gulleys, shad were coming out in the corner. The surf was lame and the water really, really cold – but still the weekend warriors were hard at it.

The afternoon led us to the St. Frances Resort down the beach, where we were pleasantly treated to a superb live performance by local but travelling musician – Johnno. Really good, as were the ice cold draft beers and seafood baskets. Thanks Fasie!

 

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Pomene surf stories

The morning after. An incredible place is Pomene. (c) Boa Gente

Pomene surf stories

Yes and just as we thought we knew all the places, a new one pops up hey? Surely this is a finite factor and if so, how special are these treasures?
When Roosta and I strolled across what they call the African Kirra, it was 2 ft and alarmingly perfect. Badger and Fever did some camerawork, wish I knew where that tape was?!
Then we found more and more un-named waves. And some with names. Culminating in a magical place called Pomene. Well, once it’s been printed in the mags, that’s it, supposedly – although I still don’t encounter crowds when there, even though the setup was painted with a double page spread in the Zag.

So what’s it like? Well, I don’t really know, even though I have surfed it for decades now. The last time I was there it totally shocked me by breaking underwater?! Seriously underwater. And with an onshore all over it, and a strong east swell delivery…really fast…sometimes you would just disappear into spray and foam and come out the other side like 50 metres further down the point! Sooo hollooow and powerful.
When I first took Roosta along, whilst putting together a movie with Brucifire, the first day was super perfect winding hollow sandy waves at about 3 or 4 feet. Surfed silly. The next day 5ft solid, and the next day 6ft perfect conditions – light offshore, hot as hell – April cyclone made late appearance. Then it got 8ft plus and the sight of these magnificent beasts ploughing down the sandbank like dredgers started to become surreal. After a few hours of the tide dropping and all waves blurring into one, I lost it and went mad, shouting obscenities at Roosta and Bruce, they back at me, and it became a shit fight. Over-perfect waves will drive you crazy – watch out, you have been warned.
Then I have surfed it with Khimal Obardien, John Fever and St.John Alexander, in a week of howling westerly winds in mid winter. The south swell waves just kept peeling around the headland and onto the sandbank, day after day…rides definitely being measured in kilometers. Mellow, south swell – just peeling smash-able perfect waves.
A huge swell also just hits that sandbank and unloads. But, it’s not quite like that Donkey place for technical perfection, which Donkey seems to be. Although on some days…

And consistency. Well, we got cyclones that also fire these north facing waves up. Every year this time and well into winter. Whenever the east is howling down here on the south coast. All this last three weeks while we have been getting hammered by these easts, old Captain Gallop and crew up in Tofo have been creaming waves day after day – all on their own?! Yep, the sand bars that normally lie lazily about doing nothing, really come to life with strong east swells – very short period and loads of waves in a set, invariably an offshore blowing as the tail of the cyclone whips around hitting very hot land and veering off in a light offshore breeze?! The same system that paints us black with the easterlies in KZN!

Mozambique is where it’s at, in these difficult times for waves…

Check out Paradise Beach Lodge on the northern bank of the estuary. You will need a boat to get to the waves but you will catch a few fish on the way there and back that’s for sure!

pomene-paradise

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Umtentweni shad undersize

Umtentweni shad undersize

Ignorance is not acceptable.

Umtentweni is pretty much well known for it’s Grannies Pool. A cool little enclave semi protected from the pounding surf where peeps of all ages can frolic themselves away.

Taking the editorial staff out for a walk and a swim always gets the tails wagging, and this day was no exception. We charged down to the pool and went swimming. Unfortunately, the brown water from the Umzimkulu had been driven by the powerful west wind right up into the bay at ‘Tweni, and the water in the pool was murky as.

Two young kids and an adult were fishing in the pool. I ambled over and checked their camp out. They were full of fish!? Using Yozuri jigs with sardine baits, they had found a shoal of karanteen, and in amongst the kara’s, shad!

The kara’s were of size, but the shad, definitely not. Plus the kids had a cast net and sure knew how to use it. They had a shoal of baby mullet too! All in all, their taking for the day was about 30 kara’s, 15 shad and a shoal of mullies! The bag weighed about 10 kg’s!

I gently enquired as to the legality of their operation and soon they got a worried look on their faces. I explained to them how much trouble they could get themselves into. They got more worried. Soon they were scarpering for their car and were off.

Sheer ignorance, or sheer criminal? Either way, unacceptable.

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Cyclones! Amazing waves at Barra…

Cyclones! Amazing waves at Barra…

The first tropical storm to be upgraded in early January – Bansi – was graced with the accolade of being a Level 4 cyclone! She is moving away from Madagascar where she was hovering a while, and now has a newly born sister in tow!

Tropical Storm Chedza is right in the channel, our side of Madagascar, and also been upgraded to a tropical cyclone, but is also headed away from us – the two together have produced some epic conditions.

The water is super warm, around 27 degrees, and the airflow has steadily moved from onshore to side/offshore, and it’s finally raining. The light during the day is silvery blue, and as I write this, thunder is forcing it’s way overhead giving us even more to think about.
Surfing waves that can clean cut you in half can be fun once you get used to it, but the purported twin of The Donkey – a shifting superbank in Barra, is by no means easy. The drop is straight out of the sky and 6ft waves disgorge themselves onto a two foot deep sandbar that runs for hundreds of metres. When it’s perfect it can almost be easy, but the last few days at Barra have registered only about a 4/10.

It was lumpy, mean and yet still super hollow. Young Sung Min Cho was the star of the show – he was seen disappearing deep into pits that are easily heavier than any KZN South Coast break can be. The wave literally empties out on itself, is so fast, yet so perfectly difficult. And at 6ft it’s insane stuff.

And! It’s all captured, by Min himself. He and his two brothers, Sung Min Cho and Tae Sung Junior Cho only started surfing a year ago and the level they have achieved is astounding. In fact, Tofo is now littered with groms ripping up anything they can paddle into.

Enjoy the clip!

 

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