A place to go when board
Deirdre Newman
When 8-year-old Kole Escher wants to skateboard, he opens up his
garage door and starts grinding on the halfpipe in his driveway in
Costa Mesa.
Devon Speth, 13, also has a halfpipe -- a U-shaped ramp used for
skateboarding -- in his front yard in Newport Beach.
When Ryan Groat, 29, wants to skateboard, he goes to Volcomâs
private skate park in Costa Mesa that is for employees and their
friends only.
These three illustrate the lengths to which skateboarders will go
in order to fulfill their passion. The skateboarding culture in
Newport-Mesa is almost as pervasive as the surfing addiction, the
sport which it evolved from. Skate clothing companies, like Volcom in
Costa Mesa and Quiksilver in Huntington Beach, have their U.S.
headquarters in the area.
And after a decade-long push from skateboarding fans, Costa Mesa
finally approved a skate park in October so the boarding faithful can
have a hub to make their four-wheeled pilgrimage to.
âItâs cool because we can have a closer place to skateâ said
Thomas Terry, 8, a friend of Koleâs. âMost of the places we skate are
pretty far away.â
Skateboarding grew out of surfing in the 1970s. On days that the
waves were flat, surfers would attach rollerskate wheels to
two-by-fours and skate around the parking lots near the beach, said
Jim Gray, who led the decade-long charge for a skate park in Costa
Mesa.
Skateboarding has attracted its own faithful followers -- some of
whom have never surfed -- and surfers have dubbed some of their moves
in skateboarding lingo, like âollies,â Gray said.
Many adults who are passionate about skateboarding refer to it as
a meditative experience.
âItâs like a gym release, you can forget about everything -- then
you go back [to work] refreshed and sweaty,â said Ben Brough, 26, an
artist at Volcom, where employees who have keys to the indoor skate
park can skate whenever they want during work.
Meanwhile, kids say they like skating just for the enjoyment of
it.
âI just like having fun,â Kole Escher said.
Kole started skating when he was 2 years old. A neighbor across
the street showed him some basic tricks, and he was hooked, he said.
Koleâs mother, Kathy Escher, was a little nervous, though. After
Kole received his first skateboard for Christmas, he slept with it
for two weeks, she said. Two years later, Kole scored his first ramp.
That first, three-foot ramp is now half of the halfpipe in the
driveway of the Escherâs home. A four-foot ramp completes the
makeshift skate park, which has become a popular skating spot in the
neighborhood.
âBy 5 p.m., thereâll be five kids skateboarding here,â Koleâs mom
said. âKole has made new friends and has friends of all ages.â
Kole said he learns different skating moves like the ârock ânâ
roll,â âgrabs,â and the âmanualâ by hearing about them or seeing
other people do them. He also enjoys playing skateboarding video
games, he said.
Heâs a fearless skateboarder who is not afraid to try moves like a
handstand -- which he saw on a video game -- even when he wipes out
and has to take a short break to recover. And, he always wears a
helmet when skateboarding, he said.
Kole is such a good skateboarder that now heâs teaching his
neighbor -- who introduced him to the sport -- new tricks, his mom
said. And he teaches some of his friends, like Carly Searcy, 8.
âHe taught me how to skate when I was four years old,â Carly said.
Devon uses the halfpipe in his front yard at his home, âwith
everyone else in the neighborhood,â his father Doug Speth said. He
also skates at schools like Newport Harbor High School and Huntington
Beach High School and at skate parks.
âItâs a thrill. Itâs just like you canât get it from anything
else, like jumping off stuff,â Devon said. âItâs dangerous and itâs
fun and you can make new friends from it too.â
Volcom keeps its skate park in a private warehouse because
otherwise it would be overrun with skateboarders, said Steve
Stratton, 26, who manages Volcomâs website and is one of the select
few who has a key to the companyâs park. The park was just built six
weeks ago and replaced the companyâs former onsite skate park. It
contains a mini bowl, a big bowl -- which is 14 feet high, at its
tallest point -- and a street course that unites them.
âThis [park] is mostly ridden by elite skaters,â said Gray, who
goes to Volcom to skate. âItâs a specialized training round for
insane pros.â
Because the park is indoors, the sound of the metal wheels
slamming against the wooden floor creates the kind of cacophony only
skateboarders could love.
âItâs a beautiful sound,â Gray said.
All the skateboarders agree that Costa Mesaâs park is long
overdue.
âI think thereâs a lack of places for [skating], so I think the
park is the perfect fit, especially with the kind of people who live
and work in the community,â Stratton said.
While Devon said he would probably use the new park in Costa Mesa,
he said he would like to see a skate park in Newport Beach as well.
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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