At home on the board
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Andrew Edwards
Twenty-eight years later and Laguna Beach is still the home of
skimboarding.
Aliso Beach was the scene for the Victoria Skimboards World
Championship of Skimboarding, where throughout the weekend,
competitors challenged each other and some tough waves in a contest
that gave local rippers a chance to compete with skimboarders from
around the world.
“This is kind of the Super Bowl of skimboarding,” senior pro
skimboarder Ron Pringle said. “This is the Mecca of skimboarding.”
Skimboarding is Laguna’s homegrown sport and resembles a cross
between surfing and skateboarding. Unlike surfers, skimboarders do
not paddle out into the ocean to catch waves. Instead, they take off
from the sand with their boards in hand. When they hit the water,
they drop the board and with a fluid motion, step onto the board as
they run toward a wave.
Once afloat, skimboarders glide on the water like surfers, and
like skaters, can pull off tricks like 360s and kick-flips. It’s not
an unusual sight to see a skimboarder use a wave for a launching pad
and catch air.
Another popular stunt is to ride the tube or catch the barrel of
the wave and skim along the water as the wave crashes. This is the
kind of wave that skimboarder Brent Grech, 16, of Corona del Mar
looks for.
“Nice, peaky, slashable waves,” Grech said, describing the best
waves. “Cruisers, cruisers for tubes.”
The Victoria championship started out 28 years ago when Charles
“Tex” Haines opened Victoria Skimboards in 1976. Over the years,
skimboards have evolved from homemade wooden cut-outs to high-end
boards made from synthetic materials.
“It was just plywood back in the old days, now it’s advanced to
high-tech water rockets,” Pringle said.
Who was the first skimboarder? No one knows for sure.
“A lot of people in different places just decided to get a piece
of wood and slide on it,” said Trigg Garner of Victoria Skimboards.
Pringle was one of 11 of the godfathers of skimboarding who
competed in the Senior Pro competition. The old-school matchup gave
Haines a chance to get back into competition, and featured some
spectacular aerial moves by Kurt Westgaard, who finished off his
semifinal heat with a double-flip off of his board.
In the Pro Division, Laguna’s Bryan brothers once again showed
they were at the top of their game. Bill Bryan won his 11th world
championship after a fiercely competitive final round with his
brother George “Geo” Bryan and Laguna rippers Mike Stanaland and
Morgan Just. For the Bryan brothers, skimboarding is a way of life,
not only do they compete, but after Sunday’s competition they
premiered the skimboarding film “Knee Deep in the Hoopla” in Dana
Point.
“We grew up in Victoria Beach,” Bill Bryan said. “When I was
3-years-old they started Victoria Skimboards and I was a test pilot,
a crash test dummy. I was hooked.”
Senior Pro Chris Henderson, respected as one of skimboarding’s
all-time greats, said he personally looked up to Bill Bryan.
“Bill Bryan has taken it to a new level,” Henderson said. “A
totally different level.”
The majority of skimboarders hailed from Laguna Beach, but
skimboarding is a growing sport, and competitors from the East Coast,
Mexico, Japan, Brazil and Chile came to Aliso Beach to show their
moves. Kentoro Higshiyami of Shimagun, Japan owns a skimboard shop in
his hometown and said the sport is popular on his side of the Pacific
Ocean.
“Many, many people skimboard,” he said.
Closer to home, the future of the sport could be seen in the
amateur competitions. Women and youngsters, like 7-year-old Timothy
Gamboa of Laguna Beach, the youngest skimboarder in the event, showed
they could perform some solid moves along the shoreline.
“[I am] just looking to pump the girls up, that’s about it,” said
Laguna skimboarder Shonna Cobb, who finished second in her division.
The rise in skimboarding’s popularity came as no surprise to
Haines.
“That’s why I did it,” he said. “It had potential.”
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