Special kids get on board
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Dave Brooks
In a few quick splashes Tuesday, Nick Avalos found himself living out
one of his dreams -- surfing a small break at Huntington State Beach.
The extraordinary 8-year-old can now add the water sport to his
already impressive list of hobbies, which includes skateboarding,
guitar-playing and drumming. While many children struggle to master
one hobby, Avalos has taken on all four, despite having a severe
visual disability.
He and about 20 other students were treated to an afternoon surf
session Tuesday, sponsored by Los Angeles-based Kanoa Aquatics, a
surf camp that recently expanded to Huntington Beach at the corner of
Newland Avenue and Pacific Coast Highway.
“It was a lot like skating, but really smooth,” he said. “This is
something I’ve always dreamed about doing.”
Avalos and the other students were from the Braille Institute, an
Anaheim resource center for the blind and visually impaired.
For many of the participants, Tuesday’s lesson was the first time
many had ever been surfing. Kanoa owner and former pro surfer Kip
Jerger conducts the special surf camps each year in both Huntington
Beach and Venice Beach.
“We believe that all people should be able to experience the ocean
and the joy of surfing,” he said.
Jerger and surf instructors Lloyd Herbert of New Zealand and Diego
Monteiro of Brazil took the youngsters out on specially designed
Softcore surfboards, with rope handles near the front. The
instructors would stand at the back and literally push the boards
into the waves, telling the youngsters the exact time when they
should try to stand.
“We’re with them the whole time, talking to them, letting them
know when the waves are coming and what the ocean environment is
like,” Herbert said. “When the wave does come, we hold their hands
and ride it in with them. A lot of what we do is constant
reassurance.”
Heather Bailey of the Braille Institute said the experience was a
chance for visually impaired students to participate in activities
their peers normally enjoy.
“They can say to their friends ‘I went surfing this summer too,’”
she said.
Many of the students visit the Braille Institute several times a
week after school, and volunteers and instructors at the facility
teach the students important life skills -- doing their laundry,
keeping things tidy, even using a keyboard.
Bailey said the students also experience many activities that
sighted people enjoy -- paragliding, horseback riding, rock climbing
and white-water rafting. Several students have even taken flying
lessons with the Young Eagles.
“We chose surfing this time, because it’s a great way for the kids
to work on balance and confidence,” she said.
Instructor Herbert said the surfing lessons are always a big
pleaser with the youngsters.
“They’re definitely a little nervous, but when they finally do
catch a wave, it’s big smiles all around,” he said. “I think a lot of
them have been waiting for this moment to say cowabunga.”
Youngster Avalos said he plans to go surfing again and hopes to
catch a few more waves this summer. In the meantime, he says he’s
going to use his summer days to pick up a new hobby -- playing the
slap bass.
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