When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Riding Giants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riding_Giants

    Riding Giants is a 2004 documentary film produced by Agi Orsi and directed and narrated by Stacy Peralta, a famous skater/surfer.The movie traces the origins of surfing and specifically focuses on the art of big wave riding.

  3. Mavericks, California - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mavericks,_California

    Mavericks is a surfing location in northern California outside Pillar Point Harbor, just north of the town of Half Moon Bay at the village of Princeton-by-the-Sea.After a strong winter storm in the northern Pacific Ocean, waves can routinely crest at over 25 ft (8 m) and top out at over 60 ft (18 m).

  4. Surfing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surfing

    In the surf zone, shallow water waves are carried by global winds to the beach and interact with local winds to make surfing waves. [52] [54] Different onshore and off-shore wind patterns in the surf zone create different types of waves. Onshore winds cause random wave breaking patterns and are more suitable for experienced surfers.

  5. 50-foot waves forecast to slam Hawaii's northern ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/50-foot-waves-forecast-slam...

    Dangerous surf conditions with waves reaching dozens of feet high are forecast across Hawaii's northern beaches just as winter-weary travelers may be searching out sun and warm beach weather for ...

  6. Smith: Legislators propose UW study on effects of wake ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/smith-legislators-propose-uw-study...

    Another more restrictive proposal, authored by Sen. Andres Jacque (R-De Pere), would have prohibited wake surfing on a lake smaller than 1,500 acres, required wake-enhanced boats to operate at ...

  7. Big wave surfing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_wave_surfing

    A surfer at Mavericks, one of the world's premier big wave surfing locations. Big wave surfing is a discipline within surfing in which experienced surfers paddle into, or are towed into, waves which are at least 20 feet (6.2 m) high, on surf boards known as "guns" or towboards. [1] Sizes of the board needed to successfully surf these waves vary ...

  8. Hawaiian scale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawaiian_scale

    Miyake reports [3] that the Surf News Network [4] expresses wave heights as "2/3 the height of the wave from crest to trough." This heuristic finds mathematical support as a compromise between two methods of expressing the combined effects of a wave's average upward and average downward deviations from mean sea level, namely a) the sum of the absolute value of a sine wave's average (mean ...

  9. Tow-in surfing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tow-in_surfing

    Tow-in surfing is a surfing technique which uses artificial assistance to allow the surfer to catch faster-moving waves than was traditionally possible when paddling by hand. Tow-in surfing was invented by surfers who wanted to catch big waves and break the 30 ft (9 m) barrier. It has been one of the biggest breakthroughs in surfing history.