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Pocket: The area of the wave that's closest to the curl or whitewash. Where you should surf if you want to generate the most speed. The steepest part of a wave, also known as the energy zone. Pounder: An unusually hard breaking wave [3] Point break: Area where an underwater rocky point creates waves that are suitable for surfing
Pages in category "Surfing terminology" The following 24 pages are in this category, out of 24 total. ... Surf break; Surf bum; Switchfoot (slang) T. Tandem surfing;
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Getty Images Ocean City, Md., is a small town with a population of only about 7,500 year-round residents. However, during the peak tourism season, it's not unusual for more than 300,000 visitors ...
“I used to surf here in the ‘90s, 2000s,” he said. “I used to go out on giant days like this, crazy waves.” High surf pounds the Avila Beach Pier on Thursday, Dec. 28 2023.
South African surfing has long been a significant part of global surf culture, but surfing in the rest of Africa has been primarily seen as a tourist attraction, rather than a local culture, until now; "these places are adopting surfing as their own and then injecting their culture into it," according to Masekela.
Local surf photographer and blogger Ralph Fatello was at the surf spot known as Fox Hill in Rye Thursday, shooting pictures and video of surfers enjoying 10-foot waves in 60-plus-degree water.
Bombora is an Indigenous Australian term for an area of large sea waves breaking over a shallow area such as a submerged rock shelf, reef, or sand bank that is located some distance from the shoreline and beach surf break. In slang, it is also called a bommie. [1]