Memories
Though I’ve surfed NH many times over the years, I never really
fit in there. During the late seventies
and early eighties when I was attending (surfing more than attending!) classes
at UNH and living with my parents in Durham, it was an easy shoot over the back
roads to Hampton, N. Hampton, and Rye. I
surfed The Wall, Straw’s Point, Lucky’s, Rye-on-the-Rocks, and Fox Hill
Point. One of my earlier blog entries is
actually the tale of the day I almost drowned at Fox Hill. I loved surfing the waves in NH; there is
some incredible quality there. But I
never felt I fit in. In those days, the
water seemed to be a much more aggressive place. Ironically, though it was far less crowded
than today, it wasn’t an easy place to catch a wave to yourself. And the crew was especially tight knit, and
scowled a lot at outsiders. They all
seemed to know each other and they all had nicknames. I felt out of place even though in those days
I sported my own “Live Free Or Die” license plate. I’ll never forget the day I was out at the
Rocks…it was solid double overhead and Kevin Grondin (THE local legend in NH)
was owning all the best set waves. But
there were plenty of leftovers to go around. Yet most of my waves were smaller inbetweeners
or shoulders I paddled into after someone else had wiped out. It wasn’t that I was fearful, I was at my
surfing prime in those days and full of confidence. But I wasn’t a local and the locals kept
boxing me in and outmaneuvering me into position. Frustrated, I figured I’d fix their wagon and
kept inching ever closer over to the main takeoff peak. Until finally I was in position, a set came
and I was the deepest one in the slot. I actually took off a little behind the
peak, but was completely confident I could “backdoor” the section and show
those bastards that I COULD surf, and could actually surf better than most of
them! And the drop was amazing, and I
squared off the bottom with a hard turn, and shot out onto the wall as an
avalanche of whitewater blasted down just behind me. It was shaping up to be my best wave of the
year until…until some big, burly bastard dropped in on me. This particular, big burly bastard was ALWAYS
out there at the Rocks when I surfed. He
had one of those Fu Manchu, walrus looking mustaches and he was the best
scowler out there. Well, so Mr. Fat
Walrus not only drops in on MY wave, after all the work and maneuvering I’d put
in to just catch myself it, but Mr. Fat Walrus actually turns to see me having
the actual audacity to ride, BEHIND him…and then, swings his forearm back,
catching me right across the chest, knocking me off my board, and I get
annihilated while he continues riding MY wave!
After I graduated, married, and started my own family, I
moved to Maine, back to where my family used to summer and where I’d first
started surfing. I’ve rarely surfed NH
in the years since. Usually I would find
myself making the drive only when the waves were too big and washed out during
a Nor’easter. The points and reefs
seemed to smooth out what was often “washing machine” conditions at my local
Maine spots. I’ve watched NH get more
and more crowded over the years as well.
Some days at The Wall I can count over 200 surfers. Tooooo crowded for me. The pace, the crowds, the locals are more
user friendly to my tastes in Maine. It’s
not that I have anything against NH surfing; I actually still have many fond
memories of surfing there. And who
knows, if I’d battled it out a little longer, maybe I too might have been accepted
into the fold there. But I don’t like to
battle. I like to surf, pure and simple. New Hampshire and Maine, though bordering
neighbors, are each unique and special in their own ways. They both engender a distinct vibe in the
water. I still feel a strong connection
to NH but I feel more at peace in Maine.
C’est la vie…
So Maine is my home now, for better and for worse. I started surfing here, and it’s where I love
to surf best. Looking at Ralph’s
pictures today though, stirred a lot of memories. Not of specifically NH or Maine though, but
of the old times…the old crew. In that
way, the memories, my memories, Ralph’s memories, and all of us who surf New
England, are not really so different. Ralph’s
pics looked a lot like the pics I have in my own archives, both actually
printed negatives in my albums, and imprinted images in my mind that will
always be with me. I remember my old
crew too: Lucas Merrow, John Saulnier,
Mark Sullivan, my brothers, Pat, and Tim.
And the Qgunquit locals, both past and present: Crow, Dick Lovell, Ronnie
Freeman, Peter Clayton, John Clancy, Brian Aromando, Billy and Rachael Ryan,
Laura Breen Brogan, the Lorusso brothers, Billy Woodard, Dave and Neco Evans,
Mark Reynolds, Joe Boutin, Doc George…a lot of faces and names I can’t even
remember right now…and even old Fearless Fred…
God, so much fun we had in and out of the water, on epic, and even not
so epic days. All of it special. Missing the ones who I no longer see out in
the water…missing already the ones who I see all the time. I’ve said it before and it bears repeating: I
love everyone I’ve met, and have yet to meet in my life, even the ones I cannot
stand and don’t even like…because all of them, all of you, are the characters
that make up the story of my life. And
as Ralph knows, it’s the characters that truly matter…family, friends…Ohana…the
memories are what we take with us as we journey forward…
Keep paddling, Ralph… and all you other bitches and bastards
too…and even to old Mr. Fat Walrus I say: Aloha!
Nice memories!
ReplyDeleteRon Freeman
I'm just seeing this for the first time. Thank you for the kind words. It sounds like you are on the right track (wave) in life. Indeed, keep paddling...no matter what, keep paddling.
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