Skeletal, sun bleached logs lay scattered along the high tide line. A powerful  storm must have washed them there. The thought of that much water hitting me  against the rocks sent shudders down my spine as i looked out to sea to try to  judge the size of the waves. The circling eagles did little to ease my  increasing sense of being a long long way from safety should anything happen.  And this is one of the easier to access parts of the island.
We had just  finished a twenty mintue hike through tattered old-growth rainforest to get to the  beach, and then walked for another half mile along the cobblestone beach to  reach the surf spot. Recent storms had torn through the forest, leaving huge  trees uprooted and branches in our path. Most people would have turned back and  found an easier route to the break, or found another place to surf. With a wry  smile one of our group noted that the damage to the path would at least keep the  crowds away. Only in a surfers mind can damage and destruction, whether man made  or natural, be such a bonus.
The four of us had been tracking the swell  out in the Pacific for a few days previous. I'd been surfing the local beach  which picked up from wasit high to double overhead within 5 hours. It was here.  By the time i'd been bruised and beaten out of the water, the boys were already  makeing plans and packing the cars. Boards, food, water and raincoats were  packed within minutes once the decision to drive south was made. We made it to  the first rivermouth break in the dead of night, and slept in the car listening  to the waves peel down the point. Sleep was fitful given the rain, the cramped  car, and the greedy anticipation of what was to come.
Sunrise brought with it a pilgramage of cars laden with surfboards. I never knew there were so many  surfers in B.C.! Well this is the age of the internet swell, and we'd have  been stupid to think we were the only people tracking its progress. Luckily we  had some local knowledge and decided not to paddle out at the crowded right hand  point, but to put in some extra effort in the hope of being rewarded.
The  rewards were stacked out to the horizon in beautiful, misty, early morning  lines. Sets walled up, and barrelled down the reef. Having only seen beach break  for the past 3 weeks I was tingling with excitement. As I paddled out in the  clear, cold water, I watched one of the group paddle into an overhead wave from  behind the peak, squeeze himself into the barrel and come flying out further  down the line, marking his progress with a burst of spray as he laid down a  cutback.
My first wave was not as spectacular, but I emerged from a  chilly tube all the same and let out a yell. There were four of us, not a  building, person, car, smoke stack, coke can or anything else in sight. This is  the edge, the fringe of surfing in North America; far, far away from the marketed Californian surf experience. An extra effort is needed to  get to these places, and local guides. I pulled into a deep barrel, and had a  split second view of the sun rising over the mountains framed by the tube,  before it shut down on me.
That split second of experience made the  whole trip worthwhile. It doesn't matter that I didn't make the wave. It doesn't  matter that the incessant rain was driving me mad. It doesn't matter that we  spent $200 on petrol. It doesn't matter that the surf dropped later the  afternoon leaving us sharing waist high waves with the rest of Canada. It  doesn't matter.....because I got what I came for.
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