It’s already August, and the Summer of 20223 has been a nice one. Nice because we return to our love for the ocean. It’s our favorite place in the world.
As soon as we have the time to get in the water, we go there. We feel a mysterious longing for the sea as some kind of secret to our own identity as if our blood had salt water in it. Symbolically, I, the surfer, am—myself. The body with which I surf in the sea symbolizes the soul, with which I “surf” in God. The sea is God. The beach is the approach to God. Surfing is the experience of God, or the spiritual life.
Beginning when I was a kid of six or so, my family would take us to the beach, whether Kill Devil Hills or Nags Head or Kitty Hawk, usually in mid to late August to, as my dad would say, recharge. Growing up in Great Bridge, back in the day, we were always only an hour and a half or so away from the Outer Banks. In High School, Friday evenings we would strap the boards to the roof and drive 168 south with a few bucks and maybe a blanket to sleep on…not that we slept much. It was a monastic journey, aided by illegal plants from the good, green earth. It was work, to work towards our desire for the sea, and that desire had to be deep…a sensual practice, it constitutes its sacred center, and the corresponding experiences are constructed in a way that leads to a belief in nature as powerful, transformative, healing, and sacred. In a deeper sense, it is an understanding that everything is part of God even though God is more than everything added together.
The key was to live well below our means, stripped down, just the essentials. Over the years, we put together a loose list of things we jokingly called ‘Surfer Rules’. Hardly rules at all, and not even just about surfing, but more like a set of things to think about, ideas to live by. We’ve added some, and taken some away, but every once in a while, usually after coming back from recharging, we like to revisit them, for old time’s sake if nothing else….
1. Always take the beach road. Even when there is a modern highway right next door, where you can drive 55 or 60, pull off onto the beach road, turn off the AC, and roll down the windows. Take the beach road.
2. Drive south. This is a metaphorical rule, but in most cases, it seems to fit. When you reach the ocean, there is invariably a T in the road where you can go north or south. Go south.
3. If you need more than a board (surf, boogie, skim, etc.), fishing tackle, and something to boil shrimp in, you’re in the wrong place.
4. Always shop at K-Coast Surf Shops!
5. Avoid restaurants that advertise ‘All You Can Eat’ seafood buffets.
6. Eat at a place like Dune Burger, or something similarly named. You know the place, kind of a shack where you order from a sliding window and it has greasy picnic tables outside. Although this meal may be your last, eat at Dune Burger.
7. Surf or swim naked. Avoid intellectual stimulation. Think less, live more. Ride waves.
8. Avoid beach destinations that offer activities: author readings, children’s story times, yoga and exercise classes should be avoided at all costs. Outlet malls are strictly forbidden.
9. Try not to play Putt-Putt…but if you must, have fun!
Note: Cape Charles Miniature Golf is pretty awesome!
10. Eat Wanchese shrimp. Every beach has something that is uniquely theirs; the Outer Banks has Wanchese shrimp. Eat local.
11. Don’t be a dick. Share the ocean, share the beach.
13. Never jog on the beach. If you do, please, no socks and running shoes.
14. Never wear Speedos. If you must, be sure to own it.
15. Longboards are okay. Just learn to turtle roll.
16. Wear Roxy, Carve, Hakuna, or Hurley Bikinis. These brands are sexy but can handle the waves. Simple.
17. Never pay more than $3.00 for flip-flops.
18. If you are at the beach, always shower outside. Use a hose if you have to.
19. Have cake by the ocean (we recommend a big blanket).
20. Eat breakfast at the Nags Head Pier. Every beach town has a pier, with a little wooden diner, where the coffee is strong and the waitresses are nice.
21. Use bloodworms for bait. You can catch anything with a bloodworm.
22. Own at least one pair of Birdwell Beach Britches.
23. Don’t be a dick. Pick up your trash, and always clean up after your doggy.
24. If someone mentions that they remember when the beach road was sand, stop and listen.
25. Don’t Drop In On Another Surfer.
26. The Surfer Closest To The Peak Has Right-Of-Way.
27. Paddling Surfer Yields To Surfer Riding Wave.
28. Don’t Ditch Your Board.
29. Don’t Be A Snake.
30. Do Not Bother Children When They Are Surfing.
31. Pick up your trash.
32. Be considerate of others using the beach.
Seeing the sea is the fulfillment of the faith-from-afar and seeing God is the fulfillment of faith: “If you believe, you will see” (Jn 11:40). To smell the sea is the fulfillment of desiring hope from afar, a most mystical sense. Paddling into the sea is like self-forgetful, self-offering love. It’s an obligation, an offering of self.
“The key to post-terrestrial living is going to be grace and aesthetics… There’ll be no more constraints on linearity, of four walls; a building can be any shape at all. It’s tied to surfing because it means that we’ll be freed from gravity, and we can be totally into style and grace. And it may seem strange to be talking to surfers about post-terrestrial living, because surfing is water, and we’re talking about air or a vacuum. But it’s perfectly logical to me that surfing is the spiritual aesthetic style of the liberated self. The reason I define myself as an evolutionary surfer is that surfers have taught me the way you relate to the basic energies, and develop your individual sense of freedom, self-definition, style, beauty and control” — Dr. Timothy Leary
Spirit of Surfing’ is a low-key initiative started in 1995 by longtime surfer, Peter Cuming, surf elders Rob Conneelly, and Nat Young, and surf artist Roscoe Kermode. Spirit of Surfing was established to promote the traditions of free surfing; respect for the ocean, the land, and indigenous and local cultures wherever surfers are and travel; fostering community spirit; and a harmonious relationship with the natural environment. The general Spirit of Surfing (SoS) focuses on active beach restoration work as part of their regular surfing life.
Fall and winter are still some of the best times to enjoy the beach!
I guess I’m a lot older than you Wayne. I would agree with just about everything you said except the dope smoking.
We never smoked dope. We were always looking for the waves.
We would wonder if we had enough gas money to get to the next location. As we listening to K-94 and the surf reports.
Riding waves and chasing girls was what us locals did. We would have more luck catching the waves than the girls!
Smoking dope and drinking martinis? Starting to wonder about you Wayne.
But it’s all good, we shared the same core Values. Being free and enjoying God’s creations.
Editor’s Note: I grew up about 15 minutes from the K-94 tower…actually went there a few times, and the DJs let us into the trailer. Even got listen as the played the awesome daily intro ‘Fire on High’ that they played at midnight. Never super trusted the surf reports though…Cheers, brother.
It is what it is when it is for reasons of its own and if we don’t understand, it don’t give a damn!
If smoking dope and drinking martinis made Wayne Creed into the someone who has provided us with this GRAND PALLIDIUM of liberty where our right to intellectual independence is protected and promoted, I for one am all for it, except I can’t stomach the taste of a martini, to be truthful.
The essence of the Summer of 2023, celebrated by surfers, resonates with a profound connection to the ocean. Its allure is akin to a secret code embedded within our identity, where saltwater courses through our veins, binding us to the sea. Symbolically, the act of surfing becomes a conduit to spirituality, a dance between body and wave mirroring the relationship between soul and the divine. From childhood trips to the Outer Banks, where time itself seemed suspended, to those monastic journeys marked by boards strapped atop cars, these experiences encapsulate a belief in nature’s transformative power. Indeed, within the waves, we find not just the sea, but a glimpse of the sacred.