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Cloudbreak Delivers – Pain and Glory
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- Category: Latest
- Published: 28 August 2022
- Written by IWT Moderator
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We are tired, torn, at a loss. Those who were eliminated today have lost most of their gear in horrendous crashes. The four of us remaining in the final can’t fathom our fortune. I find myself replaying the narrow misses on huge barreling sections, the brushes with reef and disaster. Making the final feels less an act of competitive prowess as much as a revelation: this is what windsurfing can feel like. Powerful, perfect and real.
The morning is still in Fiji, red windswept tendrils of cloud raise a warning of more wind to our stirring sailors. I enjoy my morning coffee and look over the massive load of content created from just a few hours of sailing, photos and videos on another level. On my screen I see the excitement of friends and family back home, and fans of the tour sharing the images. In pools of reflective and restive stillness we watch the events of the previous day ripple out, growing far past the point of their origin.
What happened yesterday was a prime culmination of conditions that created an opportunity that might have eventually come together for each rider at some point in their travels, their careers, but to have it happen at a contest meant that it happened at once for all riders in one place. A focal point of collective dreams coming true. With Fijian safety crews providing that added level of logistic ease and security, each athlete gave it everything they had, we felt limitless. Truly a once in a lifetime opportunity.
It was a moment that I saw everyone rise to. The judges, the crew, and the riders all working towards the goal of capitalizing on the best day of windsurfing in decades.
Heats were run in a kind of fervor, clock timing meant less to riders than the subtle timing between sets. We eagerly anticipated the next set. It was a countdown for the opportunity to have a life-changing ride. Making the next heat meant less to each rider than making the next section, the bowl at the end of the wave was prize enough. It was a prize that kept coming all day! Something that could be shared.
While waiting in the channel and preparing for my heat I watched Camille -who had the most experience and was quickest to get in tune with the workings of the wave- drive a deep bottom turn under the lip of a growling monster end-bowl, the section where a surfer would be perfectly positioned for a massive barrel. He deliberately drew out his turn to stall for the perfect moment, his eyes hungrily fixed on the immediate section that would be a massive hit. He brought his board up to hit that heavy lip milliseconds before it came over, he was right under the mouth of ruin, using the power of all that throwing water to loft himself into a massive air, twice the height of the barreling tube that was now far below him. With that opening ride he set the tone.
Each of us took in what Camille had just done, and set to work attempting to emulate it. Every rider had their own approach and brought their distinctive style to the same wave, the points of difference were subtle and beautiful. Robby Swift rode with a determined confidence and polish, he could’ve fooled anyone into believing he had years of experience on this wave, rather, he had minutes of experience. Nevertheless, Robby was the sailor we followed out beyond the reef into deep water, to search for sets. He managed to get himself into a massive set-wave, airing that bowl section in a way was a little less critical than Camille’s approach, but arguably more powerful and definitely more picturesque.
Authors: IWT Moderator
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