Trust Your Feelings...

So then, Tom Way and Phileas have had some fun together. Tom is a very experienced waterman and skilled kneelo and shaper, but like so many before him, the surfmat was an eye opener!

Here’s their tale:

Phileas, stuffed deep in the gaping claw of an almost impossibly dark-blue pit, a weighty lip of crystal-cut glass framing her under the imposing cliffs of a remote Sumba right-hander. That’s how I imagined the opening section of my Phileas adventure movie reel beginning.

The reality?

“Phileas, you mother-f@#$%^  $#@!  of a thing.” That was, in fact, how our relationship began and continued to develop over the next week.

The swell was pumping. Day one on the island was spent knee riding slabby lefts and rights. Glides, turns and the occasional shack. Returning to base in the evening, the mellow point over-looked by the camp was churning out long, four-foot, glassy right walls on the fringe of the lagoon. The sun was low in the sky. Reflections shimmered in the black-glass of the wave faces. What a way to experience my first slides on a mat!

1.jpg

Standing on the edge of the low-tide reef, a solitary mal rider took off on a wave and headed down the line for well over a minute. Bloody perfect. I hopped off the coral ledge and began arm paddling out the back.

2.jpg
3.jpg

A set loomed. Overhead, but an easy duck dive; no top-to-bottom pitching lips here. I pushed the well-travelled lass’s nose into the bottom corner of the sloping wall. Seconds later I was recoiling backwards in a wash of white-water, flippers flailing in the air, then tumbling over and over, arms wrapped around Phileas’ well-inked body in a desperate bear grip.

Duck!

The first of many, many expletives over the course of the week. How the duck do you duck-dive these things?!

I bade my time on my second attempt and snuck out clean with some four-by-four arm-leg action. A shoulder-high line started to feather, and I turned back toward shore. Remembering G’s advice, ‘Some people arm paddle into waves but I have no idea how’, I moved my own nose back a foot behind Phileas’s and began to kick. Rather than the early entry I was anticipating, I moved slowly backward up the face, and hung in the lip for a moment before finally heading downwards, unceremoniously dumped in the flats.

Duck it.

Still moving though! …Turn!

That didn’t happen. Bodyboard instinct took over and I weighted up my inside elbow, Phileas instantly bogged, and I just managed to clasp my arms round her midriff before repeating the rinse cycle.

Duckity-duck.

Three more waves in the set. Duckity-duckity-duck. By the time I got back out I was already half way down the point. Oh well, still a four-hundred metre-odd of section to enjoy, that’ll do.

4.jpg

A wide set. This one well overhead. Time to show’em. Arms and lesgs both in action, under the crumbling lip, got in earlier this time, pushing down on the nose… bog… heading backward up the face… don’t push on the nose, release!... accelerating back down… get in trim… How? Drag a fin?…. Bogging…. Release fin... accelerate, but going straight again… turn!... not turning, not turning, not… buck, buck… oh duck!

My fingers clawed at Phileas’s ‘rail’ and Phileas tried to rip my fingers off. Then she was gone.

“Phileas, you mother-f@#$%^  $#@!  of a thing!”

By the time I had resurfaced Phileas had bolted across the reef and was gliding, rider-less, in perfect trim across the tiniest line of swell imaginable deep into the lagoon. I put my head down, elbows up and started the long plod in pursuit.

Reaching the shallows, I stood up to find the white plastic rendition of evil incarnate floating in front of a young Sumbanese lad, a local forager, who was poking at her suspiciously with a sharpened squid hook. “Oi! Cut that out you little bugger!” The kid scampered and Phileas lived another day.

Despite my humbling first surf, there was something inexplicably addictive about the experience. Riding a mat was unlike anything I had ever felt before. It was impossibly difficult and yet, in the briefest of seconds hurtling over angry coral heads, Phileas had revealed moments of apparent frictionless acceleration.

Later that evening, over a Bintang, I was studying youtube clips to find out what I was doing wrong and gushing to the only person that would listen, the mal-rider with the minute-long ride from earlier in the day. “There’s something about this mat thing”, I spouted while showing him a clip of Greenough in Hawaii. He raised an eyebrow and made an impolite inquiry about my sexual orientation.

The week continued in this vein. The swell pumped and the winds were light and variable. Lefts fired, rights fired, there were barrels and pockets to be hooked a plenty. This part of Sumba was a special, fickle place. Until very recently it was a favourite hideaway for a few tight-lipped regulars who studied wind, tide and swell charts and knew when the combination looked complementary. Now the land has been bought up and resorts are in build. If you like the sound of it, get there quick because it won’t be pristine for too much longer.

5.jpg

In the perfect conditions the familiar kneeboard quiver was put to work for at least two sessions each day, but I had another crack with Phileas every afternoon and while ultimately I was struggling, I started to get into waves with less effort (under the lip, kick, scoot up the deck on the way down) and began overcoming my instinct to ride like a paipo or bodyboard (keep still, spread weight evenly, don’t push on nose or elbows), but the turning still eluded me. It didn’t help that I was surfing flicky reef breaks and shoulder after shoulder disappeared away from me while I watched helplessly from the flats.

In frustration, on my last evening I sent a call for help to G.

 
6.png
 

Armed with my new knowledge – trust your feelings Luke - I headed out for a final session at the pitching left, gopro in hand.

I bogged. And then, briefly, I sensed the force. And then, it happened. Lifting the outside rail – gently -  Phileas banked over on take-off and caned it down the line as if on ball-bearings. In true virgin form, it was all over in a few seconds, and in true virgin form it left me hungry for more.

7.jpg

I wish I could hang on to Phileas for longer, but real-life beckons; this final ride marked not only the end of my short trip to Sumba, but also the likely end to an eighteen-year stint in Indonesia and the beginning of a new one in Singapore. I’ll still be mat-riding Indo waves at every chance I get, but on a new toy as soon as G has time to make me one.

So Phileas heads onward again. Stay tuned!

A video edit of Tom’s exploits will be along dreckly!

Cheers

G

Long Sweary Lefts!

Philias update. After a week scouting setups in Northern Borneo and the south China Sea without any sniff of swell, she's now in Sumba.  And she's working me. I'm stationed in front of a long right hander which I'm sure is excellent for mats but even small it's 4ft over reef and needs a fair amount of duck diving. Still haven't figured that out. Cheers to everyone who gave me advice. Obviously I ignored it and have spent the best part of 2 days getting pitched, catching edges and failing to turn. Really hard to turn off the instincts learnt from years of hard board riding. Finally today I got in trim for the first time on a ledgy left. Got a bit of footage but will need to edit because it's full of expletives 🤣😖 great learning experience and feels so different. Fully stoked on it. Sorry for the frothy post haha

Read More

Singapore and Beyond...

So then, Phileas has landed with Tom Way over in SE Asia. Tom lives in Indo but is on a trip and has just hooked up with our freshened up girl.

52702776_379708969481517_8875113887809142784_n.jpg

Here’s what he has to say:

"Hello all. Except for a couple of misadventures with a Redback mat around 15 years ago (it melted in the indo sun after my first couple days and all seams came unstuck) I'm not an experienced mat rider. But I'm honoured to be the custodian of Phileas for the next few months and hopefully will get her into some worthy lineups. For the next couple of weeks however, we are landlocked in Singapore so I've taken the opportunity to put in some Kms in the pool and get some paddle fitness (a good enough reason to have a mat in the quiver, I reckon: pool friendly

Some rookie observations on paddling: wide nose = rash inside arms (must wear rash vest). Arm paddle speed is surprisingly fast. I imagined long paddles might be hard, but not so. Wind: how does this affect paddling? A lot I suspect. Decreasing air = less buoyancy, in tail primarily, and especially in the rear corners. Eventually it became quite unstable but wondering if this aids turning? Grip is super sticky, but with decreased air I still found myself slipping backward every few hundred yards as tail sank. Flippers: my legs are buggered so I can only wear short swim fins. I'm wondering how much this will affect the ride and paddle.

Need to get on the forums now and get reading! Thanks G for the trust on this. Next update from the beach."

Here are a few tips fella: https://www.matsurfers.com/how-to-ride-a-surfmat

Looking forward to hearing about Phileas’ journey into Tom’s world and Tom’s journey into mat surfing.

Welcome off-board Tom!

Cheers

G