In the Women’s Open, a smaller field meant we ploughed straight into quarter finals. Held at low tide, the surfers were a LONG way up the point. Rumour is that Emily Currie was so far out to sea, she actually won a heat in a totally different contest at Rest Bay, on the other side of the Bristol Channel. The walk across the ankle-breaking reef for the photographers was no picnic either. Highest round scores went to Emily, Claire Smail and Mali Harbour, very neatly covering the U16 to Over-35 age range.
The Single Fin had another great turnout despite a few last minute withdrawals. The heavier logs gave surfers the chance to actually link up the crumbly 2-3ft faces, make it through to the cleaner reforms and open up much more scoring potential. Strong representation in this one from the NE, with Louis Thomas-Hudson and Evan Rogers flying the flag. Another strong performance from Ashley Braunton, Ben Howey and former local lad Jack Unsworth – bettered only by Welsh Wonder Tom Fisher. No surprise to see the same names float to the top of the charts in the following rounds…
The Masters were the last division completed with heat wins for Sam Bleakley, Chris Webb and Edge Napper before the late afternoon glare made it impossible for the judges to determine the vest colours, and an enforced early finish. Pub? Pub.
Sunday morning saw an early start to make up for Saturday’s lost time, accompanied by slightly blearier eyes and slightly better conditions and with the Single Fin and Grandmasters quarter finals done, we were in to the sharp end of competition.
In the U16 Cadets a good turnout saw a couple of great semi’s result in Kaz Phillips providing the only male representation in the final and, despite some great footwork from the ladies, it was an early zinger from Kaz that sealed the win over Sylvie Puddiphatt, Mali Harbour and Lola Bleakley. It’s great to see the juniors competing on such an equal footing, though.