Caravan and Motorhome Club English National Surfing Championships

Caravan and Motorhome Club English National Surfing Championships

Nearly 140 surfers congregated at Watergate Bay, all with their eyes on the prize of the prestigious English National Titles across the 14 different age-groups. The event saw two -days of double peak action unfold, and here is what went down…

We were lucky to arrive on Saturday morning to sun and small peelers, perfect conditions for our under 12s to kick off the competition. As midday hit, the bay delivered a bigger swell pulse, waves increasing up to head high. U14s, U16s, U18s and Kahuna categories took to the water, displaying their talent. A long day of impressive surfing took place, stand out scores dropping across the board, and plenty of close battles between surfers itching to go through to their respective finals.

The glorious weather brought hundreds of beachgoers down, bringing a buzz of excitement with them and creating a fantastic atmosphere. The event was enhanced by beach volleyball, chalk art and beach cleaning activities from our headline sponsors, the Caravan and Motorhome Club. Tote bags were given out to competitors at check-in and winners of the event all received a club membership. We are stoked to receive this support from the club who enable us to run this event.

A misty morning first thing Sunday gradually cleared up and brought with it beautifully clean sets. 4ft waves rolling throughout the day provided epic conditions for a day of national’s finals. Bodyboarding, a discipline that has not been integrated with shortboard surfing for a number of years, took to the stage. The Men’s Open and U18 divisions demonstrated how thrilling and risky the sport truly is. This addition of bodyboard added a new dimension to this event, and it was awesome to bring the tight knit bodyboarding and shortboarding communities together. Congratulations to division winners, Brooke Joseph Mason, and Tom Catten, who have set a standard and created history for National bodyboarding for years to come.

The junior ladies ripped on the Sunday, a tight final in the U12s saw local Ellie Hickie rise above her competitors to reach her a wave total a head of the rest. The U14 girls final was a particularly tight heat, all girls dropping some stellar waves, swapping in and out of the lead, Coco Arthur winning before the buzzer. Another close final in the U16s, Eva Blackford winning and adding the national title to her recent 2023 English Grom Search title. The day finished off by Team England athlete Georgie -May Hicks winning the U18 Girls just ahead of Lauren Sandland, who had recently claimed the 2023 Women’s Open title, just four weeks prior. Performances amongst these girls were epic, and we are proud to witness such progression in English junior surfing.

For the boys, there were more rounds to progress through, making Sunday’s finals not only a test of surfing ability but also a test of endurance. Joshi James stormed through the rounds to claim the National title and repeat his success from the 2022 national surfing event. For the U14 boys, scores dropped in the final were close, Seb Whiteley took the win. Lukas Skinner followed on from his recent victory at the U16 Grom Search World Championships, cleaning up the U16 boys final and dropping some of the competitions highest scores. Noah Davis took the U18 boys titles, clinching first by 0.27 points above rival Fynn Gillespie.

In the adult divisions, a straight final saw reigning Men’s Senior (+28) champion Khan Thorne take the title once again. We hosted Women’s masters category, for the first time in years, it was great to see ladies back in the water with Lisa Sutherland clinching first, with some impressive scores. The Men’s Masters saw Mark Harris take to the water late for his heat, dropping a couple of beautiful waves, but it was Matty Bowling who took the win with a just a minute to spare. The Men’s Kahunas (+45) was popular this year, many surf coaches and parents taking part. It was great to see such a stacked line up in this category. Tyson Greenaway won the final, surfing gracefully and finished the event with one of the highest scored waves of the weekend.

A huge thank you to all surfers, supporters, media team, judges, and event team for being a part of this epic weekend. It was an unbelievable weekend for English surfing, and we cannot wait for the next one!

Final Results:
U12 Girls Shortboard: 1 Ellie Hickie 2 Kira Connolly 3 Arabella Peres 4 Martha Edwards
U14 Girls Shortboard: 1 Coco Arthur 2 Willow Smith 3 Lila skinner 4 Sunny Ingram
U16 Girls Shortboard: 1 Eva Blackford 2 Ocearna Peres 3 Boe Howell4 Mia Olivia
U18 Girls Shortboard: 1 Georgie-May Hicks 2 Lauren Sandland 3 Tegan Blackford 4 Eva Moorcraft-Holland

Womens Masters (35+): 1 Lisa Sutherland 2 Annika Connolly 3 Sarah Howell
U12 Boys Shortboard: 1 Joshi James 2 Jensen Martin 3 Jack Strutt 4 Jago Boswell
U14 Boys Shortboard: 1 Seb Whitely 2 Noah Cerne 3 Sebastian Connolly 4 Isaac Friend
U16 Boys Shortboard: 1 Lukas skinner 2 Reen Bowden-Inoue 3 Finley Donovan 4 Heath Gillespie
U18 Boys Shortboard: 1 Noah Davis 2 Fynn Gillespie 3 Ishka Thres 4 Malakai Hagley

Mens Seniors (28+): 1 Khan Thorne 2 Simon Shields 3 Sam Coad 4 Ben Goosey
Mens Masters (35+): 1 Matty Bowling 2 Mark Harris 3 Andrew Stone 4 Michael Barton
Mens Kahunas (45+): 1 Tyson Greenaway 2 Dan Joel 3 Martin Connolly 4 Joel Gray

Bodyboard – U18’s Boys: 1 Tom Catten 2 Darwin Tagholm 3 Alex Edmunds

Bodyboard – Men’s Open: 1 Brooke Joseph Mason 2 Ross Littlejohns 3 Brendon van Rooyen 4 Phil Milsom

LiveHeats:
To see individual heat and wave scores, you can check out all the results on LiveHeats here.

A huge thank you to Watergate Bay who hosted us for our return of the English National Championships and ERA Adventures for the Lifeguard Cover.
A further thank you to our fantastic headline partners Caravan and Motorhome Club and to our amazing partners korev Lager, The Wave, dryrobe, Olaian by Decathlon UK, Clarke Willmott, Vospers.

Strike Missions

Strike Missions

It’s all about tracking swell and striking when the time is right, hoping the gamble pays off and the risk is worth the reward. Mofungo’s power team consisted of Ian Crane, Brett Barley, and Puerto Rico’s very own Dwight Pastrana. There’s something to be said about exploring a region of the world that one of your very own call home. For Dwight, he got as much out of sharing his home with us as we did exploring it. We hope you enjoy.

Pez Gallo!

Pez Gallo!

Salty Crew is cooking up another Long Range Report. Let’s take a look at the ingredients. Take 3 ripping surfers from Hawaii and drop them in Costa Rica. Mix in surfboards, spear guns, and fishing rods, equal parts good waves and good vibes, a handful of trophy fish and beach break barrels, a pinch of Yellowfin Tuna, a bunch of tasty sashimi and ceviche, one side of peeling pointbreak and Caribbean slab, one local ripping grom. Let the ingredients marinade for a week and then serve immediately.

Starring: Matt Meola, Benji Brand, Kalani Rivero, Tosh Talbot

Filmed by: James Tull, Liam Conrad, Lauryn Dougherty

Directed and Narrated by: Hayden Lane

Pearl Moon I Zac Haynes

Pearl Moon I Zac Haynes

Zac Haynes on his film: “Pearl Moon was shot over a 6 month period starting with a swell on the South Coast of WA at a few of my favourite waves. The session at the left ended in a pretty heavy way with losing a ski to the rocks and Jesse snapping his leg in a couple of places. Followed by cold water and shallow ledges in Europe, plenty of stormy cold days battened down at the pub but the windows in-between fronts with clean winds and solid swell will always be worth the wait. Finishing off in the tropical paradise of Tahiti scoring endless pits at the world’s most perfect slab, what more could you ask for than scoring Chopes with just you and a few mates out.”

@zac_haynes/

Hosed In Tasmania

Hosed In Tasmania

Located some 150 miles to the south of the Australian mainland, Tasmania is rich in biodiversity, fauna and flora. The same can be said for waves, you’d be forgiven for thinking that Shipstern Bluff the globally renowned big-wave spot and gateway to heaven or hell depending on making it over the step or not was the main course on the surfing menu. Tasmania has so much more to offer, hit the link and explore through the eyes of Tasmanian filmmaker Simon Treweek and local builder Kelly Nordstrom. Don’t worry, Shippies is on the desert menu, if you can handle it.