Building El Nino revs up Billabong XXL Big Wave Awards
Billabong XXL Big Wave Awards
Billabong XXL jolted by new videos from Tasmania and beyond
Surfersvillage Global Surf News, 27 October, 2009 : - -
Newport Beach, Ca -- While surfers in the Northern Hemisphere await the
arrival of El Niño-fueled big winter waves, there has been no shortage
of massive swells around the world in the last six months.
Just last week, Shipstern Bluff -- a notoriously shallow wave
off the southern tip of Tasmania, Australia -- produced some of the
most spectacular rides of the year and triggered numerous entries into
the Billabong XXL Global Big Wave Awards.
Spawned by a massive storm in the Southern Ocean, the huge
swell was challenged by a group of big wave chargers including Aussies
Marti Paradisis and Karl Atkins, who used jet powered watercraft to tow
into the towering walls of water.
Visiting surfer James Hick -- who hails from the unlikely
hometown of Jersey, England -- accomplished some of the day's most
heart-stopping rides. The devilish Tasmanian surf session also featured
its share of spectacular wipeouts. Despite the bone-jarring impacts,
there were no serious injuries.
Several successfully completed waves are now candidates for
the Billabong XXL Ride of the Year Award and its US$50,000 first
prize. The tenth annual Billabong XXL Awards take place in California
next April, honoring the biggest and best rides of the previous twelve
months, anywhere in the world, based on the photographic evidence.
Other top rides to date include a huge paddle-in wave by Greg
Long at Puerto Escondido, Mexico. Long -- from San Clemente,
California -- is no stranger to the XXL stage, having won the 2009 Ride
of the Year Award last April.
Also topping the contenders for the Monster Paddle Award is
South African Grant Baker, who stroked into an oversized peak at
Dungeons, near Cape Town on the southern edge of the African
continent. Mark Mathews of Maroubra, New South Wales, crossed his home
continent to score one of the year's roundest tube rides in Western
Australia. Both Baker and Mathews are previous XXL finalists.
This season has also seen some of the most spectacular rides
ever turned in by female surfers. Three-time Billabong Girls Best
Performance winner Maya Gabeira of Brazil rode what may be the biggest
wave ever by a woman at South Africa's Dungeons, and seven time ASP
world champ Layne Beachley was filmed emerging from one of the deepest
tubes ever claimed by the fairer sex at Maroubra, near her home in
Sydney, Australia.
Meanwhile, the strengthening El Niño weather condition bodes
well for the North Pacific and Atlantic as surfers in Hawaii,
California and Europe prepare for bigger-than-average storms and swells
in the coming months. The biggest waves recorded in the Pacific Ocean
in modern times occurred during the last two major El Nino events in
1997-98 and 1982-83. Surfers have until the end of winter on March 19,
2010 to qualify for the Billabong XXL Awards and its US$130,000 in
prize money.
To see the latest video and still photo entries in the
Billabong XXL Big Wave Awards, visit the event website at
BillabongXXL.com.