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- đââď¸ Surf buddy or not to surf buddy đ¤
đââď¸ Surf buddy or not to surf buddy đ¤
The truth about surf buddies, beginner bliss in Noosa, gear that messes with your pop-up, and a surfergirl jackpot.

đ Happy Little Friday! Congratulations to everyone who surfs Lower Trestlesâyour breakâs officially been picked for Olympic Surfing at LA2028. Which means⌠no waves for you that summer? 𼺠For the rest of us, thereâs always this bumper of a newsletter. đ
đââď¸ Letâs surf:
To surf buddy or not to surf buddy
Noosa, Queensland is a point break
Word of the week: Stokes drift
Girl-Who-Hit-Surfing-Jackpot
Did religion almost wiped out surfing?
Weekly popup âĄđââď¸đĽ
SURFODRAMA
đą To surf buddy or not to surf buddy
A surf buddy. Itâs a blessing. Itâs a curse. Sometimes I no longer knowâbecause my surf buddy is my husband. đ
The curse? I like going out even if the conditions are less than ideal, and Iâll stay in the water much longer than heâs willing to.
So if we drive to the break together, one of us has to compromise. And that doesnât always make for a very happy couple. đ
It got me thinking: what are the pros and cons of having a surf buddy?
Caveats: Youâre on the same wavelength, at a similar skill level, and youâre not in a relationship.
Pros
Safety in numbers â Itâs always better to have someone watching your back. In the water and in the lineup.
Go-surf forcing function â If they go out and you donât, oh, the guilt.
Trying new things â You push each other: from the whitewash, into the lineup, into new breaks.
Someone to talk to â Whether mid-sesh or post-surf over snacks.
Cons
None.
Honestly, I donât see a downsideâas long as you have the same surf goals. Sure, you might progress at different paces. You might (literally) drift apart in the lineup.
But having a surf buddy doesnât mean youâre not your own surfer. You can still paddle out alone. And if it stops working? You can always find a new buddy.
Itâs just really nice to have someone to smile atâand yell âWOOHOO!ââwhen they catch a wave.
And you know whatâs even better than having a surf buddy? Having multiple surf buddies. You can always treat finding the right one like a speed dating event (thanks, Deanna!)âuntil it clicks. đđťââď¸
SURF SPOT SPOTLIGHT

Noosa, Queensland: beginnersâ point break
Wouldnât it be nice to experience a point break without having to worry about getting pummeled on the rocks? So when you hear that Noosa is considered both 1) good and 2) calm⌠donât you just want to go? 𼰠I do!
đ The surf
"Noosa" means "a place of shadeâ, but Noosa Main Beach and the point breaks of the National Park are just dreamy. Itâs one of the few spots in Australia where long, peeling right-handers break over a sandy bottom with minimal consequence. Main Beach and Johnson's are small-wave spots, great for total beginners.
đż Water quality
Generally excellent. Noosa is a national park, after all. Just avoid surfing right after heavy rainârunoff happens everywhere.
đ Wardrobe
No wetsuits needed most of the year (this must be nice). In summer, itâs boardies and bikinis all day. In winter (JuneâAugust), you might want a spring suit or 3/2 depending on your tolerance for chill.
âď¸ Best time for beginners to go
Summer (DecâFeb): Warm water, small and friendly surf, but you knowâholiday crowds.
â ď¸ Hazards
Crowds, especially during the Noosa Festival of Surfing (usually March).
đ Rentals + lessons
Youâll find board rentals and surf lessons right on Main Beach. There are also tons of surf schools offering beginner packages, longboard coaching, and even some surf retreats.
đ When youâre not surfing
Walk the Noosa National Park trail for dolphins, koalas, and the views
Hire a boat or just paddleboard on the Noosa River
I keep hearing about gelatos from Massimoâs đ¨
Shop and snack your way through Hastings Street
Hit the Eumundi Markets
đ§ł Solo friendly?
Absolutely. Noosa is safe, walkable, and chill, with surf hostels, friendly locals, and tons of other learners in the lineup.
GIRL-WHO-HIT-THE-SURFING-JACKPOT
đââď¸ Not a water person in Fiji: Rachelâs story
This surfergirl story comes with a serious warning.
You read about Rachelâs adventuresâleaving the UK for New Zealand, not really a water person. Oh, interesting.
You see her photos surfing crystal-clear waves. So pretty. Iâd love to surf there.
But then you hear how friendly everyone is in Fiji...and suddenly youâre booking the next flight out. âď¸đââď¸
Read her story
Missed any Girls Who Canât Surf Good stories? You can find them all here.
WORD OF THE WEEK
đ Word of the week: Stokes drift

Waves. We read them. We ride them. We turtle roll through them. But what do we actually know about them?
Do waves serve any purpose? Beyond surfing, that is. There must be a good reason, since thereâs no such thing as a wave-less ocean.
Apparently, they are doing a-plenty! They mix oxygen in, circulate nutrients and regulate temperature in shallow water, keep tide pools fresh, and create the surf zone â where fish, birds, dolphins, and mammals like surfers, come to hunt and feed. âşď¸
Finally, they create this little phenomenon called Stokes drift.
Imagine you're floating on the surface of the ocean. Waves roll past, and it feels like youâre just bobbing up and down. But over time, you realize: youâve actually drifted forward, just a tiny little bit.
That tiny forward motion? Thatâs Stokes drift. Itâs caused by the circular motion of water particles under the waves not quite closing the loopâeach one moves slightly forward with every pass. Becauseâphysics.
This means that even on a calm, windless day, Stokes drift can quietly carry you down the beach.
And your stoke for catching waves? Slowly drifting away from you. đ
SURF THRU HISTORY
Did religion almost wipe out surfing?

Religion. Without it, we wouldnât have the Pyramids, Dalai Lama or the Easter Bunny. But we also mightâve avoided witch hunts, guilt about sex and almost killing surfing for 100 years.
Truth or fake news?
Imagine thisâyouâre in Hawaiâi, itâs the 1700s, and surfing isnât just a hobby, itâs a sacred ritual. You paddle out, catch a wave, and the entire beach watches in awe.
Now fast-forward a centuryâsurfing is nearly wiped out.
đş Hawaiâi pre-contact
Before European contact, surfing in Hawaii was a way of life. It wasnât just about riding wavesâit was spiritual, social, and political.
Chiefs surfed on giant Olo boards (up to 22 feet long) while commoners rode shorter alaia boards.
It was a symbol of powerâif you ruled the lineup, you had status on land, too.
There were surfboard-making ceremonies, chants, and rituals before paddling out.
âď¸ Enter the Calvinist missionaries
When Christian Calvinist missionaries arrived in Hawaiâi in the early 1800s, they saw a society that, well, didnât quite fit their religious beliefs.
đŹ Surfing often involved men and women surfing together⌠sometimes nude. Mixing of the sexes, shock, horror.
đż It was tied to Hawaiian spiritual beliefsâwhich the missionaries were actively trying to erase.
đ It looked way too much like having funâand fun was not on the missionary agenda.
đ The decline of surfing (and Hawaiian culture)
So, did the missionaries outright ban surfing? Nope. It was discouraged, but there were other forces in play.
1ď¸âŁ Hawaiians abandoned their traditions in favor of Christian teachings. The churches were full!
2ď¸âŁ Foreign diseases wiped out a huge chunk of the Hawaiian population.
3ď¸âŁ Land was privatized under new Western laws, restricting access to beaches.
4ď¸âŁ The economy shiftedâHawaiians were pushed into farming and labor instead of ocean life.
By 1900, surfing was nearly extinct.
Enter: Duke Kahanamoku
Duke was a Native Hawaiian, Olympic swimming gold medalist, and absolute waterman legend.
In the early 1900s, he introduced surfing to the world, doing demos in California, Australia, and beyond. He brought back traditional Hawaiian surfing, and made it a global sport.
Duke gets a lot of credit for bringing surfing to the world, but it was also down to the Hawaiians who never fully gave up on their traditions. â¤ď¸
WEEKLY POPUP
Itâs ok. Blame your tools đą
Weâve spent the last few weeks âblamingâ usâour fitness, our practice habits, our bad habit of staring at our feet. But this weekâs itâs about the true saboteurs of our pop-ups: that damn wetsuit and that good-for-nothing board.
Is it easier to pop up when youâre surfingâas good for note ancient Hawaiians intendedânaked (well, bikini- or boardshorts-forward)? Hell yeah.
Do you catch more waves on a giant board that weighs as much as the ancient Olo? Of course.
So go on. Itâs OK to blame your tools!
đ§Ľ Wetsuits: Fit trumps thickness
Yes, you need the right thickness for your local break:
Warm water (70°F+ / 21°C): bikini, boardies, or a spring suit (lucky you!)
Mild (59â68°F): 3/2mm
Cold (50â59°F): 4/3mm or 5/4mm
Arctic madness: steamer, hood, gloves, bootiesâand Godspeed
But here's the part no one tells you: try squatting, paddling, and breathing in it before you buy. If it feels wrong on land, itâs not going to feel any better in the water.
Also: most suits are made for âaverageâ bodies. You are not the problem. The sizing system is. So, donât be afraid to try different brands, different zipper types (front or back), and different sizes. Custom is always an option, if it fits your budget.
Thereâs literally no rhyme or reason to this wetsuit fitting madness. I have a 4/3 OâNeill Epic that feels more flexible and pleasant to pop up in than my 3/2âyou guessed itâOâNeill Epic.
đ Surfboards: Size (still) matters
Hereâs something you never hear:
âOh, itâs so much easier for me to pop up now that I bought my own surfboard than when I was learning at a surf school or retreat.â
Buying your first board is a topic for another timeâbut for now, hereâs what makes popping up easier:
Longer boards are better than shorter boards. 9'6" to 8' gives you more surface area to stand on.
Volume mattersâespecially if, like me, youâre on the curvier side. More volume = more buoyancy and float = more stability + easier paddling. Look for 60â80 liters, but know the trade-off: more volume = harder to turn.
Width helps too. Think 22â24 inches. More width = more side-to-side stability + more room for your feet.
Rocker (nose-to-tail curve): The flatter the better. Flat = more stable = easier to pop up.
Yes, soft tops are beginner-friendly: softer landings, more forgiving on knees, shins, and heads. But, Iâll take my hard-top fiberglass longboard over an 8â foamie any dayâunless itâs big and Iâd rather not get smacked in the head.
So if your pop-up is a pain in your butt, maybeâjust maybeâitâs not you. Maybe itâs your gear. Go aheadâblame your tools, just make sure you look when youâre going when you pop up. âşď¸
THE WIPEOUT WEEKLY FOMO
âŹď¸ Aaaaaaand that was the last wave of the week!
If a friend forwarded this and you liked it, hit subscribe & join us! We will see you all next week! đ
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