Hitting the Point before The Wedge
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ROBERT GARDNER
There were big waves a few days ago. There was once a time when any
kind of surf would have found me at the beach -- even if I was
working. I would be hearing a case, and my clerk would come up to me
with a puzzled expression on his face.
“There’s someone named Skunky calling,” my clerk would say. “He
said something about a red flag?”
I would nod, trying to maintain my best judicial demeanor, then I
would rush through the case just as fast as I could get the attorneys
to talk, whip out of my robes and head for the beach. Skunky was one
of the kids I knew at Little Corona, and he was telling me that the
guard had put up the red flag, meaning the waves were big.
The days of me rushing anywhere are past, and I have even had to
give up the beach. The 92 stairs leading down to and, more
importantly, up from Little Corona are more than I can navigate
today. However, I did drive along Ocean Boulevard looking at the
waves, and when we got to Lookout Point, I could see what appeared to
be hundreds of people watching the great bodysurfers over at The
Wedge.
The Wedge was originally called the Point. The name Wedge came
into existence after World War II. It was not always a surfing spot.
Far from it. For years there was a rock groin stretching east or
toward Balboa from the jetty. This was right at the water’s edge, and
the surf broke directly onto the rocks. No one was crazy enough to
surf the Point, not even Tagg Atwood.
In those days, the Balboa pier was one of the premier bodysurfing
spots on the coast. Board surfing hadn’t come into popularity yet.
Then, in 1935-36, the city dredged all the mud flats and sand islands
out of the bay and dumped a few million yards of sand along the
beaches on the Balboa peninsula. This extended the beaches a couple
of hundred yards out into the ocean. In so doing it destroyed the
surf at the Balboa pier, turning it into a nasty shorebreak. At the
same time, it covered the rock groin at the Point and extended the
shoreline to its present position. As you walk out to the Wedge
today, look to your right and you will see the tops of some of the
rocks from that old groin sticking out of the sand in front of the
oceanfront houses.
And so it happened that one day in 1936, Tagg Atwood, who was
always a little crazy, looked out at what had been the Balboa Pier
surf and decided he was going to find another spot. A little while
later he returned and said, “Let’s surf the Point,” and so it was
that Tagg, Spenny Richardson and I became just about the first people
to surf the area.
As I say, Tagg was always a little crazy, and Spenny and I were
just dumb enough to go along with his crazy idea. It must be
remembered that this was before Owen Churchill had returned from
Tahiti and developed the swim fin. Without swim fins the art of body
surfing consisted of going over the falls, a free fall straight down,
then wallowing in the trough, getting pummeled by each ensuing wave
until that set of waves was over.
All I can remember about those days was the sheer terror I
experienced in taking off on a big wave and knowing that if I
survived the fall I would probably drown in the trough. It was
probably because of that terror that I became disenchanted with
bodysurfing and went into board surfing and skin diving. I didn’t
really get back into bodysurfing until I got my first pair of
Duckfeet fins, and it was a long while after that before I got up the
nerve to go back to The Wedge.
Looking back over the 30 years I surfed the place and 30 more
years of watching others surf there, I’m more convinced than ever
that Tagg Atwood was crazy to surf the spot, and Spenny and I not too
bright to join him.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge.
His column runs Tuesdays.
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