Posts Tagged ‘surfing at Waimea’

North Shore Surfer Marvin Foster is Surfing Perfect Pipeline in Heaven

Saturday, May 22nd, 2010

North Shore Surf Girls   Website
Marvin Foster, 1962-2010

North Shore surfing legend, father, brother and super cool person Marvin Foster passed away May 18th, 2010 in Haleiwa on the North Shore of Oahu,  finding peace at last.   He was a fearless surfer with a true North Shore style.  Earning the nick names Carving Marvin and Marvelous Marvin he was a master at surfing the Pipeline and set the standard for carving in the early 80’s.  In 1980,  he was named Rookie of the Year by ASP World Tour.  Always a daredevil, he was the  first person to go left at big Waimea Bay, and  was one of the original invitees to the Quiksilver Eddie Aikau Big Wave Invitational surfing contest.

A straight “A” graduate of Waialua High School,  Hawaiian to the core and intelligent,  Marvelous Marvin looked you straight in the eye and told you like it was.  Loved and respected by his family and friends he will be truly missed.

Marvin is survived by his daughters  Vai Tiare Marr-Foster and Zjayna Foster, brothers Daniel, Cyrus, and Kalani Foster, and sister Pua McCormick.

North Shore’s Best Surfing Beaches

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

North Shore Surf Girls Website

The best place to surf on the North Shore depends upon what kind of surfer you are. For beginner surfers Puaena Point and Freddie Land are the best places to go. If your an intermediate surfer any place up to 6 ft, except Pipeline and Rocky Rights. After the surf gets over 6 ft., every surf spot is for experts only, especially Pipeline, Sunset, Haleiwa, Waimea Bay and all outside reefs. The good news is that if your wanting to learn how to surf we teach our surfing lessons in a protected cove, so even when the surf is huge on the outside we have small and safe 1-2 ft., waves to teach you to surf on.

All about Waimea Bay and Valley on the North Shore of Oahu

Monday, February 16th, 2009

Waimea Bay and Waimea Valley is one of my most favorite places in the world!`Located in the Moku of Waialua, it is the only complete Ahupua’a on the island of Oahu that is preserved. An ahupua’a is the name Hawaiians use to describe a track of land, but it’s much more then that, it also represents a style of land management that follows the flow of the water from the mountains to the sea.
Beautiful Waimea Bay

Waimea Bay’s beautiful white sand beach is one of the largest and deepest beaches in the Hawaiian Islands and a great place to swim and snorkel in the Summer months. It is also a Marine Life Conservation District. On the West end of the bay the famous Jump Rock which you can jump off of if your brave! There is also a hole at the base that you can swim through.
Waimea Bay Jump Rock

In the Winter months when the surf is up Waimea Bay features one of the most dangerous and deadly rip currents in the world. So much so that Jump Rock name is changed to Death Rock ! If you must go in the water during the Winter months talk to the North Shore Lifeguards first. Waimea Bay is also one of the most famous big wave surfing spots in the world. Long before tow-in surfing heroic men and a few women paddled into huge waves with only the power of their arms and fins in the case of bodyboarders. It’s hard to describe what it feels like to paddle into a wave that is thick as a school bus and taller then a telephone pole, but one thing is for sure Anna Marie in the movie Blue Crush did not have the commitment to pull it off! Sorry, I’m digressing into the one weak point of Blue Crush’s script. Waimea Bay is also host to the Quicksliver Eddie Aikau Surfing Competition which only runs when the bay calls the day. Here’s an interview by Mark Healey that talks about what a dream it is to compete in the Eddie. If your lucky and on the North Shore from December 1st – through February 28th, you may luck out and get to see the contest.

Waimea Bay is also amazing when you see it underwater – I remember the first time I saw it with a mask I literally ran out of the water, OK so I was a really little girl at that time, but I remember vidily that I was shocked with how deep and big it was! As mesmerizing as the Bay is, one must take the time to hike up to the falls in the West side of Waimea Valley, which is thankfully managed by Hawaiian’s again. Waimea Bay was also the first place Europeans stopped on Oahu and was filled with thousands of native Hawaiian’s before the population was decimated by disease. The mana (power) of the Bay is only matched by the deep feeling of peace a person feels when standing between the valley walls and breathing in the air of one of the most important botanical collections in the world. Saving Waimea valley was a renaissance of power to the people. You see Waimea was condemned by Honolulu’s Mayor Harris in early 2000 for the sum of $5,00,000 dollars – I remember the process well as I advocated to allow swimming at the falls. A few years later a back room political deal almost gave away 2/3’s of the valley, but the people prevailed and all is pono (right) now. In any case when you come to the North Shore a visit to the water fall is a must do.