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The World’s 10 Best Cities For Surfers: Rio De Janeiro

From Stab issue 58: Stab reveals the metropolises where a man can lock down a satisfying occupation, be entertained in the most degenerate manner, where he won’t be vilified for his free expression and where a hunk of fiberglass can be put to exceptionally good use…

Number one is: Rio De Janeiro, Brazil

By Jed Smith and Julio Adler

There’s a very good reason why the Wall Street traders who vultures the global economy have begun relocating en masse to Rio. Well, a few reasons actually, but mostly it’s just ‘cause they’re smart. It’s boom time in Brazil and an exploding economy has added the final spice to an already intoxicating stew of culture, climate, caipirinhas and ah, what’s that other cheap and plentiful thing that abounds in South America starting with a C that blows the living heavens out of a healthy, but ageing, man’s heart?

Backed by giant green mountains, rimmed by rainforest and with kilometres of sandy, surfable coast to its north and south, it’s easy to see how Rio has earned the moniker cidade maravilhosa (marvellous city). With economic prosperity reigning, a skills shortage in several fields of high-end expertise and the football World Cup and Olympics about to drop by, the question has become not why you should move to Rio but, if it’s within your means, why haven’t you?

Why you’ll wanna live there:If surfing is but one part of a lifestyle that thrives in a richly artistic, eclectic, romantic and temperate (bordering on tropical) environment then get thee to Rio. If surfing is your lifestyle and sleeping in vans, crapping in ditches and shaving salt crystals from the back of your ear onto your morning omelet is your thing then Rio’s not a place of permanent residence for you. As the second largest city in Brazil and plonk on the beach, lineups are crowded and can be aggressive but that’s not to say great uncrowded waves are an impossibility. Just that, well, a calm disposition and a shortish fattish quad does go a long way here.

Six mill souls in this dreamboat city. Photo: Ryan Miller

Where to stay: Stab prefers the Hotel Fasano to anything else and, despite the cost ($500 upwards for a bolthole) believes a man can come no closer to heaven than being immersed in its pool overlooking the paupers below. Copacabana Palace ain’t so bad, either, but Hotel Fasano gots the fever right now. Ipanema, Leblon, Gavea and Santa Teresa are the best places for a truly Rio de Janeiro adventure, if y’into that sorta thing. Bed and Breakfast joints are the thing to do now, and even they are pretty pricey. You can stay right at the beach in Ipanema at Arpoador BB, or at the heart of Leblon at BB Leblon, Gavea at La Maison or even at the hills of Santa Teresa.

Violence: Not as bad as you’d think, if all goes well, psychotic if it don’t. Just ask Shane Doz who had a gun barrel pointed at his head by two runts on a scooter. With the World Cup and 2016 Olympic games bound for Rio, howevs, the government has spared no expense in wiping the grime and blood from it’s seething back streets. So far has the city come, the hillside hoods formerly owned by sniffling six year olds with homemade shooters are now occupied by quaint bed and breakfasts, Samba studios and tourist trails.

Getting out: Rio’s home to one of the most diverse and progressive social scenes in the world, with everything from clubs, bars, street jams, raves and mini festivals to live gigs, block parties and of course, come mid-February, Carnival, with two million cats taking to the streets everyday for a week of partying. But, people in Rio don’t have a habit of going out to hipster clubs. Y’can walk all night throughout the streets of Baixo Gavea. You can’t miss the Lapa, a sexy but sometimes dangerous neighbourhood, with bars, restaurants, and all kinds of clubs for the sophisticated. The big thing in Rio are the private parties, like Baile do Ze Pretim, or rockarocka and (only four times a year) the fashion brand Auslander party.

Y’like sand under your feet and sand bottoms under your 5’6” Mayhem? Rio sure is your city. Photo: Seth Stafford

Grinds: Maybe you’ve just scorched a fat green one in the soothing afternoon sun and you’re feeling a little peck to go with that icy caiparinha in your hand. Summon an Acaraje from a street vendor for a couple of clams (a black-eyed pea fritter topped with shrimp and all manner of other tasty treats) or, if you’ve got game on the cavaquinho (the four-stringed Brazilian ukelele) try to weasel into a beachside Churrasco (Brazilian bbq). Fail that, take a seat at any restaurant and order a bowl of Feijoada, the national black bean stew with smoked meats that takes a full day to prepare.

Cultural hits: Rio’s got ‘em in spades. Take the Barra Expresso on a Saturday down to the famous crafts market in Rua General Glicerio in Laranjeiras or check out the Bohemian hilltop neighbourhood of Santa Teresas. If you’re into finer arts, there’s the Instituto Moreira Salles (photography museum), the National Gallery of Fine Arts and the fruit at the fieras (open air markets). Oh, and there’s hundreds of samba studios catering to varying degrees of skill around the city. It’s a bit of a daunting scene but even the most rudimentary understanding of samba puts you way ahead of the bow-legged white men cluttering the d-floors.

Surfers: Rio is home to a giant surfing community and is proud to have birthed Raoni Monteiro, Leo Neves, Guilherme Herdy, Bruno Santos and Maya Gabeira.

Work detail: Learn Portuguese, top it with a degree and there’s big money gigs available everywhere in Rio. With huge media, electronics, engineering, computer and banking sectors located in the city, it’s developing a huge ex-pat community.

Water and all that: During the 60s and the 70s every surfer coming to Rio stayed either in Ipanema, Copacabana or Jardim Botanico. Enter the 80s and the big boom of commercialism threw the contest down to Barra da Tijuca, the longest beach in the city with 18 km of sandbars and infinite possibilities. If you pass Barra, you’ll find all kind of different set ups and waves: there’s Macumba, Prainha, Grumari and, can y’keep a secret? Rio’s rarest gem is Guaratiba, its own little Mundaka. It breaks maybe five times a year and the locals are very protective. Try Rio from late April until late October. Waves here are short and intense. If you drive an hour north from Rio, you’ll find Saquarema, Buzios and Cabo Frio, a must-do for every visitor.

Now, come and dive into the idiosyncrasies that make Rio so totally hot!

Julian Wilson, Rio sloth. Photo: Ryan Miller

Bossa Nova … is music to make love by: smooth, delicate, wistful. Rio de Janeiro can be like that if you know where to go, and when. The musical offering is almost obscene. You have free concerts by the beach year round, lots of happenings of every genre, from samba to minimal house. Avoid the big concert halls (expensive as hell!), except for the traditional Theatro Municipal, inspired by the Opera House of Paris. You can listen to music and visit amazing expos at Oi Futuro for cheap or for free (super cheap!). You also have Circo Voador and the parties at Fundição Progresso.

Saudade … has no practical translation and means that you miss somebody or something. During your stay in Rio, it’s inevitable to confront your wildest fantasies walking down the street or having breakfast at a Padaria (bakery). You simply can’t resist the urge to go up and face Christ the Redeemer at the Corcovado hill and the view up there is something capable of putting any agnostic down on his knees and saying a prayer to whatever sort of god he might get inspired by. Even the airport here has a lyrical name, Tom Jobim, the great composer who wrote Girl from Ipanema and many others. Usually, airports are named after generals and presidents, like Kennedy in NYC or Charles De Gaulle in Paris. Tom Jobim loved to spend the afternoons watching the sunset from the rocks at the Arpoador (one of the sites of the Rio WCT Contest).

Segredo … this means secret. Forget the Churrascarias, places where they stuff you with meat and beer and charge you a fortune for the all-you-can-eat orgy. If you want great meat, go straight to Majorica. You don’t need Michelin guides here, as many famous French chefs came to Rio and opened their own bistros in the neighbourhood, like Claude Troigros and the marvellous bakery La Bicyclette. Weekends can be spent at Barra de Guaratiba, with fresh fish in the shacks owned by the tias (aunts), rustic and delicious.
Rio is a paradise for fast food fanatics. Every corner has a small fresh fruit juice and burger shop (BB lanches, Polis Sucos e Ballad, all over Ipanema and Leblon) for your delight.

The Good and the Not-So-Good
+ In the current fin-loosing era, ain’t nothing quite so good as tipping your wings over a Rio wedge. Gals? Something about that brow skin and the vast expanse of a women’s ass laid bare. Dancing, fresh food, year-round sunshine and a job that’ll top anything you’ll score in NYC or London? Are you kidding me?
- Okay, despite cop squads busting open gangs and being zealous in the use of their pistols, the gap between rich and poor is real and when there’s a gap o that magnitude expect resentment and opportunism. The good side of the down side are the fruits of contraband. So cheap! So powerful!

The city of dreams, the city of gold, the city of guns and gals. Drink in the view, ain't nowhere in the world like this. Photo: Ryan Miller

BUY STAB ISSUE 58 ONLINE, HERE.

32 comments so far...
1.

I learned how to do floaters in Rio, it’s the best place to do so.

2.

You speak Brazilian or Portugese…

3.

I am brazilian, and you guys have to understand that Rio can be an awesome place to vist but never a good place to live! Violence and stupid/ arrogant people are the main reasons. That´s about it, cheers.

4.

i gotta say on a recent trip to to indo, for two months, the only aggro i saw was on bali, while in the Bukit, instigated solely by packs of “brazzos”. It was in May and was pretty much deserted at most breaks (less than 10 in the water)… I saw brazillians turn up and roll out the old “safety in numbers, dominate and conquer” tactic… and while out for dinner those were the exact same guys counting coins at bill time, or arguing with bar owners about how many drinks they had. FFS, most of the time it was only over about 50-100,000.
Before you label me as just another Ozzy Racist, i am from New Zealand, and we are very welcoming and tolerant of all races cultures and religions. what i saw from brazillian surfers in bali has really put me off even wanting to talk to travellers from Brazil when in the water back home in NZ. I actually saw a brazillian girl kick another guy in the face just for paddling next to her at Ulu’s. She had a crew of hefty dudes with her, and the guy who got kicked just looked at me with a bleeding mouth, shrugged and then paddled in. I went in on a wave soon after sick of being scowled at for taking off “too deep”(even though i was making every wave), gettting hassled for waves when it was just them and me out…

Seriously, Brazil, you have abad rep around the world, and its time to change that by bringing your A-game of respect, peace and patience to the water when(IF) you’re lucky or hardworking enough to get to leave Brazil.

Aroha Nga Mihi Nui. (love and blessings)

5.

If you could speak Portuguese (no such language as Brazilian) it would actually be “Obrigado amigos!”… just sayin’

1.

it just made me raw out of words!
nice job stab…
I lived in Rio for a few years back in the 90′s and I agree, there’s no better place to be a surfer and a men…

cheers Brazil!

    2.

    Copacabana and Ipanema have good bodysurfing.. big barreling close outs. But go north and surf at Saquarema, the real gem, clean and beautiful. Or south of town there’s some rideable surf. A few hundred miles south, Florianopolis is an awsome city, but theres that lame rule you cant surf in the sardine season, which is basically a big chunk of the surf season. As for women, I think with a bit of portuguese language you can slay your fair share regardless of location. Without the language, better go outside of Rio where girls like to see foreigners. Rio is too fucking big and gnarly to be considered a good place to live mate. And if your a serious surfer keen on cities, why not live in Denpasar or Durban or someplace with consistent clean surf. I reckon if you’re from Sydney and like to party, Rio will work out just fine for you. Be warned, the photo above shows only a tiny part of the city. The place is a massive sprawling megopolis with the pollution to match.

3.

I speak Brazilian and Spanish and you’ve got this so wrong. Aborigado ameegos, get it right!

    4.

    You speak Brazilian or Portugese…

      5.

      Here in Brasil we speak portuguese. It’s almost the same as in Portugal but with a diferent accent and sometimes meanings.

    6.

    If you could speak Portuguese (no such language as Brazilian) it would actually be “Obrigado amigos!”… just sayin’

7.

I learned how to do floaters in Rio, it’s the best place to do so.

8.

I am brazilian, and you guys have to understand that Rio can be an awesome place to vist but never a good place to live! Violence and stupid/ arrogant people are the main reasons. That´s about it, cheers.

    9.

    deixa de ser idiota, vc deveria valorizar a sua cidade e nao manchar ela p tds as pessoas que tao lendo… sua cidade vive do turismo!!!

10.

I’m sure Rob is from Sao Paulo!

    11.

    LOL

12.

Nice and Fair article. Julio Adler is the man.

13.

500 beans a night for a room is a bit of a sting!

14.

rio surf SUCKS. this is a load of crap.

15.

i’ve surfed brasil a lot over the last decade and whilst I love Rio, the surf there is not good. You have to drive north out of rio to get any sort of decent waves as ipanema and copacobana just blow – short little close outs dumping on the shore

16.

“It’s boom time in Brazil and an exploding economy”

Well, sorry to say, but you are bit late mate, the country is going south. Although it can even be good, cause stuffs might get cheaper ( this is one of the most expensive cities in the world for expatriates right now), not so easy to get a job anymore.

17.

come one everyone, /b/ nice

18.

http://www.layback.com.br/surf/rio-de-janeiro-raw/

19.

Right on guys, u’re right. Coke is so cheap over here, its totally worth it! Oh, but wait… there’s violence as well, hmm thats an interesting one. Meh, doesn’t matter, just come over and party!

20.

Is this a joke? everyone knows this is where the most brazilian haters unite to talk hipster shit which is so far superior than any third world manlady or crab styled surfer or uncool dudes that cant even speak english, am I right? what happened?

21.

Brazil is fucked, so are their people

    22.

    @S you obviously have no idea – I hope you only ever surf your local, never learn another language and never get any foreign flags.

    23.

    and so are you, fucking fucked fucker fuck.

    24.

    So are you, you cunt. Want to fight? I looove to fight….

25.

http://waves.terra.com.br/surf/fotos//dupla-mata-a-fissura/53759

26.

Well thanks kooks for fucking up the thread. Challenges to “fight”- what, boring us online? You are probablay on different fucking continents. Get back on topic.

I want to visit Rio, it sounds awesome. And the women. The Girl from Ipanema – Maya Gabiera.

But the Stab missed the mark- the best city on the planet to live and surf is Honolulu. Best weather on the planet. Good-sized city with all kinds of jobs. Beautiful native and hapa-houlie women. Summer surf and winter surf. Hands down Honolulu.

    27.

    STAB missed the best two cities. Hands down, Durban South Africa, and Honolulu, Hawaii, have the best surf right in the city. Next would be Cape Town. The problem with Rio is the sewage, its filthy. Plus you gotta drive a ways outta town to get real waves. I’ve been to all the above mentioned ‘top ten’ cities (except Reykjavic) but to me the places are Durban, and Honolulu. Durban has better waves right in the city, than anywhere else ive been. You can walk to barreling beach breaks that are actually consistent. Honolulu has about 50 spots but needs swell and has too many flat spells, but always has some type of ridable wave. In Durban you can get barreled and even surf at night. Ever heard of Cave Rock? however Durban is every bit as dangerous as Rio.

28.

I’m actually laughing at this nonsense.

Rio is extremely violent, corrupt, expansive, driving sucks, public health and transportation suck, police is a joke… Traffic jams all over, street kids etc..etc…

As for the waves.. average, at best. And when they are not, the crowd is ridiculous. The beaches are mostly dirty, raw sewage is very common, litter everywhere, even the sand is filthy. Most of the city is very poor and ugly, just a small fraction on the coast line is actually not totally fucked up… just see for yourself in google earth. Add that to 1000 favelas. Yes, one thousand. If you wanna live far from that, you’ll pay >U$200k for an average apartment and while you are at it, you can buy a corolla for U$40k. And an Iphone for just U$1.3k. Awesome uh?

I’m no even gonna compare it to Australia ou U.S./Hawaii, because it’s plain stupid.

Fly south a little over 1 hour from Rio, to Florianópolis, and you’ll get better beaches, much better surf, much better women, less violence, cleaner beaches, less corruption, better cost of living, better public services, etc…

This article describes a nice holiday in Rio. Living here and dealing with the everyday problems, traffic jams, violence, taxes, private healthcare, ridiculous police, cost of living, etc.. is a whole other ballgame.

    29.

    Im from rio and i must say DM – Rio is completely right on the ball. Couldnt have put it any better myself. The article describes a holiday in Rio, and that is an amazing time. but this city’s fucked. at least we’re not racist cunts like all u aussies.

30.

all ozzies are racists. you never see beautiful rio is you just horrible people who hate all brazillians. i hope kangaroos jump in front of your car racist ozzies

31.

haha. that’s what we have bullbars on our cars for. kangaroos and brazilians

32.

i gotta say on a recent trip to to indo, for two months, the only aggro i saw was on bali, while in the Bukit, instigated solely by packs of “brazzos”. It was in May and was pretty much deserted at most breaks (less than 10 in the water)… I saw brazillians turn up and roll out the old “safety in numbers, dominate and conquer” tactic… and while out for dinner those were the exact same guys counting coins at bill time, or arguing with bar owners about how many drinks they had. FFS, most of the time it was only over about 50-100,000.
Before you label me as just another Ozzy Racist, i am from New Zealand, and we are very welcoming and tolerant of all races cultures and religions. what i saw from brazillian surfers in bali has really put me off even wanting to talk to travellers from Brazil when in the water back home in NZ. I actually saw a brazillian girl kick another guy in the face just for paddling next to her at Ulu’s. She had a crew of hefty dudes with her, and the guy who got kicked just looked at me with a bleeding mouth, shrugged and then paddled in. I went in on a wave soon after sick of being scowled at for taking off “too deep”(even though i was making every wave), gettting hassled for waves when it was just them and me out…

Seriously, Brazil, you have abad rep around the world, and its time to change that by bringing your A-game of respect, peace and patience to the water when(IF) you’re lucky or hardworking enough to get to leave Brazil.

Aroha Nga Mihi Nui. (love and blessings)

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