Stab Magazine | What Surfing Can Learn from Skating

Now Unlocked: Chippa Wilson Stars In "Zipper"

2 Views

What Surfing Can Learn from Skating

With Eric Geiselman, a gent who’s fluent in both.

style // Mar 20, 2017
Words by Shaun Fisher
Reading Time: 4 minutes

I rip around a deep concrete bowl in Bali, cautious not to hit the tiles or the pool coping above. It’s hot and sweaty and I’m shaky-legged after not skating for a couple of months. A local gent I don’t know hands me a beer, even though I did nothing particularly well, and we get chatting. While we talk, another guy rips a clean 50 over the spine and everyone pauses to smash their decks against the ground. I can’t help but think back to my morning surf at Canggu, and the hour-long paddle battle I had with 40 other surfers who were just as agitated and antisocial as I was.

Since skating split from surfing’s evolutionary path, it has carved its own language, style and culture. It has major branding, wealthy professionals and a place in the Olympics (ha!). But most importantly, in its social environment, skating has been able to retain what surfing lost, some 30 years ago.

I phoned Floridian Eric Geiselman, who has been wildly fluent in both surf and skate since he was a kid, to discuss the change.

“With surfing, everyone is so competitive, kinda dog-eat-dog – which is cool because we feed off each other – but it’s a lot of testosterone and sometimes you don’t want to even go that route,” Eric says. “In skateboarding, I always feel like no matter what you want to do, the individual is accepted. Your freedom of expression is embraced. It doesn’t matter if you show up to the park and suck, if you try a trick and make it, everyone in the park is clacking decks and rooting for you. There is more camaraderie.”

Screen Shot 2017 03 20 at 12.06.20 pm

Yeah, Ev can dance over concrete. Photo: @lyles

Due to its reliance on the inconsistencies of nature, surfing might just be the most competitive sport in the world. The fickle combination of tide time, wind direction, swell size, sandbanks and daylight, creates a pressurised environment that surfers have to battle on, hustling each other for the next set wave. How many other sports dictate that you must compete just to practise it?

“It’s purely a fact of the starvation of waves,” says Eric. “With skating, it could be raining right now and I could be in my living room practicing a kickflip on the carpet. Skateboarding, you can literally do anywhere. You can go to the skate park and the ramp is always there.”

This isn’t the case with surfing, and there’s no denying that the feeling in most lineups has changed over the years. Back when surfers were the degenerates and skating didn’t exist yet, surfing had a carefree attitude that was accepting and supportive, no matter if you shredded or were just starting out. Many of us are too young to remember these times, but the old salts at your local will tell you (especially if you drop in on them). Watch Morning of The Earth again or some clips from Endless Summer with five dudes on a wave, all laughing together.

The only problem is that clips like these led to the popularisation of surfing and a surge of bodies in the water, particularly over the last two decades. Around 2.4 million Americans and 2.3 million Australians now identify themselves as surfers, and most of them live in centralised locations. Waves in San Diego and Daytona, Gold Coast and Bondi, are totally packed out. And while perfect unridden waves continue to roll into shores around the world, most of us are either too time or money poor to be able to find them.

https://player.vimeo.com/video/123749397

“It’s not a bad thing that there is more people doing it – and the level of surfing has risen a fuckload,” says Eric, explaining why he finds himself skating more than surfing. “But you’re never going to go to the beach and feel welcomed or accepted. With surfing, especially if you’re at a pointbreak, it’s a fucking nightmare. You are just a piece on a conveyor belt, all snaking each other just to get a wave. While everybody’s friends, you have to be aggressive. And there is always going to be that vibe in the water, which sucks. That’s what I hate the most about surfing, that ego and entitlement.”

So, what’s the answer?

The signs at Snapper showing a stick figure dropping in with a big red cross through the middle don’t seem to be doing a whole lot. ‘Be kind to learners’ and ‘share the lineup’ are the obvious maxims, though people won’t always follow them.

“Just get along and be real,” is what Eric says, though he doesn’t seem hopeful. “At the moment, I’ve been skating heaps and surfing zero – skating is keeping my sanity.”

We end our conversation talking about the last week of swell that hit the Gold Coast, and Eric says that he hopes there are waves in a month when he flies over. I tell him we don’t need another guy in the water, and he laughs. It really seems that if surfing could be fixed, returned to its former Morning Glory, in some robot dreamland future, then it would need the equivalent of skateparks (wavepools). And, lots of them. Too bad Kelly has the only one worth visiting – and he only invites his friends. 

Comments

Comments are a Stab Premium feature. Gotta join to talk shop.

Already a member? Sign In

Want to join? Sign Up

Advertisement

Most Recent

(Surf) Respect: How Do You Get It?

The secrets to living a productive life and earning the admiration of your peers.

May 7, 2024

Stab Interview: Laura Enever On Her World Record Payday, Why Cloudbreak Bites Harder Than Shipsterns + The Terrors Of Live Commentary

"That sums up my career perfectly - got a 10, still lost the heat"

May 5, 2024

Full Frame: “Mullet Lord” Frolics In The Fruits Of His Realm

Beloved Aussie coffee shop owner colludes with lip to brew steamy concoction.

May 5, 2024

Erin Brooks And Mikey McDonagh Summit Freshly Spawned Mountain Of Challenger Series Rankings

Perfect 10s, phallic polyurethane, and numerous benthic vortexes marked the Bonsoy Gold Coast Pro.

May 4, 2024

Paul Fisher Resurrects Iconic Dick Board, Inadvertently Saves The WSL

Surfing's gone soft? Take this blue pill.

May 3, 2024

2 Australian Surfers, 1 American Still Missing In Baja California, Mexico

Three suspects have been arrested, a truck was found burned, but the friends remain "missing".

May 2, 2024

Zipper Offcut: A Pacific Island Micro-Wedge

Chippa, Harry, Dion, a hazardous ramp, and a near fiberglass-vasectomy.

May 2, 2024

UNLOCKED: Chippa Wilson Stars In ‘Zipper’ — A Surf Film By Stab & Monster

Featuring Filipe Toledo, Harry Bryant, Bobby Martinez, Eithan Osborne, Taro Watanabe, and Dion Agius.

May 2, 2024

Is Nat Young’s 4.03 A Symbol Of Surf Judging Demise, Or A Harmless Scoring Aberration?

World champs, super coaches, WSL commentators and more sound off on the state of surf…

May 1, 2024

How Stretch And Nathan Fletcher SpaceX’d Surfboard Design Into The Future

“I brought the boards to Hawaii and everybody laughed at me. Everyone except Michael Ho…

Apr 30, 2024

Doug Silva Is The Skullet-Locked 12x World Party Champ Working Wonders For Seth Moniz’s Tour Trajectory

Here's how he uses EDM + storytelling to snap talent into 'infected alligators'.

Apr 30, 2024

Marti Paradisis On The New Shipsterns Safety Initiative + The Laziness Of Bandwagoning Swell Carnivals

Before calling Shipsterns Bluff and getting flexed, read this. 

Apr 28, 2024

Full Frame: A 15-Minute, One-Wave Pipe Session

"Oh shit, that was kind of nuts, I think I think I'm just gonna go…

Apr 27, 2024

Want Half-A-Brain? Keep Calling Helmets Lame

Kai Lenny surfs hideous Jaws + Mavs + Waimea, joins esteemed list of surfers to…

Apr 27, 2024

80 Men And 48 Women Enter The CS Gauntlet — Only 15 Will Survive

Your 2024 Challenger Series x Gold Coast Pro preview.

Apr 26, 2024

The Best Surfing I’ve Ever Seen: Nate Lawrence

Kolohe, Cola Bros, Luke Davis, Crane, and "the most magical 3 weeks ever had in…

Apr 25, 2024

Snapper To Return To The CT In 2025(!) + WSL Announces Season Wildcards

Next year is looking up. Here's what we know...

Apr 25, 2024

Kelly Slater Will Surf In Tahiti And Fiji CT Events — And He’s Bringing A Secret Weapon With Him

What's it like to coach an 11x champ? We asked Glenn "Micro" Hall.

Apr 24, 2024
Advertisement