Tuesday, October 19, 2010 1:52pm PDT

Surfing the China River Bore

By: Surfer Magazine


Jamie Sterling checks out a great wall in china... sorry i couldnt resist.

Each year, millions of spectators flock to the shore of the Qiantang River in southeastern China to watch the world-renowned tidal bore rush through the city. The bore, caused by a massive tidal shift and the bottleneck shape of Hangzhou Bay (that makes it easy for the tide to flow in, but difficult for it to ebb), is one of the largest known in the world.

full article and video here...

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"Record" for Largest Wave Ever Ridden Trivializes Big-Wave Surfing

"Record" for Largest Wave Ever Ridden Trivializes Big-Wave Surfing

A return to old-school measuring techniques is in order

Consider two representations of two very big waves, below. The first is a photograph of Mike Parsons at Cortes Bank. The second is a video of Garrett McNamara near Nazare, Portugal. Now take out some measuring tape and make the distance of one foot between your hands. That's the amount, according to the Billabong XXL committee, that McNamara's wave is bigger than Parsons's wave.

1 Comments

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kaliso

Posted by kaliso October 19, 2010 02:27pm PDTReply | Report Abuse

Hope surfing catches on in China, it'd be huge!

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