Screw Gov. Christie

Discussion in 'Mid Atlantic' started by shupat08, Sep 2, 2010.

  1. shupat08

    shupat08 Well-Known Member

    93
    Aug 5, 2009
    Front Gate ranger at the local State Park this morning told me and my buddy that "[They] got the call from Trenton this morning, no surfing allowed here. Don't even bother. Sorry." The guy told us to U-turn and find somewhere else. Well, long story short, we only found pounding close-outs with select shoulders and rights. Bullsh*t!
     
  2. aka pumpmaster

    aka pumpmaster Well-Known Member

    Apr 30, 2008
    So you REALLY think Christie personally issued a no-surfing order???:rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes:
     

  3. jettyface

    jettyface Well-Known Member

    180
    Aug 5, 2009
    Yes. He called IBSP and Sandy Hook and this was the conversation: "hey its Chris"
    State park ranger: "hey how's it going?"
    Christie: "over here in Trenton the waves are a bit rough I think we need to close the beach."
    State Park Ranger: "ok if Trenton is going off then you must really know how crazy it is, we'll close the beach."

    Thank you Gov. Buzzkillington
     
  4. tbeaver

    tbeaver Member

    22
    Aug 7, 2009
    Shame on our rotund Governor. And to think, you called in a fake sick day at your job in state government only to get skunked!
     
  5. JERSEYboarder

    JERSEYboarder Well-Known Member

    370
    Jun 30, 2009
    thats not right i cant remember when thewre was no surfing in IBSP
     
  6. Waverider82

    Waverider82 Well-Known Member

    256
    Mar 26, 2010
    Total B.S. Makes no sense. Have they ever been to Hawaii or California and seen the waves there? Make sure to write a letter complaining to the state parks and local representatives and tell all your surfer buddies to do the same. This is supposed to be a free country.
     
    Last edited: Sep 2, 2010
  7. ND081

    ND081 Well-Known Member

    900
    Aug 7, 2010
    do you know if you're allowed to surf off the jetty in IBSP thats right next to the barnegat inlet on normal days? I was up by the inlet today and it looked like it was freaking firing on the other side
     
  8. pkovo

    pkovo Well-Known Member

    599
    Jun 7, 2010
    It was posted on the APP website last night that they would be closed today and tomorrow. Not sure if it ran in the actual paper.

    This isn't Hawaii or CA. It's an overcrowded state that doesn't normally get large waves, and we're leading into one of the biggest beach weekends of the year. I'm really not surprised. They're thinking liability.

    Especially when you have the weather channel Hype Machine talking about dangerous rips and evacuations in every third sentence 24 hours a day. I mean clearly there will be dangerous conditions, but man they absolutely go nuts on this stuff.

    Pretty sure the rangers would call you out if you try to go next to the jetty, or the fisherman would be casting lead at you. It doesn't actually break good there anyway.
     
  9. USCG47driver

    USCG47driver Member

    7
    Sep 2, 2010
    In defense of the government, SOME people should stay out of the water when it is above their ability. I can't tell you how many rescues are launched by the Coast Guard and other rescue departments for idiots who go in way over their head - literally. Everytime we launch a rescue mission, $70,000 of tax paying money is spent, but more importantly, the lives of the rescue teams are put at jeopardy for someone's stupidity.

    In 2003 my unit responded to 3 a-holes who took a go-fast boat out of the inlet when a labor day storm was throwing 12-15 footers on the beach. They capsized and we launched. We had to pull these clowns from the water 50yrds from the beach, putting our boat in harms way of the dangerous surf. All because these guys were drunk and made a stupid move.

    On that note, I don't believe the government should hinder the right to access the water at any time, but it is a slippery slope, because if you get caught in a bind, someone somewhere is going to be putting their life on the line for you. Know your limits!
     
  10. USCG47driver

    USCG47driver Member

    7
    Sep 2, 2010
    Actually I was just there on Tuesday, north side of that jetty was producing some beautiful tubes, but the break was right and you'd be committing suicide to try and surf those. They'd slam you right into the rocks. But that was Tuesday, mid-tide and incoming, well before the swell really started to build. I'd say they were easily head high while the rest of the beach was waist.
     
  11. Waverider82

    Waverider82 Well-Known Member

    256
    Mar 26, 2010
    The state does normally get large waves around the head high range. Just not consistently. Hawaii and California can get 50 foot waves, which obviously can be deadly This stuff is a few feet overhead at most while it's still clean. It's just this hype machine that the weather channel has created about these "rips". Rips don't even present a danger to someone who knows what their doing in the water. They showed a video of a surfer on a 1 to 2 foot overhead wave and they were talking about he was "crazy". That's not crazy. It's called surfing. People surf and bodyboard on the Atlantic and a swell shouldn't stop them from doing so. It's what their waiting for! Maybe they should just shut down all the surf shops too.

    The Weather channel is creating all these lies about the danger of long period swell. They should do this ridiculous coverage everytime there's a 15 second period swell hitting southern California, which btw has a HUGE population locally. Oh wait a minute. They'd have a crew there almost everyday....lmao The weather channel see's this is a ratings grab. I swear by the way their covering this event, you'd think it was a death trap for an experienced ocean person to enter the water with a 5 foot at 13 seconds well. Rather than give people real advice about the dangers of shore pound and knowing your limits and using caution, they spew out this crap. Also, it depends on the break. Every break breaks differently. Some are real heavy and some break easy as we all know. What a complete joke! Look at this ridiculous picture taken off a new england news tv network. necn.jpg
     
    Last edited: Sep 2, 2010
  12. ND081

    ND081 Well-Known Member

    900
    Aug 7, 2010
    lmao DANGEROUS SURF
     
  13. shupat08

    shupat08 Well-Known Member

    93
    Aug 5, 2009
    Ha... no sick day for me. This is my summer vacation. See I'm one of those teachers that steal taxpayer dollars (well that's atleast how Governor Krispy Kreme puts it). But thanks for trying to be an asshole. Maybe you'll succeed someday!
     
  14. USCG47driver

    USCG47driver Member

    7
    Sep 2, 2010
    I agree that the weather channel and other news stations are blowing this way out of proportion. That being said, you can not compare 20 foot swells on the pacific coast to similar sized swells in the Atlantic.

    I've been to surf school in Washington state, at the mouth of the Columbia river. 20ft swells are common there. I'd take those 20 footers over 10-20 foot Atlantic surf any day. People under estimate just how nasty the atlantic can get. Currents can be MUCH stronger than what you'll see on the west coast. Personally speaking, you won't see me trying to paddle out in 10 foot hurricane surf here on the east coast. Doesn't mean I think you guys are nuts, but after many years of "playing" in the surf, I respect the power, and its something that I really don't want to mess with.

    So while they speak of these "rips" on tv, you cannot sit here and look at this hurricane surf as being anything less than dangerous. Have fun, but be careful guys. Not worth dying over a wave....in my opinion anyway. Someday I'd like to be good enough to surf some larger waves, but I got my ass pounded in 4-6 footers from a wind swell. I can't imagine playing with this hurricane swell, although I'll be on duty ready to play with it in another form.
     
    Last edited: Sep 2, 2010
  15. wbsurfer

    wbsurfer Well-Known Member

    Mar 30, 2008
    when surfing with big waves i have learned that 1) you must respect the water and the power that the water has when its big and pumping, 2) you gotta channel your fear from scared fear into pour energy fear and use that fear to produce more energy, 3) remember eas coast surf is way harder than any other place you have surfed as remember we east coast surfers dont have channels we can just paddle in and catch a wave and then paddle back out in the channel we have rips so use the rip and current to your benefit, and finally you just gotta know your limits if your new and still riding a soft top dont go paddling out in head high+ surf stay small, now this will change if of course your good and can surf a soft top really well, as i know i ride my cousins when its shorepounding and shallow with waist high waves so i dont break my boards.
     
    Last edited: Sep 2, 2010
  16. Waverider82

    Waverider82 Well-Known Member

    256
    Mar 26, 2010
    I understand what your saying. Your talking about the better(for me,of course i don't like super heavy hollow waves) less heavy breaks out west vs. Steep holllow beach breaks in the mid atlantic. REAL HEAVY. The currents are caused by the hollow waves breaking on sandbars with steep drop offs.

    IE Malibu wave...my type of wave not heavy or really hollow. Of course out west ALSO has some of the most dangerous breaks around like the wedge and sandy's in Oahu. Pipeline is one the heaviest waves in the world and it breaks on razor sharp coral so the west has it's share of dangerous breaks. There not all easy rollers out west

    Charging double or triple overhead close out waves on a hollow beach shorepound break with no paddling channels is nearly impossible to paddle out to the lineup and nuts. Wack jobs do it all the time at waimea bay shorepound,(truly insane), the wedge, sandy's ect. I agree 4-6 foot on a hollow beach break will work u real good.My only point was you shouldn't be banned from entering the water if you find a spot that is manageable and working good. That was my original point. He had found a spot that was working and wasn't allowed to go in.
     
    Last edited: Sep 2, 2010
  17. jettyface

    jettyface Well-Known Member

    180
    Aug 5, 2009
    I made a mistake before. The honorable governor was actually lowered into the ocean off of island beach state park today to act as an additional buoy to get a better reading. He claims to have been bobbing up and down at 25 feet every 30 seconds, thus setting in motion the state wide gnar-warning system, which closes down the beach due to gnar waves.
     
  18. Waverider82

    Waverider82 Well-Known Member

    256
    Mar 26, 2010
    Oh and you can't tell me spots like Mavericks aren't a million times heavier and bigger than anything out east.
     
  19. Waverider82

    Waverider82 Well-Known Member

    256
    Mar 26, 2010
    Oh and don't feel bad about getting worked in 4-6 feet. . It's all about having fun. I don't like seeing someone being banned from the ocean during a good swell. That's all.