Portugal explodes onto the global big wave circuit with a handful of household names and a freakish wave canyon. Photos: Jorge Leal and Wilson Ribeiro.

When the ‘Apocalypse Now’ film crew packed up and left the Philippine coastal town of Baler, they left one important item behind – a surfboard. More than 30 years on and this quiet backwater is home to a stoked crew of welcoming locals. Words: Mark Sankey Photos: Alexa Poppe

Big-wave riding is an awe-inspiring experience, but what happens when things go wrong? In an exclusive extract from his new book, Al Mennie explains what it's like to survive the mother of all wipeouts.

The annual Fish Fry on Australia's Gold Coast gives shapers a non-commercial, non-competitive opportunity to come together and share ideas in a shameless celebration of the fabulous fish. Words: Tommy Leitch Photos: Jamie Bott

Hidden away in a Falmouth boatyard among the classic lines of traditional timber ships is an unusual surfboard factory: one in which the boards are finished with wood and natural oils. Here tradition meets modernism. This is Glass Tiger. Words: Mark Sankey Action photos: Kirstin Prisk Other photos & design: Alexa Poppe

Drift tracked down Mark Jeremias and Jason Baffa, directors of ‘Singlefin: Yellow’, to talk about their new project, ‘One California Day’, and find out their thoughts on surf culture and tradition from Crescent City to Imperial Beach. Words: Jamie Bott


Purple jelly

July 16, 2009 | Words By: Clare

by-the-wind-sailor_courtesyofmarlinYou heard it here first folks. It’s official - we are in store for a scorcher this year. I’ve seen definitive proof – if the locals are to be believed - to back up the Met Office’s promises of a barbeque summer and it comes in the way of purple jelly.

Scores of by-the-wind-sailors, or Velella velella to use their official name, have been washing up on Cornwall’s shores, which in the eyes of local St Ives Bay residents is a sure sign that we’re all set for warm weather.

Usually only found in warmer waters out to sea the small, disc-shaped floating creatures have a vertical sail that propels them across the ocean’s surface. When the UK experiences a run of southwesterlies the purple, jellyfish-like animals sail towards our shores to be washed up on our coastlines. After, swimming through a soup of by-the-wind-sailors a couple of weeks ago I did a bit of investigating. Speaking to locals who know the beach like the back of their hand, the response was unanimous. Purple jelly in June means a season of blazing sunshine is on the way. However, communications officer Guy Baker from the Marine Biological Association is unsure of the scientific connection between the two.

“We tend to see by-the-wind-sailors coming in every year in varying quantities, it’s more a reflection of the wind patterns than of the weather to come,” he explains. “However local observations are valuable and it might be that coastal residents have observed a connection between the arrival of these creatures and good weather over hundreds of years, so there could be truth behind it.”

So there you have it. If you choose to believe a the handful of talkative octogenarians that I cornered on the beach a couple of weeks ago over the rational scientific explanation of experts, it’s bikini and boardshort surfs all the way this summer. Fact.

I know who my money’s on…


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