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]]>The photograps was shot on Camera Canon 7D. f/8 2000sec ISO 200
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]]>Kim Carey took this shot on a Canon 7D. f/8 1600sec ISO 160
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]]>The Gold Coast and its beaches have provided hundreds of Indigenous tribes with a sanctuary to hunt, gather, live and socialise (including surfing) for centuries – part of a special relationship salt water mobs have had with the ocean for more than 40,000 years.
Joel Slabb is a Director of Banaam Indigenous Surf Titles – a known local surfer with a few competitions under his belt. He grew up on the beach at Fingal and he’s a Coonjinburra man, from one of the north eastern tribes of Bundjalung Country. “It was sort of a natural progression from fishing,” he says, when asked about how he came to surf. “Our family is a fishing family and grew up on the ocean. We started riding anything we could to make it fun while waiting for our parents, and progressing to what it is today and surfing.”
According to Slabb there is still a strong presence of Aboriginal families around the Fingal and Tweed areas and, he says, they were fortunate around Fingal with two of his Elders being the first Aboriginal surfers to join Snapper Boardriders, who are partners in delivering the Surf Competition.
“The First contest I went to was in Black Rock near Nowra, in 1993 or ’92,” says Slabb. “It ran there for a couple of years and then moved up to Fingal in ’94 or ’95, something like that. And was there until 1999.” According to Slabb, that’s the last time an Indigenous surf competition was run there – some 16 years ago. So what happened? “It was the perfect storm,” he says. “I got told Billabong went through some changes and the Surfing Queensland border changed from Byron back to the border. That all occurred in the same year. So the competition just didn’t happen.”
Fast forward more than a decade and surfing group Surf Support Agency started to give young people surfboards in Fingal, and Slabb was a part of that. He says it sparked a few ideas and everyone was keen to see the competition happening again. “But putting it together was hard – especially finding sponsorship after 16 years. There are no corporate sponsors – just personal sponsorship,” says Slabb. “We had a family group donate $10,000 to the event. They live in Fingal and they see it as a real ‘close the gap’ initiative and they wanedt to give money to something that’s working.”
Slabb credits surfing with helping him to not ‘drift’ as a youngster. “As a lifestyle choice, surfing has been the right one,” he says, adding that the catchphrase for their event is #seeyaoutthere. “It’s sort of an invitation, to draw people to the water and enjoy what we enjoy. There are lots of people with drug and alcohol issues…we want to change that, to just get that message across – to see them out on the water other than doing destructive things.”
Two of the elements the team is most excited about are the kids’ program and the allstars event. That will see a team of Indigenous surfers go head to head with surfers from Snapper Boardriders.
I ask Christine, Joel’s sister, whether there’ll be a large contingent of women. “Over the last couple of years, with all the grom girls coming up, it’s starting to get popular,” she tells me. “The younger generation are more firey, more competitive. I started because Joshua, my husband, was a junior pro surfer back in the day and I got sick of sitting on the beach, watching him surf, so I just decided to pinch his board one day and go surfing.”
Joshua will be competing in the tournament and so will their kids. All four of them surf. Rory, who has joined us for this conversation, will also be competing. He’s done quite well in Oceanic Cups and says his favourite spot is Cloud Break in Fiji. We talk about his island heritage – his dad is a South Sea Islander and his mum is Aboriginal: “I suppose our parents see it as a good outlet for kids,” he says. “My parents were nothing but encouraging, they would drive the whole east coast of Australia driving me to comps.”
Slabb’s father, an Aboriginal Elder, organiser of the first Fingal Indigenous surfing competition and a highly regarded member of the community gives the event a firm stamp of approval.
“Having been part of the surf festival in the past, I found it be the most rewarding and positive experience for Indigenous People,” he said. “It’s like the old days, the gathering of people, Coroborree, meeting of all tribes throughout our great nation. What a venue. Tweed, Gold Coast, Bundjalung Area.”
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]]>Carey took this shot on a Canon 7D on f/stop 7.1 at 1600 exposure, and ISO speed 125.
The video below is a compilation of shots of Tallow Beach taken by Kim Carey during 2014.
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]]>At Lennox Head’s recent Oz Grom competition, Ness Moore found the future of surfing in Australia is in safe hands…
Flying along at high speed, the pint-sized grommet launches himself at the lip of the wave – projecting high into the air. With poise and grace he flies, weightless – board and boy, sea and sky. He’s made it and he’s only 10.
The Skullcandy Oz Grom Open, held on seven-mile beach at Lennox Head, not far from Byron Bay, is a vibrant showcase of some of our best junior surfers. With competitors flying in from all corners of the world, the competition is a highlight on the junior circuit, and it seems Australian surfing is set to continue its dominance throughout the world.
Blonde haired grommets roam the event site, surfboards and skateboards scatter the shoreline. It’s a festival of fun and everyone’s invited. Don’t be fooled though. These young competitors mean business. They’re here to win – with style and grace beyond their years, they perform aerials, executing exciting new-age manoeuvres – they’ve got it all covered. They’re agile, fast and know how to smash a lip to pieces. They’re all the best surfers combined. A dash of Dane, a taste of Taj, a heap of Kelly and a mountain of Medina. These kids have grown up watching the best of the best, now they’re going to be even better and with kids as young as seven surfing with such prowess, one can only speculate on the heights they will reach.
One such competitor who is aiming for big things is 12-year-old Finn Cox. Finn has been surfing for six years and competing for two years, and this year he made it into the quarter-finals of the under-12 division of the Skullcandy grommet open. “I love being out in the water surfing,” Finn says, “although my favourite wave is ‘Gallows’, back in Margaret River which is my home town.” Finn’s long-term ambition is to become a full-time professional surfer.
The waves were perfect for this year’s event. Sandbanks lined up with right and left-handers peeling off up and down the beach. The kids were stoked. The waves were fun, not too big, not too small. They had shape and offered up sections to perform upon. Mother Nature was smiling – along with the rest of us.
These kids were as impressive out of the water as in it. Professional all the way, one young man having been knocked out in the quarter-finals personally congratulated his opponents, shaking their hands and complimenting them on a heat well surfed. Talent and manners – it doesn’t get any better than that.
To see this year’s results and find out how you can be a part of next year’s event, visit www.skullcandyozgromopen.com.au
Ness Moore (aka The Lioness https://thelioness.com.au/)
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