Surfing is a surface water sport

19 12 2007
In which the participant is carried along the face of a breaking wave, most commonly using a surfboard, although wave-riders may make use of kneeboards, body boards (aka boogie boards), kayaks, surf skis, and their own bodies. Surfing-related sports, such as paddleboarding and sea kayaking do not require waves, and other derivative sports such as kitesurfing and windsurfing rely primarily on wind for power, yet all of these tools may as well be used to ride waves.Two major subdivisions within contemporary stand-up surfing are reflected by the differences in surfboard design and riding style of longboarding and shortboarding.In tow-in surfing (most often, but not exclusively, associated with big wave surfing), a surfer is towed into the wave by a motorized water vehicle, such as a jetski, generally because standard paddling is often ineffective when trying to match a large wave’s higher speed.




Why Costa Rica?

19 12 2007

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Although we could write a book about surfing in Costa Rica and why it has become one of the world’s top surf destinations, we will assume that if you are looking into traveling here, you have already read that chapter… you know…

  • warm water
  • consistent year round surf
  • affordable prices
  • easy access to breaks
  • over 700 miles of coastline, both Pacific and Caribbean oceans (and thousands of breaks)
  • friendly people
  • international surfing tournaments
  • great surf camps
  • not to mention active volcanoes, white water rafting, monkeys, canopy tours, snorkeling, mountain biking, windsurfing, sailing, eco-minded culture, great food, the list goes on and on.

Let’s face it… if you’re going international, there are many places to surf. But Costa Rica has the right combination of travel perks…

great surfing + Pura Vida zen-like culture = GOOD TIME

 





Why Costa Rica Surfing is Incredible

19 12 2007

Costa Rica is sometimes called “the Hawaii of Latin-American surfing” because there are thousands of beach breaks and tons of oceanfront. Rivers galore offer tons of rivermouth breaks, especially on the Pacific. On the Caribbean side, you get great reef breaks.Monster waves you don’t see much of. What you do see is good-size kilometer breaks that are consistent year-round.

Because Costa Rica is so small, you can switch to another break rather easily if one isn’t working for you. Same thing for crowds (although crowds have not been the biggest problem here.)

Another big reason is the culture. The Costa Rica culture supports surfers, with surf shops, board rentals, bars, restaurants, hotels… there definitely is a strong vibe down here for surfing.

It’s like coming home.








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