Wavelength Surf Magazine – since 1981

#1 EUROPE’S BEST: NOVELTY WAVES

A while ago Luke Gartside’s take on Cornwall’s novelty waves generated a huge interest from the Wavelength faithful. In many ways, and maybe for the first time, Luke was ahead of the curve. Since then YouTube surfing stars Ben Gravey, Jamie O’Brien, and Dylan Graves have developed a cult following surfing the world’s rare, weird, wacky, and warped waves.

So to kick off our ‘Europe’s Best’ four-part travel series, which will take in the continent’s best waves, surf camps, and university towns, we have scanned coast to coast to find some of its best novelty waves.

The Garonne, Bordeaux

Sheet glass on the Garonne. Photo Bordeaux Tourism

Sure the beaches of Lacanau have a certain je ne sais quoi. And down on the Cap Ferret isthmus, it’s possible to follow up a fun beachbreak surf with a glass of Chateau L’Oiseau Bordeaux Blanc at an Oyster Bar overlooking Arachon Bay. But what can’t you do, as you can in nearby Bordeaux, is ride a six-foot wave down the River Garonne for 10 minutes.

The tidal bore occurs between June and September, when an extraordinarily high sea tide rushes up the river creating five to ten waves, moving at speeds of up to 20 mp/h. Now you won’t be alone if you decide to tackle it; a range of surfers, kayakers, paddle-boarders, longboarders, canoeists, and hit the phenomenon every time it breaks. It is effectively one long drop-in. A bit like Hossegor, really.

Hot Pipes, Brighton UK

Hot Pipes is the favoured surf spot for the committed, hard-core gang of surfers from Brighton, on England’s southern Sussex Coast. Now, this isn’t palm trees and golden sands. The gas-fired Shoreham Power Station’s 100-metre-tall chimney stands sentinel over the wave, and the name comes from the pipe that takes the warmed wastewater from the plant to the cold, grey, English Channel.

The pipe is encased in a flat, six-foot-wide concrete groyne which has six steel poles protruding from its top, that have to be navigated. Most of the punters flock to the small, wind swells that break on the sand and shingle on either side of the groyne. However, on the right tides and swell, a slab left wedges off the flat, barely submerged concrete of the pipe itself. Intense two-second tubes are possible, as are impalement and concussion.

Gasoline – Tagus River, Lisbon

Another river wave, but this time created not by the moon’s gravitational pull, but by a ferry wake. In Lisbon’s Tagus River, the huge boat that takes people from Berreiro to Lisbon creates a wave that has been described as “the most high-performance ferry wave in the world.” Which says everything… and nothing.

Portuguese pro Joao Kopke is one local who has ripped the wave, whose size depends on the number of commuters on the ferry. Whilst other variables include the size of the tides and the wind direction, we can’t think of any other European waves that come with their own timetable.

The Port of Amsterdam

The protective harbour locals have given this wave a fairly generic name, to keep this rare wave a “relative” secret. However, even given the recent popularity of a new surfing subset called wall ride surfing, you’d think that they needn’t bother.

It’s a wave that only breaks every couple of years when huge Atlantic storms provide the gale force winds and giant swells needed to breach the harbour’s significant defences.

When that happens the locals go wild for their cold, grey, wind-and-wall-lashed novelty wave. Given the other option is sitting in a warm toasty Amsterdam sipping coffee and eating tasty, high-grade weed cookies, you have to hand it to them.