JUDGE GARDNER -- The Verdict
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The recent big surf brings up memories of the 20-foot surf at the
Balboa pier during the 1920s. This was before we knew about surfboards or
bodyboards. Bodysurfing was the sport, and there were two main places we
went -- Long Beach and Balboa. Specifically, the Balboa pier.
Surfers are notorious for inflating the size of waves, but we had a
foolproof system of measurement. When you were on a big wave and you
looked to your right at the pier, if you saw water running down the face
of the pier you knew you were on a 20-foot wave because the Balboa pier
was a 20-foot pier.
One day I was riding a big wave and looked to my right to see if I had
a 20-foot wave or just a puny 18-footer. Kent Hitchcock, a local marine
photographer, was sitting on the railing of the pier as I went by, and
ham that I am, I grinned into his camera as he took a shot of me. When
developed, he put that picture in the window of his shop in the Balboa
Inn building where it remained for years with the caption: “Bob Gardner
riding a 20-foot wave at the Balboa pier.”
Far be it from me to to let the truth stand in the way of a good story
-- particularly one that has me on such a huge wave. However, while that
was a big wave, it’s doubtful that it was really 20-feet because there
was a flaw in our foolproof measurement system: The Balboa pier didn’t
rise 20-feet out of the ocean. I presume the 20-foot pier concept grew
from the fact that the pilings were 20 feet long. However, when built
into a pier, a lot of that twenty feet was buried in the sand.
Both of those prime bodysurfing spots are gone now. The Long Beach
surf disappeared when they built the breakwater, and Balboa was destroyed
when all the sand from the big dredge was dumped on the beach, changing
the bottom. I hear there is a movement in Long Beach to sink the
breakwater and bring back the surf. Anybody interested in a little sand
removal at the pier?
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge. His
column runs Tuesdays.
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