Get wet and boogie
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Jose Paul Corona
Chris Phillips emerged out of the cold ocean with a smile on his face.
After a few seconds on the beach he was shivering. But it didn’t seem to
matter because he was having fun. He was bodyboarding.
And it was more than that. He was with other bodyboarders getting
pointers from professionals bodyboarders like Trevor Ellis, who were on
the beach to talk to eager students like 17-year-old Phillips about
bodyboarding basics.
Bodyboarders descended on windy Huntington Beach last week for the
“Boogielicious Tour,” a free clinic sponsored by Bodyboarding Magazine
that is meant to show the novice the basics of bodyboarding.
Those who made the trek got free bodyboarding lessons from
professional bodyboarders and learned about water safety.
“[We’re] here to tell them what it’s really all about,” said Jeremiah
Klein, photography editor at Bodyboarding Magazine.
Bodyboarding isn’t given much respect, especially by the surfing
community, Klein said. Most people think of bodyboarding as just a fun
past time.
Unlike surfers, bodyboarders can do tricks such as flips on their
boards, he added.
The other goal of the tour is to give people more awareness of the
sport, Klein said.
More than 20 people showed up bright and early last Thursday for the
free lessons, and it didn’t take long for them to get into the water.
It wasn’t a very strict lesson, Klein admitted.
If the students had never bodyboarded before, they were taught the
basics. For those who were a little more advanced, they were asked what
they wanted to learn.
Alex Marquez had been eagerly anticipating the event for two months.
He’d read about it in Bodyboarding Magazine.
The 20-year-old Carson resident has been bodyboarding for the past two
years and he couldn’t pass up a chance to talk with some pros and ask
questions.
“I still have a lot to learn,” Marquez said matter of factly.
For the most part Marquez wanted pointers on how to do tricks. The
pros told him how to work on his timing and balance when he’s out on the
water, and he admitted that the advice was very helpful.
Phillips drove in from Cypress and also wanted some advice on how to
pull off some tricks. He got a lot more than that.
“I learned how to get air,” he said.
Even the most seasoned bodyboarder can always learn something, Ellis
said.
FYI
The Boogielicious Tour will return to Orange County in July and
August. A free clinic will be held in San Clemente on July 20 and Newport
Beach on Aug. 9.
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