Camp with a cause
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Mike Sciacca
Amanda Rawle fixed her attention on every word Rochelle Ballard spoke
Friday.
Rawle, a first-time attendee at the one-day O’Neill Rochelle
Ballard Surf Camp held at Goldenwest Street, listened intently to the
sage advice that Ballard, a professional surfer from the North shore
of Oahu, gave to nearly 50 young girls attending the camp.
“I’m having a blast down here,” said a soaking-wet Rawle, 13, who
came down to Huntington Beach from her hometown of Puyallup, Wash.
Rawle won a free trip to the camp by winning a contest sponsored
by Pacific Sunwear.
“I’ve been to Huntington Beach before, but this is my first time
surfing the beach here,” Rawle said. “By coming to this camp, I want
to be able to learn how to surf a little better. I surfed in Kauai
before, and I’m probably the only kid at my school in Puyallup who
knows how to surf.”
The theory behind the O’Neill Rochelle Ballard Camps, now in its
fourth year, is to inspire, educate and train young surfer girls.
Their instruction Friday came from the No. 2-ranked female surfer in
the world.
“I enjoy seeing the sport grow and to see lots of girls surfing
together,” said Ballard, who participated in several of the camp
activities. “I want to help provide an opportunity for growth that I
didn’t have as a kid.”
The camp’s full-day schedule included yoga, instruction in ocean
awareness and safety, surfing, a Haole Hula girls contest, group
photo, obstacle course training, awards and beach cleanup. Focus
group discussions centered on coaching and surfing techniques, “chick
chat,” and Boarding for Breast Cancer Awareness.
The obstacle course training involved campers run into the water,
through tires laid out on the sand, zig-zag through safety cones and
doing an army crawl under netting placed about three feet high from
the sand.
Surf Diva Surf Camp, based on La Jolla, supplied the camp with 10
of its instructors.
“We are the first all-girls surf school in the world,” said Izzy
Tihanyi of Surf Diva Surf Camp. “Through everything they are being
taught today, we want them to keep in mind that it’s about fun. They
don’t have to be the best surfer out in the water. We just want them
to enjoy everything they are doing here today.”
Ballard said that by “giving back” to the surf community, she
hopes to inspire the next generation of female surfers.
“We’ll talk to them about how to enter competitions, how to get
sponsors, how to become part of the surf industry, the jobs available
there, stuff like that,” Ballard said. “I want these girls to become
aware of the opportunities available to them.”
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