Camp rides wave of success
Jerry Elder admits that it wasn’t a great summer for surfing in
Newport Beach. Not only was the water unusually cold, but the beaches
were hit by an invasion of jellyfish that, according to lifeguards,
stung hundreds of people.
“This is the most unusual summer I’ve seen here,” said Elder, who
runs the Newport Surf Camp on the Balboa Peninsula with his son Todd.
Thankfully, Elder said, adverse conditions didn’t stop dozens of
children from enrolling in the camp this summer. Some came from as
far away as Korea and Italy -- and others signed up multiple times.
“Surfing is way different for me, because I just go in boats and
stuff,” said Julia Donovan, 9, who spends much of the year river
rafting near her home in Sun Valley, Idaho. Julia enrolled in the
class this summer while visiting her aunt and friend in Southern
California.
The surf camp, a weeklong course for children 6 to 16, began in
June and runs until the beginning of September. Participants in the
class -- some beginners, some seasoned veterans -- start the week by
learning how to balance on surfboards and studying water-safety
essentials. Then they venture into the water to work with
instructors.
The camp provides the wet suits and surfboards. To warm up before
every four-hour session, enrollees jog around the beach and do
push-ups and stretches.
Along the way, there are a few surfing tips not covered in any
Beach Boys song. On the first day of class, Elder and the other
instructors teach the “stingray shuffle,” in which surfers shuffle
their feet while entering the water to shoo stingrays out of their
paths.
“It’s the vibration,” said Maddie Peckenpaugh, 11, of Newport
Beach. “They know something’s coming that’s bigger than them, so they
get out of the way.”
By all accounts, the shuffle worked. Elder said all his students
had made it through the summer without a single sore foot.
“I’ve never been stung by a stingray or a jellyfish, but there’s a
first time for everything,” Maddie said.
Jennifer Stucky, one of the program’s instructors, said surfing
was often a challenge for people who live outside of California’s
beach culture. Some of the camp’s foreign visitors grow up near
shorelines, but not always the American kind.
“They’ve been in the ocean, but it’s different,” Stucky explained.
“Where they come from, they don’t really have big waves.”
* SCHOOL’S OUT is a weekly feature in which Daily Pilot education
writer Michael Miller visits a summer camp within the Newport-Mesa
area and writes about the experience.
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