Mike Parsons is my new hero.
Parsons is one of many big-wave surfers whose story is told in Chris Dixon’s book, “Ghost Wave: The Discovery of the Cortes Bank and the Biggest Wave on Earth.” It is a fascinating book, and I have not, nor do I ever plan to, hit the waves with a surfboard, no matter how big or small they are.
I’ve lived at the beach going on nine years now. I know in the back of my mind that the ocean is a powerful thing, as do most people who live or visit the beach often, but I think it’s something that unless you’ve experienced firsthand, you probably take for granted.
Dixon’s book changed that mind-set for me.
He tells the stories of big-wave surfers (read: adrenaline junkies, crazy people, some of the bravest/stupidest people you’ll ever meet) and their hunt to find and surf the biggest wave ever. They do find it, at the Cortes Bank, 100 miles or so off the coast of Southern California.
That’s right: Breaking waves that are nowhere near a shoreline, and gigantic waves at that, when the conditions are right. What makes this happen is a huge peak that rises up from the ocean floor to around 12 feet under the surface of the water. This creates a wave, that when the swell hits the bank at the right angle, can reach heights of 70, 80, some even believe 100 feet.
And these guys surfed these waves. Mike Parsons officially surfed the biggest one, between 70 feet and 80 feet, on a trip to the Bank in 2008.
He concedes that fellow surfer Greg Long surfed a bigger one, closer to 85 feet, on the same day, but they didn’t get any photos of it.
Waves that big had a habit of sucking the surfers backwards on their way down the face of the wave, and then spitting them out at around 50 or 55 mph. Parsons said he was sucked backwards up a wave on the three biggest waves of his life. So not only did he have to keep his balance on his way down an 80-foot wave, he had to keep it while the wave changed his direction, something he had absolutely no control over.
If nothing else, that is the underlying message of “Ghost Wave.” No one, no matter how brave they are or how knowledgeable they are, has any control over what the ocean decides to do. Whether you’re in waves 70 feet high or seven feet high, you better enter the water knowing what you’re getting yourself into, and that you always face the possibility of not coming back.
The book is not just about the surfers’ quest. It also follows the history of the discovery of the bank, and of the history of surfing. He even dives into the psyche of some of the surfers, trying to find out just what it is that makes them face death on a regular basis, for that’s exactly what they do every time they head out into big waves.
There is also a chapter devoted to the story of a group of men who hatched the idea that they could raise Cortes Bank out from the depths of the water by sinking a huge ship right on top of it, creating a new island and a new nation. It’s a funny, scary, nerve-wracking tale all rolled into one that alone makes the book worth reading.
Dixon tells the story well, even though I sometimes got lost when he was explaining the intricacies of weather patterns and ocean currents and the system one surfer, Sean Collins, developed in order to predict where big waves might hit.
Despite that, the book is captivating and one that all surfers, or aspiring surfers, should read. They should also check out the video of Parsons on YouTube. You’ll never look at the ocean the same way again.