Teahupoo Category

Colossal Teahupo’o at 6,242fps

In: Spots, Surfing, Teahupoo

August 27th, 2011 Double code red on Phantom by cinematographer Chris Bryan

Damien Hobgood on being a twin, surfing Teahupoo and Jeffery’s Bay.

WCT surfer Josh Kerr’s new self promotional tool “KERRAZY TIMES” episode 5, Tahiti. Don’t miss the after party, 40 guys + 0 girls + free beer = a fully loaded Occy.

Da Hui would like to share their feelings regarding Billabong’s Tahiti Pro and the ASP.

The Billabong Pro Tahiti 2009 is about to start the official waiting period. May 9th to 20th. Such a scary wave.

All wildcard final at this years Billabong Pro Tahiti, Manoa Drollet vs Bruno Santos. I would have loved to see Manoa win this one, he deserves it. As for the rest of my Fantasy team, what the hell happened?. Kelly, Bede, Jeremy, Jamie, I’m talking to you.

Well it doesn’t really start today but the waiting period has begun. The official report from the contest site. “Day one of the waiting period for the 2008 Billabong Pro Tahiti has been postponed. It is about as small as it gets at Teahupoo with 1m waves not enough for Luke Egan to hit the [...]

This is the tow session that kicked into high gear the other day after the Teahupoo trails event was canceled on account of scary death pits.

Inside Teahupoo

In: Spots, Surfing, Teahupoo

The boys at Redbull strapped on some immersive video equipment at Teahupoo and ran it through a couple of shacks. The controls are super awkward but if you play with it you can get some cool POV angles from inside the barrel at Teahupoo.

Teahupoo

Teahupo’o (pronounced Cho-pu or Te-ah-hu-po) is a world-renowned surfing location off the south-east of the island of Tahiti, French Polynesia, southern Pacific Ocean. It is known for its heavy, glassy waves, often reaching 2 to 3 m (7 to 10 ft) and higher. It is the site of the annual Billabong Pro Tahiti surf competition, part of the World Championship Tour (WCT) of the ASP World Tour professional surfing circuit and used to be one stop in the World Tour of the International Bodyboarding Association.

Teahupo’o (or ‘Chopes as it is sometimes called) is a reef break. It is mainly left-breaking, but the outer reef also creates right breaks that surfers must be cautious of when paddling out. Teahupo’o is also renowned for the consistent number of “barrels” it delivers. It is a rewarding location and is widely regarded as being on the ‘must-surf’ list of every enthusiastic surfer. However, only experienced surfers in peak physical condition should attempt Teahupo’o; heavy waves combined with a shallow shoreline can result in serious injuries and even death in a wipeout.

Tahitian Thierry Vernaudon claims to be the first to ride Teahupo’o, having done so in 1985 with some other locals. They rode much smaller waves, however, than those often featured in photographs and videos of Teahupo’o. Bodyboarding pioneers Mike Stewart and Ben Severson surfed Teahupo’o in 1986 and it soon became an underground spot for thrill-seeking bodyboarders. Few professional surfers rode Teahupo’o during the early ’90s and it was only in 1998, at the Gotcha Tahiti Pro, that Teahupo’o became widely recognized as having some of the heaviest waves in the world.[1] On August 17, 2000 Laird Hamilton is credited with surfing the heaviest wave ever ridden, documented in the film Riding Giants. In 2003 the late Malik Joyeux successfully rode one of the largest waves ever ridden.

[source wikipedia]


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