by Pointbreak » Thu Sep 23, 2004 6:36 pm
Just back from three weeks in Arugam Bay - now i have to get out the wetsuit again!
I went there to learn so i probably have a different perspective than many. For me it totally rocked - there were waves every day except one. Arugam bay isn't really about surf forecasts and tidal charts and swell - its pretty much there all day every day. In the middle of the day its a bit too hot and wind is a problem, except for the beginner breaks. Otherwise you could do it dawn to dusk.
Waves aren't big. Everyone kept wondering when the big swell was going to come in but in three weeks, it never did. So 3 foot on the small points and maybe 5 on the big ones. Nice clean waves though and some really long rides were possible. A lot of guys were disappointed and kept talking about "Indo". Of course you could always pop over to the Maldives and do a reef charter. Met some guy who did that and said he got perfect, big powerful barrels every day. Wouldn't have done me much good though.
Every break is a point break there, which was great for me because you didn't have to paddle out - just walk up the beach to where you want to start, and step in. Generally there is an outside point which gets bigger and an inside point which is pretty small. So groms on the inside and everyone else on the outside.
Oh yeah and every wave is a right.
Generally sandy beach access or maybe stepping out between some big rocks, no clambering over reefs except for one spot (i managed to fall and get dragged across it. good thing the reef's dead). Not much risk for the newbies. Sometimes you do pick up the wave pretty close to some big rocks but the waves are always pushing you way from them so even being a few feet away is OK.
No rips, no sharks. I heard someone got stung by a jelly but i only saw these little floating spikes one day which you you could hardly feel and wouldn't get out of the water for. Its weird - the place is practically hazard free!
There are five major breaks: "The Point" (the one right in front of the town, and some a tuk-tuk ride away: Pottuvil Point, Crocodile Rock (which has no crocs), Peanut Farm, and Okanda. If you want the big waves, go for the Point (crowded), or outside point Peanut Farm, or Okanada, which is about 40 minutes away. Okanda had a pretty big wave - 7 foot plus the day i was there - but it was pretty messy. Nearly got killed trying to paddle out to it like a dumb grom.
The scene is pretty mellow, and everyone is European or Ozzie. The locals have one rule: always drop in. Which sucks but that's just how it is. Nobody got that worked up about it and even though they were good they mostly stayed at the inside Point, so you could always go somewhere else. It was a real mystery to me why people would fly 10 hours, take a 10 hour bus ride, and then crowd the point right in front of the hotels rather than take a tuk tuk 20 minutes away where there might be nobody. The tourists were the usual mix - mostly cool though. It wasn't much of a scene after hours - there were a few parties which really seemed to piss off the locals but it wasn't anything big. Actually there isn't much to do at any time of day other than surf. The place is a small fishing village with pretty much nothing happening. I should also mention its not the nicest place for women tourists, there are some "cultural differences" which aren't too cool.
Its expensive to get there (450 pounds airfare minimum) but dirt cheap once you arrive. Like 5 quid a night for a hotel and 1-2 quid for a meal including drinks etc. You can rent really bad boards for about 2 pounds a day, most of which had been broken in half at least once. You couldn't rent a decent short board, strickly beat up learner boards. I think i got the only board which was not broken - a 7'6" mini mal which served me prettty well. Some people were selling boards there pretty cheap though - like 250 bucks.
So sorry if someone wants detailed descriptions of the waves or descriptions of amazing rides and all that - this is a newbie perspective. It worked for me - took me the whole three weeks but at the very end I could catch waves and make some basic turns. I'll remember seeing wild elephants from the beach and my first wave at peanut farm.
Now back to Croyde...