- Travel
- Wetsuits
- Surfing
The Best Spots to Enjoy Surfing in the UK
The UK is not known for its surf culture, but you'll be pleasantly surprised that it has so much to offer from a water sports point of view! The water is generally cool, even in summer time but don't let this small issue bother your enjoyment of the wonderful ocean swells! From Lands End to John O'Groats in Scotland, great surfing waves roll against the Atlantic, North Sea and English coastlines of the UK.
California Big Wave Surfing
Big Wave surfing has always captured the imagination of surfers and non-surfers alike. California is home to three bona fide big wave surf spots: Mavericks, Ghost Trees, and Cortes Bank.
El Salvador
In the heart of the Americas is the small country of El Salvador. Recently, more and more it is gaining reputation as a world class surfing spot and the best thing is that it is easily accessible - only a 5 hour trip from New York and there are daily scheduled flights from all major airports in the United States.
Why Should You Wear a Wetsuit?
It is always important to protect your body, whether it's from dangerous infections, cold water or physical harm. Here are some reasons why you should be wearing a wetsuit when you are in the water.
Choosing a Cold Water Wetsuit for Surfing
Surfing in water temps of 65 and below demand the use of a cold-water wetsuit. Choose a full suit with the appropriate thickness.
History of Wetsuits
Wetsuits are perhaps the single most important apparel in the water sports community. Not only do these light-weight, skintight outfits look great, they also help you protect your from the hazards of the sea.
How to Choose a Wetsuit?
Choosing your wetsuit is always a delicate process since any imperfections will limit the amount of fun you have in the water. So what to look for when you are choosing a wetsuit?
Taking Care of Your Wetsuit
If you just got a wetsuit, you will probably be wondering what the life expectancy of an average wetsuit is. Well, interestingly, it depends on how you handle that piece of apparel. If you know the correct ways of wetsuit maintenance, it will be of good service for years.
Surfing refers to a person or boat riding down a wave and thereby gathering speed from the downward movement. Most commonly, the term is used for a surface water sport in which the person surfing is carried along the face of a breaking ocean wave (the "surf") standing on a surfboard. Surfboards can also be used on rivers on standing waves. Both are sometimes called stand-up surfing, to distinguish it from bodyboarding, in which the individual riding the wave does not stand up on the board and only partly raises his upper body from the board.
Two major subdivisions within contemporary stand-up surfing are reflected by the differences in surfboard design and riding style of longboarding and shortboarding. In tow-in surfing (most often, but not exclusively, associated with big wave surfing), a surfer is towed into the wave by a motorized water vehicle, such as a jetski, generally because standard paddling is often ineffective when trying to match a large wave's higher speed.
Depending on wave size and direction and on wind conditions, also sailboats surf, namely on larger waves on open sailing waters. Unlike "surfers", sailors usually do not surf in beach waves, and they usually do not go out in order to surf; instead, the wave and wind conditions may let them boat surf while during a sailing trip. More recently, the same principle of craft-based surfing has been increasingly used by kayakers, notably in the sport of playboating, which is mostly carried out on rivers.
Surfing-related sports such as paddleboarding and sea kayaking do not require waves, and other derivative sports such as kitesurfing and windsurfing rely primarily on wind for power, yet all of these tools may as well be used to ride waves.

