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Caught Inside Monster Waves! A Surfers Worst Nightmare

Music compilation of surfers getting caught in massive waves from 25 to 50 feet in height. Caught Inside is when a surfer who is paddling out is too far in, and the waves are breaking further out. It can be dangerous in a big wave surf.

No one was killed in the making of this video. Although they did take some serious beating…

Part 2 of “Caught inside Massive Waves”

(I did recycle some of the footage in this one since it was too good to leave out)

Music: by Sirius Beat – No Way Out

Waves in this video:

Jaws – Hawaii – United States
Belharra – France
Nazare – Portugal

Some of the surfers in this video:

Pedro Calado
Jamie Mitchell

The secret to surviving a huge set is: there is no secret. There are no Eastern breathing mantras that allow you to hold your breath for five minutes; there are no watermen trap doors in those swirling masses of turbulence that lead straight to the surface; there are no oxygen-giving dolphins waiting 15 feet below the surface. But this doesn’t mean that your number’s up if you’re facing a 50-foot wall of foam. The fact is, surfers survive these situations every winter. Take it from me, who’s had more than his fair share of lumps at Maverick’s and had the privilege of being mowed by a huge one at Cortes Bank. And aside from needing a good set of lungs and some basic skills, there’s really only one main requirement on the big-wave frontier: confidence. You need to know you can pull through in the worst possible situations. As soon as you panic, good judgment and the breath-holding capacity go out with the tide. Think about it: a long hold down is no more than 30 seconds. If you swim deep, keep your eyes open and let the turbulence have its way with you, there shouldn’t be any reason why you won’t come up for air, pumped for the next one.

Big wave surfing is the ultimate celebration of extreme surfing. Challenging deadly waves in harsh weather and ocean conditions takes a very serious approach.
Big wave surfers are not interested in performance. Forget perfect cutbacks, stunning floaters or breathless aerial antics. The profile of a big wave rider is the result of several unparalleled personal characteristics.

Fear is always present in a 50-foot wave. Fear is the best way of managing the risk of paddling for a huge wave face, which doesn’t tell you what is going to happen and how it is going to break.

Monster waves tend to move quickly and force surfers to get away of the powerful whitewater. Big waves are lethal even for the most experienced extreme riders. The best big wave surf spots in the world have claimed several lives in the last decades.

Malik Joyeux, Sion Milosky, Moto Watanabe, Mark Foo, Donnie Solomon, Todd Chesser, Dickie Cross and Peter Davi have passed away in extreme surfing conditions. Wipeouts, severe coral reef injuries and drowning are the most common causes of death in big wave surfing.

The pioneers of big wave surfing started to eye impossible killer rides in the 1940’s. In the 1960’s, waves like Pipeline and Waimea increased the popularity of paddling into new wave heights. Going over the falls was the daily menu.

Laird Hamilton is the first professional big wave surfer. The waterman from Maui defies fast, hollow and high waves with a full-time training and previous preparation. Hamilton, the father of tow-in surfing, takes on the entire big wave spots of the Hawaiian Islands, in helicopter style.

In 2000, Laird Hamilton surfs what is considered the heaviest wave of all time. The “Millennium Wave” was ridden in the reef of Teahupoo, in Tahiti, and set a new standard for big wave surfing.

Garrett McNamara is one of the toughest big wave challengers. After riding a spectacular 78-foot wave in Nazaré, Portugal, the Hawaiian waterman entered the Guinness World Records with the biggest wave ever surfed.

The 55 best big wave surfers of all time is an exclusive extreme surfing club. From Jaws to Mavericks, Puerto Escondido, Punta Lobos, Ghost Trees, Belharra, Shipstern Bluff and Todos Santos, Nazare. these riders have set up a new scale in the definition of giant waves. They are:

Al Mennie, Andy Irons, Anthony Tashnick, Ben Wilkinson, Bob Pike, Brock Little, Buzzy Trent, Carlos Burle, Chris Bertish, Danilo Couto, Darrick Doerner, Darryl Virostko, Dave Kalama, Dave Wassel, Eddie Aikau, Frank Solomon, Gabriel Villaran, Garrett McNamara, George Downing, Brad Gerlach, Gerry Lopez, Grant Twiggy, Baker Grant Washburn, Greg Long, Greg Noll, Ian Walsh, Jamie Sterling, Jay Moriarty, Jeff Clark, Jeff Rowley, Jose Angel, João de Macedo, Kai Barger, Keala Kennely, Ken Bradshaw, Ken Colllins, Koby Abberton, Kohl Christensen, Laird Hamilton, Laurie Towner, Mark Foo, Mark Healey, Mark Mathews, Mark Visser , Maya Gabeira, Mike Parsons, Nathan Fletcher, Pat Curren, Peter Mel, Ramon Navarro, Richie Fitzgerald, Ross Clarke-Jones, Shane Dorian, Sion Milosky, Zach Wormhoudt

Reblogged 7 years ago from www.youtube.com

Comments

Cade Harris says:

guarantee only half of those guys walked out alive

Adam Peck says:

water is probably the strongest thing on earth tbh

MoulfritProd says:

It hurts just watching…

sami moring says:

let me get this straight..
hold my breath for a minute or more..while taking a vicious beating, which knocks the air OUT of my lungs, twists, twirls me in every direction possible while hoping not to hit the reef/coral (which varies 3-6ft below the surface), other people or surfboards..get to the surface, take the biggest breath I possibly can in 2-5 seconds and do it again and again (considering it's a 2-3-4 wave set)..where do I sign up?
oh yeah, 1 more thing like someone mentioned below… relax 🙂

upaiaq says:

How do you live through this! Do you ball up?Can you tell which way is up or down?

delimanxt91 says:

Fuck that I've taken a couple freak waves on the head over the years both nothing even close to having to do the classic swan dive off your board there is a 35 footer about to break on my head I wonder how many guys have time to just pull the leash and say fuck the board I might make it under if that thing doesn't pull me right back into the wave

Muap says:

I get butterflies when I see 7-9 ft waves, even worse in short period swells.

GOD says:

A lot of tits

GOD says:

YOU GOTTA HAVE TITS, TO DARE DOING THESE THINGS.

mikerafone music says:

I like surfing when its fun not friggin terrifying!

Police Dog says:

Sympathy and props to the guy at 1:20… that must have been the loneliest feeling when he took one big breath and dunked under – and  then the bigger wave right behind it – we can see it but I wonder if he would have wanted to know that was inbound in 20 more seconds?

Whatever says:

Surfers. 1:281:40 I guess you can not cut through a big wave like that? And turning turtle would not help either? I noticed they all bail. Are they swimming down trying to get under the wave? Also It seems the surf boards pull them with the wave even when they go under. (not sure I have a question with that one just curious about some insight)

Roy Bean says:

nice production work

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