Saturday, August 15, 2009

Mentawai Spot Observations - Macaroni's

Tide Height

We surfed it in the evening around 4-6pm and again in the morning 7-9 AM. These would have been fairly opposite tide phases and the waves seemed pretty similar in nature.

Swell Direction

The swell direction where we got it big was 180 straight south. The waves we observed were either a super-critical takeoff into a gnarly barrel or further down the line a slower mushy wall without the rippable open face. I understand it's more rippable and shoulder-hoppable with more SW direction, but we didn't see it from that direction so I can't say. Probably the most freakish thing we observed was the wall of the swell down the line was regularly bigger/taller than the part of the wave that was breaking. This seemed to be the case both from the lineup and from the boat.


Swell Size

As it gets bigger, Macca's breaks in pretty much the same spot. This means fun barrels at shoulder to head high turn into heaving, below sea-level pits when well overhead, and the rare double-overhead wave is awesomely gnarly with the top 25-30% of the face throwing out as lip. Evidently if it gets much bigger than 10-12 ft faces it breaks on an outer reef and is just whitewater through the inside.


The Reef

At Macaronis the reef is a big flat slab. If you get really close it it has some sharp stuff attached, but it's not particularly jagged or uneven. The real issue when hitting the reef is the violence of the impact, not so much the scraping/shredding of you skin. Guys have gotten compressed vertebrae and broken bones going down hard on bigger days, so with size comes real consequence.

I was on the inside in 18 inches of water when a big set hit, feeling pretty unlucky. The current sweeps hard down the reef, making it always seem like you are trying to punch through the breaking part of the wave if you paddle against it. However if you just relax and go with the flow the current mostly carries you out of trouble to the bottom of the reef, and you just have to make a long paddle back out.


Wave selection

Macca's is amazingly mechanical. You could move 15 feet in or out and be catching well overhead death slabs or shoulder high leftovers in the same session from about the same spot in the lineup. I observed the waves grinding down the line so slowly and regularly that if you were actually sitting in the lineup there was a zero percent chance of getting caught inside. Maybe this would work differently with a 225+ west swell, but I can't say.

The mechanical nature of the wave really helps when trying to figure out the takeoff spot. Move a couple palm trees further up or down the reef and you are too far back to make the tube or totally missing the tube and not getting barreled at all. If you are in just the right spot you have a heavy drop, a critical wall, pump a couple times then stall really hard to stay in there. It takes confidence to slam on the brakes after driving for speed but Macca's gives you that confidence quickly.

On the bigger days the 4th, 5th, 6th waves of the set were cross-chopped from the first couple set waves whitewater reflecting sideways off the reef and moving down the line. It seem be pretty obvious to avoid those.


At about the 20 second mark check the little wave breaking on top of the suckout - he thinks he's in charge!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iwJuKFXpfmY

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1 Comments:

Anonymous Aron van de Bilt said...

Hi! I plan a surf trip to the Mentawais. Can you recommend a surf charter or operator? I found some good deals for surf boat trips on some website called lineupexplorers.com. Do you know them? I attached the surf boat I'm interested in. Any experience with this one?

December 31, 2009 at 1:31 AM  

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