Friday 28 March 2014

Clockwatching


I’ve had jobs in the past where I’ve caught myself clockwatching. That slow burn between 3.30 and 5, or the soporific glow of a big lunch that makes the second hand move too lazily. Jobs that have not had a sense of purpose or business.

Even though bad weather and a broken boat engine meant my job on Skomer Island had started on the mainland, I quickly realised that the further I dug the bigger the hole became. There was so much to do, to plan, to organise, to imagine. My first week involved many texts, garbled messages and rushed emails that had me scurrying around shops buying provisions and replacement items for the island. I started to plan work on the website, edit some leaflets, think about events and publicity. My notebook was near full after just a few days. In between all this I found time for some surfing, caught up with old friends and reacquainted myself with the glowering cliffs and crags of Pembrokeshire’s coast.

I finally got onto Skomer by hitching a ride with a volunteer work party on their way to neighbouring Skokholm Island. After an admittedly anxious ten days it was a relief to step foot on the landing at North Haven. My welcoming party included the Wardens Ed and Bee, Assistant Warden Jason, and five or six seals who fixed us with their mocking gaze as we hauled my baggage up 87 steps.

Since I landed I’ve been clockwatching. I admit it. But this time it’s different. I keep looking at my watch and wondering where the time has gone. Why isn’t there an extra hour in the day? Ed, Bee and Jason arrived about three weeks ago and have been working flat out on repairs and cleaning. The hostel, volunteer and research accommodation has needed a lot of work. I’ve been flat out since I got here and now have nothing but admiration for the efforts of these three. Meanwhile they’ve somehow found time to already figure out where Choughs are planning to nest, spotted a rare Cackling Goose, spotted some early Puffins, Raven chicks, a Great Northern Diver, and still managed to find the time to show me the ropes and make me feel very welcome.

We’ve got a few days left before our first guests of the season and before the island is open to the public. The list of things that need to be done keeps growing and no job seems as simple as you might think. We can’t just go down to the hardware store and buy more drillbits. We can’t order replacement parts online and wait for them to be delivered. We can’t start a job and leave it someone else to finish.

But there’s plenty we can do. We can make do and mend. We can saviour the anticipation of a new Skomer season approaching. We should clockwatch as much as possible, make a note of the time, look around at the landscape, seascape, the birds, the island. Because if we don’t we’ll find ourselves getting on the boat off the island in November wondering where the time went.

Saturday 22 March 2014

Stormbound....


 





Well the boat never got fixed, and then the gales set in. So I've had a frustrating week of will I - won't I get to Skomer. But at least I'm back in Wales and enjoying the beautiful Pembrokeshire and Ceredigion coastline.


I've tried to be productive and have been working out of the superb Wildlife Trust Visitor Centre at Cilgerran near Cardigan and staying in some accommodation owned by the Trust.








In between shopping trips to charity shops to search for curtains for the staff accommodation on the island, I've been catching up with some old friends in Mid-Wales and exploring the coast looking for some waves to waste my time on.










There's plenty of work to be doing as I plan some events and marketing, but really I just want to get onto that rock!

Monday 17 March 2014

A slight hiccup...

It was with red eyes that I finally eased my little car up the long winding hill out of Woolacombe. I'd like to blame my bleary eyes on my friends for sending me off in style the night before, but really I knew that I'd been touched by sadness for leaving a place with so many good memories.

My nostalgia evaporated soon enough as I focused on nursing my overladen car along the slow lane of the M5. As I crossed the Severn Bridge into Wales, the sun pierced the cloud and lit my path. I groped for my sunglasses and decided it was time for a coffee.

I'd planned to stay at a friends house near Swansea for a night before heading over to Pembrokeshire for the final leg of my journey, a short boat ride to Skomer Island. As I was queuing for an overpriced but overdue Costa coffee my phone rang. It was Eddie, one of the island wardens.

He casually explained that the Trust's boat was still being repaired and might not be ready by Tuesday. However, by the time it might be fixed a windy weather system was on its way that might create a sea state too dangerous for any trips to the island. I might be marooned on the mainland for as long as a week.

After all the stresses and worries of packing and moving I thought I took this all quite well. At least I'd be able to go to the Trusts' offices and meet some other staff, do some shopping for the island, catch up with old friends in Aberystwyth and maybe squeeze in another surf.

But really all I wanted to do was get to Skomer and start working before the first guests arrive...

Wednesday 12 March 2014

Leaving


So far 2014 has been a year of arrivals and departures. Airports. Train stations. Long goodbyes. It’s been a whirlwind. Starting in Senegal, then Norfolk, continuing in Bruxelles and finally in Woolacombe, it seems all I’m doing is saying farewell to people and places that hold a special place in my heart.

I approached the New Year with a determination to move back into conservation work. I’ve had an amazing time the past few years working by the beach in North Devon and travelling in the winters. But after meeting some inspiring people in Senegal I realised that I missed the challenges of my old job. I realised that one passion had been shelved in favour of another. Surfing had bullied its way into the forefront of my mind. So it was time for a change.

I did not expect to be offered an interview and then a job from the first application form I sent off. I did not expect to be going back to Wales. I did not expect to be trading one small island for another. And now as the date to move to Skomer draws close I still do not know what to expect.

So here I am sitting in the departures lounge of Bruxelles Airport thinking about all the leaving I’ve done already. And now I’ve got more to do. I’ve got a weekend of goodbyes in Woolacombe ahead. I’ve got to load up my little car and chart a course to Pembrokeshire. I’m going to miss North Devon beach life, but something tells me I’ll see it again. I’m not going to surf much in the next few years (and I’ve surfed a lot!) but it’s time for change.
Am I ready for moving to a remote island off Wales? I think so. I don’t know. Somebody tell me! I want to get lost in the new job, live the work, meet amazing wildlife, raise awareness, develop the business. But I’m shadowed by a few doubts. Questions I can’t cast any light on until I get to Skomer. So I’m coming armed with train schedules, flight plans, taxi numbers and mobile broadband. Tools to help me stay in touch with Bruxelles, with Woolacombe, with Senegal, with everywhere. A connection to what was before and what is yet to come.

Monday 3 March 2014

an article about a surfing adventure


Divine Inspiration in Senegal

 

It must have been a writer who named a hurricane sized low pressure system Hercules. For journalists and the surf media it was like manna from heaven as pens and keyboards around Europe were dripping metaphors. But trying to find an easy, slick metaphor that worked with West Africa proved difficult. The old gods don’t hold much sway in Senegal, an Islamic country where despite the modernity and fast paced development of its capital, Dakar, people still go to see the witch doctor when they’re sick, and still wear charms to ward off evil spirits.

The swell size and power was forecast to be on a Hawaiian scale. Long lulls in these high period swells can be fatally deceptive. Jesper, the manager of Ngor Island Surf Camp and our guide, remembered that the last swell this size had claimed the lives of a score of local fishermen whose ocean going pirogues could not navigate the perilous shorebreak. It seemed patronising but we surfers were warning fishermen not go out on the biggest day of the swell. But these hard working guys would probably go anyway, or they might not make any money that day. We hoped they would return safe. Inshallah.

The day before the swell peaked we paddled out at N’gor Right, the swell magnet of Dakar and the spot that can hold the largest of swells. Big sets poured in from the north while north trade wind backed off under the weight of a heavy sky. Only a few of us staying at the camp wanted any of what Ngor Right was dishing out. This was far from the playful looking surf discovered by the makers of the original Endless Summer. Tyron and Dave from Newquay, a German transplant to Portugal called Marc, an Irish-Scottish mongrel known forevermore as Hellman, and myself paddled out. After some lurching, heavy drops and some good old fashioned beatings we eventually submitted to a monster set that nearly closed out the channel from the island to the mainland. Washed up, tired and tense with anticipation for the next day, the crew retired to the surf camp.

When we returned we found Jesper busy on the phone planning an adventure for us. He was organising us an off-road vehicle and a driver and sending us south of Dakar to an area known as the Petite Cote. Given the forecast we had agreed to roll the dice and go exploring, hoping to find some waves in an area known to be inconsistent. With an early departure, a dawn high tide and a big swell, Jesper was worried about safely crossing the normally placid waters of the channel between Ngor Island and the Ngor village. We’re going to need a bigger boat, he had said, and was booking one for pre-dawn start. We cracked open a well-earned beer and enjoyed that most Senegalese of dishes; thiebou dienne. The large communal plates of fried rice, spicy fish and fresh vegetables finished us off for the night. Or so we thought, as Jesper produced a cooler full of booze. It was his birthday and he didn’t need to persuade us too hard to help him celebrate.

At five the next morning we arrived at the beach still fighting the effects of sleep and a few too many of the local beers. A boat was waiting for us but as we stumbled onto the sand we saw it thrown up the sand by a surging wave, the local boatman riding its stern like a figurehead in the night. It was a scene that didn’t inspire confidence. As the call to prayer from the muezzin in the village drifted across the bay there were some anxious looking faces. The boat driver barked at us, and we were herded onto the boat and calmly steered between the rocks to the beach in Ngor village.

We loaded our gear onto the 4x4 and blazed a trail through the early morning traffic. An hour later we arrived at the reef we’d scouted the day before. The early offshore breeze carried a chill so we warmed up with coffee and peered through the pre-dawn gloom at the surf. During the midnight high tide the waves had scoured out trenches from the top of the beach ridge and thrown debris inland. It looked like tons of sand had been moved around. Evidence of Hercules at work.

The sun rises quickly in Africa. That morning the only things moving quicker were the surfers getting changed once we’d seen what awaited us. A small point of reef was setting up overhead A-frame waves. The left was fast, with a bowly, hollow take off followed by a playful wall about a hundred meters long. Hellman and his goofy footed companion Marc ran down the beach at the sight of it.

Although the paddle out was easy, it was quite long so a couple of us hitched a ride out to the peak.  Our second boat ride of the morning was just as hair raising as the first. We hopped in with the local fishermen after helping push their pirogues to the water’s edge. They launched their clumsy looking craft through the head high shorebreak with a steely determination and ancient skill. In this part of Senegal, the villages depend on their fishermen for food and income and have done for centuries. Their pirgoues are made from hollowed out tree trunks, a classic design given a modern lease of life by some battered looking outboard engines.

We jumped into the water, waved goodbye to our new friends and paddled over to the peak. The right had a big first wall with carving and cutback sections before reforming on the inside as a long steep hollow section followed by a fun shorebreak. The right was around one hundred and fifty meters. If you could design and engineer a surfbreak it would look like this. Some of the guys snuck into a few tubes, Tyron was giving lessons in roundhouse cutbacks and everyone was feeling blessed to be here. I was sat in the line-up wondering who to thank; Hercules, Allah, or Jesper for convincing us to gamble.

We had left our gear and thermos flasks in a local fishing hut under the watchful eye of the elders. The village kids, being kids, were cheeky but curious and would love to help you wax your board or rinse the sand off your wetsuit. My ear plugs were a source of great amusement. If the kids got too close, however, the elders would bark a few harsh words of Wolof and scatter them. After a few minutes they kids would regroup to push their boundaries once again.

Needing a drink I asked one of the elders where I could buy some bottled water. He quickly enlisted a tall teenager to be my guide and take me through the rabbit warren of dusty streets. Laden with bottles, the lad wanted to carry them for me back to the beach. After talking about school and football in my basic French, the only thanks he wanted was the answer to this question; “what do I have to do to become a footballer in Europe?”. I didn’t know what to say. The hospitality, friendliness and generosity of the Senegalese still takes me by surprise. Visitors with are often invited to join in with a big family lunch or shown around a village by its proud residents. It is often humbling.

Back at the beach and it was time for surf four of the day. A few other surfers from Dakar had arrived but only surfed the right so our crew took turns on the left. I couldn’t help thinking how busy this place would be if it was anywhere else in the world. A US Marine from California had also made the trek down to the spot. On a break from a posting in Mali, he was wide eyed at the quality of the surf and compared the spot to Trestles. The spot is no secret, but it is rarely surfed as it sits in the shadow of the Dakar peninsular. It works from waist high up and breaks good less than twenty times a year in these big wrapping swells or good south swells. This was an exceptional day. The overcast, cloudy conditions kept the winds glassy until dusk, while the sets kept coming and coming.

Meanwhile back in Dakar the Hercules swell was wrapping into some of the breaks on the south coast of the Almadies peninsular. One spot there sits under the two watchful minarets of a huge mosque. It is a Herculean setting if ever there was one. It too is a sleeping giant of a wave. Frequently breaking around head high in large north west swells, it really needs a powerful swell to clear the rocky, urchin crusted reef and show its class. Reports from that day told of overhead to double overhead rights peaking up and barrelling for a hundred meters into the channel. Some of the local crew were running the show. We checked it out the day after the peak of swell and scored some intense rides over the shallow reef. Falling at the end section or getting caught inside by a big set is not really an option here. Everyone gets an urchin when they surf here. It is the price you must pay to whichever god you choose to follow.

Hercules had certainly flexed his muscles, damaging coastal areas in northern Europe and drenching the coast of Morocco, while the waves in Senegal snuck in under the radar of the surf community. Ngor Right and a left hander across the bay from Ngor Island can hold huge swells and could have been towed into that day. It was breaking at least four or five times overhead, with no wind and in warm water. While the big wave crews charged Mullaghmore and Belharra, and the sheltered spots of Europe were filled to bursting point, we found quiet perfection and a warm welcome.

As Hercules fades into legend, its might and power have left scars some coastal communities, while its waves have been surfed, documented and immediately displayed to the voyeuristic surf media consumers. We are a bit late in sharing the story of Hercules from Senegal. But then this is Senegal, things work slowly down here and a little patience goes a long way when you’re working in African time.

 

Andy Bramwell

January 2014