Photos by Tyler Lapkin
There is a certain feeling you get while doing something you truly love. A feeling that encompasses so many emotions it’s hard to describe but impossible to forget. For the wild souls out there, this feeling comes with a blend of fun, excitement, a little bit of fear and it’s addicting. So much so that you are willing to push your body to its limits, withstand the elements, and go against most people’s better judgement.
I can’t remember the first time I felt that feeling but I can tell you about a time it hit so hard I knew something in me was changing. It was the first time I had ever felt the true power of a wave. We were in Hawaii for our senior trip and the chaperones had gotten us boogie boards. A couple of friends and I grabbed some boards and quickly hit the water. It took a try or two to get my timing right but when I did, I felt an energy I had never felt before. There was this massive power rolling through this wave that was propelling me towards the beach at speeds that surprised me. The whole day was spent in the water- learning, being pummeled, finding a rhythm, and gaining respect for the water. That’s how I caught the surf bug. It would be years later before I had the opportunity to catch my first wave but I was fully able to understand the love for the sport.
Tyler first tried surfing the lake in his teenage years but never really got into it. Only recently, the last 4 or 5 years, has he and friends really started to pursue it. And pursuing this kind of hobby, in an area like this, can be a little daunting. That water is cold. Especially the time of year when the winds are blowing like they need to be to get the swells big enough to ride. “Here because the winds so acute, it’s such a small lake, the wind is constantly blowing. The waves-there are really no sets. So you are constantly being bombarded by waves.” Tyler said. While surfing in the ocean you get sets of waves that come in but not in Tahoe. “There’s no break really, you’re constantly duck diving underneath the waves. You really have to choose wisely when to paddle because it’s not like there’s three nice waves coming in and any three of those waves you can catch. It doesn’t work that way, you really have to be in the right place, with your timing and placement. So it’s hard to predict when a wave’s going to come and how to catch it.” On top of that Tyler spoke about the lack of salt in the water that also effects the surfers. “In the ocean you have salt water, you sit up higher, you’re more buoyant. In the lake there’s no salt so you’re actually sitting deeper in the water which on cold winter days is not helpful.”
I really feel like surfing is one of those things that you either love or have no desire to try. I mean, you surf because you love it or you don’t surf. It’s one of those things that at the end of a session, you don’t really have anything to show for it except this feeling that it gives you and the experience itself. “It’s almost cliche but the feeling that you get with surfing… There’s nothing really like it. It’s so spontaneous. You’re on this moving thing and then you have to respond to it in the moment. There’s really no other sport that I can think of that’s like that. The feeling that you get is addictive. I think it’s just like, you’re out of your mind, you’re in this totally spontaneous zone where you’re not thinking and you just have to respond to what’s going on in the moment. It’s a feeling like nothing else.”






