Saturday, November 27, 2010


This autumn it's been nothing but big sessions for the Mamas.… Yesterday I had a bit of a laugh remembering the days when Christophe used to have to drag me out back by my leash, kicking and screaming in 50cm waves. We’ve tried to find the more mellow waves some weeks, but the swell has been big. And is it my imagination, or does it always double in size between ten and twelve on on Friday mornings, just when we’re in the water?

Last week was the biggest session, out in the bay of St Jean. There were two metre sets coming in and, as Johanna said on the beach, with a bit of understatement the conditions were “Not Classic.” The South wind was howling down the valleys from the Pyrenees, after a week of rain the water was brown, and dead seabirds floated around in the toxic looking floodwater.… But there were waves, for those of us who hadn’t got  carried away with the excitement of the Beaujolais ball at the Madrid. Usually surfing is a perfect cure when your feeling a little hungover round the edges. But I guess the tannins in the wine had hit me hard .

I found myself wondering why, if I wasn’t sure if I could get out of bed this morning, I thought it might be a good idea to paddle a mile out into the freezing ocean for some intensive wipeout training. 

The other girls got some lovely waves, and the Mamas medal for outstanding bravery goes to Marie Jouet for taking off on some monsters. 

I’m claiming the wooden spoon for being so cold and weak when we got in that Johanna had to take my wetsuit off for me !


Yesterday was a bit smaller, at St Jean again. It was so beautiful I wished I had my watercolour box out there with me. There was snow on the mountains, and the sky split down the middle between bright blue and huge black stormclouds, with shafts of winter sunlight catching the spray. It was like one of those inspirational religious paintings, and it’s surprising the Mamas didn’t all come in Born Again. But again, just when I was trying to get my head around the metre sets rolling through, they seemed jump in size, leaving me thinking, if it’s a ‘nice little metre’ what is that thing crashing over the digue? Then the brouhata came in, a freaky local wind that goes from 0-60 in thirty seconds. I fell off a wave and my board went spinning straight up into the air, before crashing back down beside me. It seemed like time to paddle in if I didn’t want to break my nose or end up in Munchkin land.….

Yes it’s been a pretty amazing few weeks, not at all what we imagined when we first started down there in the mousse at Erretegia. I think if we had we might have stayed superglued to our beachtowels if we had.

So big thank-you to Johanna for getting us together, getting us out there, and teaching us to surf.  Oh, and getting us out of our wetsuits when we’re too hungover to do it for ourselves!

Posted by Wilma

Photo by Wilma

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Meetings in Lofoten

The Lofoten islands in arctic Norway, where the mountains meet the ocean, a place where man interacts with nature, where people are shaped by their environment and live in harmony with it. The spectacular landscape, the dramatic climate and the exotic wildlife make this an extraordinary placeto travel to. To embark on one of the many adventures and sporting activities it has to offer, and last but not least to experience the warmth of the people who live there.

Meetings in Lofoten is a film project combining adventure and the natural world, with
 a special focus on portraying the local people and showing what it’s really like to live there. What makes people stay here? What makes people leave?

The project was conceived by Johanna Matsson and Karolina Ekman, who both come from a competitive free skiing background and have years of traveling around the world for competitions, photo shoots and film jobs behind them. Now they’ve settled down, Johanna is a mother and runs a surf schoool in Biarritz, Karolina a physiotherapist and skipper based in the Alps...but their curiosity and enthusiasm for adventure are undiminished.
Thanks to the knowledge and experience from their backgrounds in skiing,surfing and sailing they will be able to meet people and discover placesin a fresh and unusual context....travelling on skis, by boat and experiencing the local surf scene in the break!!!
The plan:the first year’s trip will generate photos, a prototype film and articles in various different areas of interest (travel, skiing, surfing, sailingetc).Karolina is a well published writer for ski, outdoor and adventure,health and fitness magazines. A pilot film will be made for the documentary to be produced the following year. Thanks to their back grounds they already have many of the contacts needed for this project.The Lofoten islands - an extraordinary place to travel to .....To sail around the archepelago,to drop anchor and ski tour straight from the beaches, then surf in the setting sun!

Photo of Lofoten (top) by Felix Oppenheimer







Saturday, November 6, 2010

Mamas in the Bay


Making the most of the last little bit of sunshine at St. Jean yesterday. With twenty five foot swell forecast for Tuesday, we thought we'd better get in the water while the waves were still a reasonable size. Although I'm not sure about that big set at the digue.....
Yes, I admit it I did photoshop the background in - but that was where we were surfing and I took it when we got out of the water, so it's not really cheating is it?