It's the loneliest feeling in the world, say Jamie
Mitchell and Grant "Twiggy" Baker…
Feel this most dreamy scenario. You and two
pals sit atop a clear and very blue sea two miles off the
romantically named town of St Jean de Luz in France. It’s January
7, 2014. Winter, sure, but it’s one of those gorgeous Bay of Biscay
days where the air is clear and sharp. With the right wind, you can
smell bread baking and coffee brewing within the bakeries and cafes
that inflate its medieval streets. Today, is one of those days.
Friend one, positioned 50 yards out to sea, paddles for a wave.
You detect his inability to connect and proceed to paddle
shoreward.
Friend three, positioned 50 yards shoreward, hoots encouragement
just as the wave grabs the tail of your board and proceeds to
project you forward.
Ok. Now, stop, right, here.
A quick change in the variables reveals thus. Friend one is
Shane Dorian. Friend two, Grant “Twiggy” Baker. And you are Jamie
Mitchell.
Between the three of you is 30-plus feet of fibreglass and more
volume than most have in their entire quiver.
And you, my friend, is about to eat shit.
“We got up that morning and the swell was so big it had sunk our
jet-ski which we had waiting in the harbour,” recalls Mitchell of
the day that would further catapult him to absolute godliness. “It
freaked us out a bit, but we managed to jag a lift on a boat and
met up with Shane O and a few of the guys who were busy waxing
up.”
The trio are about to paddle out to the deep-water break named
Belharra.
Mitchell, once only a mythical character in lifeguarding and
paddle-boarding circles, partially inflates the Patagonia
inflatable vest he’s wearing beneath a Quiksilver-issue steamer and
takes a moment before plunging into the cold ocean and
paddling towards the peak.
Somewhere amid the hubbub, videographer Vincent Kardasik mounts
the back of a jet-ski and heads off in the same direction.
Dorian, Mitchell and Baker position themselves amid the vast
line-up and begin an anxious wait for the tell-tale signs of bumps
on the horizon and the ignition of jet-skis way out the back. As
each wave passes, the plumes of whitewater being blown off the back
shower down golf ball-sized pellets onto the backs of our three
heroes.
“That shit hurts,” says Mitchell of the droplets. “But, we were
all talking to each other and keeping one eye out to sea at the
same time. Talking, but real nervous at the same time. And then I
saw Shane O make a move and start paddling for one and I thought to
myself, ‘Righto, here we go.’”
Mitchell senses Dorian’s inability to connect with the wave and
digs his heels in, swings his 10’6″ around and begins to
paddle shoreward as the wave starts to jack.
Further in and to the left a little, Kardasik subconsciously
manoeuvres a gloved thumb towards the record button.
“We had been waiting for that wave all morning,” recalls Twiggy.
“As soon as I saw that wave, I knew Jamie was in the perfect
spot to catch it, so I paddled as hard as I could to get out of his
line and get myself over the back safely. All the while I was just
screaming at him to ‘Go, go, go'”.
The tail engages and as Mitchell feels the familiar sensation of
lift, he recalls hearing Twig’s encouragement, but turns his
attention to the task at hand. “The thing with waves of that size
is, you get a bit of time to ready yourself for the drop, and I
felt like I had a real good stance, everything felt sweet,” says
Mitchell. “But I got a bit down the face and just started to bunny
hop.”
Twiggy is gifted a remarkable view. “I was worried about what
was behind that wave, but at the same time I was so mesmerised by
it,” he says. “I was front and centre for one of the greatest
surfing moments ever and all I could think about was how incredible
it looked and how badly I wanted Jamie to catch it.”
Twiggy, at this point, is paddling skywards just as Mitchell
dismounts his board and begins to skim in the opposite direction.
“I had a bit of time to think about things and then I just made
sure to pull my arms and legs in and braced for impact,” says
Mitchell.
And as Mitchell is plummeted downwards, Twiggy is once again
gifted a view so few will ever know. “I came over the top of
Jamie’s wave and must have air-dropped about 10 feet off the back,”
he says. “I couldn’t see anything because of the spray but when it
cleared all I could see was a massive wall of water. It was at
least 70 feet, blocked out the sky and was about to break directly
on my head. I’d never seen anything like that from that angle
before.”
Two friends, a long way from home, deep, deep underwater.
“It’s up there with the worst hold-downs I’ve ever had,” says
Mitchell. “It gave me a real good work over, but the one after it,
that’s the one that really got me.”
Mitchell surfaces just in time to be confronted with the same
wave that’d dealt Twiggy a firm hiding. “It the loneliest feeling
in the world,” says Mitchell. “I popped up and had a couple
seconds to look towards the channel and I could just see no one was
coming, no one could get to me. I looked towards the wave and it
was just a massive wall of whitewater. I recall not being able to
distinguish where the wave ended and the sky started.”
Mitchell takes a couple deep breaths and plunges as deep as his
inflated vest will allow. “I actually don’t like going too deep
under big waves because I find you get pushed along and out of the
way of the wave behind and you’re less likely to have a two wave
hold down,” he says. “And this thing must have dragged me a couple
hundred metres, easy.”
Mitchell is eventually flushed into the deep-water channel still
unaware of the enormity of the two waves he’d just dealt with. “I
honestly didn’t think they were as big as they were. Then Shane O
dragged me over to the boat to look at the footage,” he says.
“That wave, for sure, is one of the biggest, if not the biggest,
ever attempted as a paddle in,” says Shane O.
Loneliness and exhilaration, what strange bedfellows.
(And how about that photo! If you like Timo Jarvinen’s work you
can buy his prints just by clicking here.)