In the past 15 years, destinations with impressive dunes鈥攕ome taller than the Empire State Building鈥攈ave become meccas for the new-ish sport of sandboarding (also known as dune surfing).
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While people have been sliding down sand dunes for centuries, doing it for sport (or, OK鈥攆un) started in the 1970s. That鈥檚 when Lon 鈥淒r. Dune鈥 Beale鈥攚ho many credit for creating the sport鈥. Eventually, snowboards were used and then lighter and more maneuverable sand-specific boards began popping up.
鈥淪and is very forgiving,鈥 says 24-year-old Gabe Cruz, . In nine years of hucking front flips, 360s, and 30-foot jumps, Cruz has never suffered a true sandboarding injury鈥攐nly bumps and bruises.
Before you check out one of these dune surfing hubs, heed this advice. You can go sitting (to start), laying down (once you鈥檙e used to it) or standing (for experts)鈥攋ust keep your camera wrapped in a plastic bag. Sand is not technology鈥檚 friend.
Stockton Sand Dunes, Australia

Best For: Easy thrills
Dune Heights: 100-130 feet
Speeds: 30 mph
are surreal鈥攊magine 20 miles of towering sand mountains wedged between lush, densely vegetated hills and the blue . Slopes here are short (mercifully brief uphills!) but steep (approaching 60 degrees) so stand-up and sit-down riders use light swallowtail sandboards with a notched tail for maneuverability. But given the fineness of the sand, falling is exceptionally fun鈥攍ike face-planting into a big bowl of cornstarch.
runs dune shuttles every half-hour ($28 AUS, a 5-minute trip from ), dropping you off at a 鈥渂ig鈥 and 鈥渓ittle鈥 hill where an instructor is stationed to offer tips. Hike and surf for as long as you like; once you鈥檙e tuckered out, you just catch the next shuttle back to Stockton.
Sand Master Park, Oregon

Best For: Growing Your Skills
Dune Heights: 100 feet
Speeds: 15-30 mph
Yes, a store borders the sand, but 听still feels like it could be in the Sahara rather than Oregon. It鈥檚 a privately owned, 40-acre parcel of drifted sand that lets riders explore at will: The park offers lessons, but no guided group tours. And it鈥檚 a veritable amusement park for sandboarders, with clumps of dunegrass that create natural jumps听and narrow 鈥渃ouloirs鈥 that require quick, precise turns. 鈥淭his is very technical terrain,鈥 says Sand Master owner . 鈥淏ut the coastal sand glides like snow and really spoils you for any place else.鈥
First stop is the , which doubles as the sport鈥檚 de facto hall of fame with news clippings and pros鈥 autographed portraits filling the walls. Rent a terrain board (which is lighter and more efficient than 鈥渂ig-mountain鈥 sandboards) to exploit the park鈥檚 many natural features, or just pick up a skimboard or sled (which require no previous experience or skills). Practice on the shop鈥檚 40-foot sand ramp, then strike out into the dunes.
Huacachina, Peru

Best For: The After Party
Dune Heights: 350 feet
Speeds: 20 mph
Set in the coastal Ica desert, is home to 115 permanent residents who live around an emerald-green lake, ensconced within tall, tawny dunes, fringed with palm trees, mom and pop hotels, and more than a few nightclubs and bars. Just outside? Sand, as far as the eye can see.
You can rent a sandboard for a few soles from one of Huacachina鈥檚 street vendors (be sure they send you off with some wax, or cera, to facilitate easy gliding) or book with , which uses dune-buggies to turn the uphill slog into a joyride (from $65 for two hours of four-wheeling and 5 sandboarding runs). You鈥檒l see far more belly-riders than accomplished carvers鈥攖hese sustained, relatively steep pitches intimidate most would-be stand-up boarders鈥攂ut Huacachina is dedicated to play, not high performance, and no one looks askance at never-evers.
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Huachachina鈥檚 clubs are open and filled almost every night, so afterwards, laugh off your mistakes with an ice cold .
Cerro Drag贸n, Chile

Best For: Sunset sand surfing
Dune Heights: Up to 1,640 feet
Speeds: 30 mph
overlooks the city of Iquique and shimmering expanses of the Pacific on one side, and the endless on the other. Local sandboarders hike up at sunset, and not just for the amber light: With all moisture baked away by the afternoon sun, the cool, extra-dry sand makes for speedier descents.
At any hour, runs are bogglingly long, and will force all but those with the strongest quads into crying uncle midway down the slope. Pause too long, and you鈥檒l notice the many water bottles, boxes, and other pieces of scattered trash littering the sand鈥攅vidence of Cerro Dragon鈥檚 proximity to the city and its popularity with OHVs. Why go? The same reason that skiers flock to Alaska: Few other spots offer such long descents, with the sandy bowls and ridges that offer endless opportunities for creative expression.
hauls sandboarders up in dunebuggies. For a more eco-friendly, non-motorized option, book with : Its English-speaking owner leads 听in the Atacama dunes, and will tack on a few sandboarding runs at no additional cost.
Great Sand Dunes National Park, Colorado

Best For: Night boarding
Dune Heights: Up to 750 feet
Speeds: 20 mph
A brilliant sight to behold: 19,000 acres of dunes鈥攖he tallest in North America鈥攔est at the foot of the knifelike . And they deliver an equally supersized payoff: The long runs let you link scores of satisfying turns.
The coarse sand here develops a hard, crusty layer beneath the midafternoon sun. For softer sand and a smoother ride, go in morning or evening鈥攐r, better yet, at night. Colorado鈥檚 ski bums flock to these dunes during full moons, when the sand reflects the ghostly light (which is bright enough to cast shadows on the dunes). But every cloudless evening presents a dazzling night show: sits 30 miles from the nearest city (Alamosa, population 9,562) so the stars here seem as bright as Las Vegas marquis.
On your way to the park, rent a Venomous sandboard or sled ($18/day) from 听in Alamosa. Park in the dunes鈥 main parking lot to access slopes ranging from mellow to extreme. Or camp inside the park at to stage a nighttime session. And if you go in May, when Medano Creek is flowing, you can cap off your sandboarding session with a plunge in the sandy-bottomed stream.
Swakopmund, Namibia

Best For: Speed demons
Dune Heights: Up to 328 feet
Speeds: 40 mph
Sand dunes rise up from most of Namibia鈥檚 976-mile-long coastline and encompass 21,000 square miles of land. Dunes here are so ubiquitous that in Namibia, sandboarding is more than just an amusement-park stunt: It鈥檚 a national pastime. 鈥淧arents use it as a way to tire kids out,鈥 says conservationist Jason Nott, a native of Omaruru, Namibia. Instead of buying dedicated sandboards, most families keep a few pieces of thin particleboard (the kind you might buy from Home Depot鈥檚 lumber department) in their cars鈥 trunks for impromptu roadside romps on the sand.
Visitors can give it a whirl at , the country鈥檚 sandboarding hub and the home base for . Run by Marin County, California native Beth Sarrow (who started the first commercial sandboarding operation on the Namibian coast), Alter Action leads half-day trips into . Just like Namibian kids, you have to hike yourself up the dunes鈥攑ark regulations prohibit jeeps鈥攂ut once at the top, you see endless dunes in every direction. Groups average five runs, but speedy, stamina-filled boarders can pack in seven runs or more.
With the stand-up option ($45), you use actual snowboards and boots to carve down a 330-foot-high slope (and even soar off a constructed jump). Speed freaks choose the lie-down version ($30), roaring downhill face-first on a piece of waxed particleboard (the record-setting speed is 55 mph). It鈥檚 the kind of flight that calls for a toast鈥攁nd fittingly, the outing ends with a cooler full of .