The Burliest Waves Ridden in Recent Memory

This month, photography publisher Insight Editions released “,鈥� by big-wave surfer Rusty Long. The coffee table book chronicles all the best big-wave spots and surfers in the world with large, brilliant pictures by some of the top surf photographers. We caught up with Long to get a bit of backstory on a few of our favorite shots.
Photo: 鈥淭his is during the Code Red swell, which was a historic swell that coincided with the a World Championship Tour contest,鈥� says Long. 鈥淭hat was one of the biggest, rawest, most ferocious days ever towed into out at Teahupo鈥檕. People put themselves in positions that were really dangerous and as extreme as it gets. It was a tow-in only day. All the guys that really live for Teahupo鈥檕 flew in for that day. It upped the ante in the sport.鈥�

鈥淭yler and his brother James are two of the Tasmania locals who have surfed the wave the hardest over the past decade. Once again, this is a really radical deformed Shipsterns wave. And you can really see how shallow it is. You can see those boils and that shelf nearly out of the water there and how much water is coming down onto that shallow reef. It really is a sketchy place to surf. Those guys down there are a rare breed of surfer.鈥�

鈥淢ikey is one of the most talented surfers out there. The guy鈥檚 got cat-like reflexes and he鈥檚 so comfortable out on that wave, it鈥檚 just remarkable. And that shows the perfection of Shipsterns Bluff, once you get past those deformities and once the wave hits that next section of the reef. It turns into a flawless giant barrel.鈥�

鈥淩yan is one of the Aussie madmen who chases the big slabs around at Shipsterns Bluff. That is the epitome of a deformed Shipsterns wave and has the full effect of those steps that the wave is notorious for. It鈥檚 such a roll of the dice, surfing that wave. Especially when it鈥檚 big and you鈥檙e getting towed in. You don鈥檛 know what you鈥檙e gonna get. It starts as a big lump. Some waves hit the reef and are rideable, some just turn into total mutants. He didn鈥檛 stick this one. He made it over that section there, but you can see that next piece of water he鈥檚 going into and that part demolished him.鈥�

鈥淚 don鈥檛 know who that is up there in the lip, but that鈥檚 a big wave to be caught inside at Jaws. There are so many guys surfing out there on big days now, it鈥檚 really pretty remarkable. It started with just a small handful of guys, but now there are often 50 guys out in the water.鈥�

鈥淭hat鈥檚 one of the biggest, thickest barrels that anybody has ever gotten onto out there. Laird Hamilton towed Koa into that wave. That鈥檚 such commitment and such a radical thing to be on the back of the rope when the biggest lump of the day is coming in. That鈥檚 Koa when he was still 17. He ended up going down on this one. It鈥檚 remarkable that there haven鈥檛 been more serious injuries, given the number of guys who have taken wipeouts on big waves at Teahupo鈥檕 over the years.鈥�

鈥淭hat鈥檚 a photo I took in Ireland during a massive swell back in 2011. The near shore buoys were 38 feet at 18 seconds, which is far and away the biggest buoy reading I鈥檝e ever seen. There were waves breaking all over the coast that day that were in the 70-to-100-foot range. That wave right there is probably 50 feet. This is a reef that just goes unridden. There are a lot of waves over there that go unridden, a lot of giant waves. It鈥檚 where the biggest waves in the world are, in my opinion.”

鈥淭his was right at the end of the day of a really big day. We were all packing up ready to leave and Brad and Mike Parsons were starting to put their tow rope back into the ski when that big lump came in out the back. They buzzed out real quick and next thing you know Gerlach was on this 68-foot wave that ended up winning the 2005 XXL for biggest wave.鈥�

鈥淐ortes Bank is an underwater seamount 100 miles off the coast of Southern California. It鈥檚 where a lot of the biggest waves in the world have been ridden. It鈥檚 as risky and as high-adventure of a mission as we have in the surfing world. This is during the first paddle mission at Cortes in 2009. We went out there on a 100-foot super yacht and had a giant crew of all the best surfers in the world. The waves were only 20-30 feet on the face, but it was a perfect day to test the waters paddling out there. Conditions were flawless, it was the catalyst to go out there and paddle it bigger.鈥�

鈥淭hat鈥檚 my brother, Greg, at home in San Clemente prepping to go out for a Cortes mission. You can see all the gear. You really have to be accountable for everything out there. Greg was obsessed with Cortes from the get-go and was really meticulous in his preparation. Between him and Mike Parsons, they were the driving force for all those missions out to Cortes.鈥�