On December 18, Kelly Slater released footage of himself surfing a man-made wave. And though the pond-bound break is a far cry from the idyllic ones we鈥檙e used to frothing over, it鈥檚 the most exciting surf video in years.
There are a few unique things about the wave. For one, the 11-time world champion surfer designed it himself, with help from the geniuses at . The barrelling, head-high wave breaks flawlessly and without fail to produce a 45-second ride. Its face, speed, power, and shape put it in league with world-class breaks鈥攕omething no other artificial wave has managed before.
鈥淭here have been a lot of attempts to incorporate artificial waves into the sport, or even just into a training forum,鈥 says Dave Prodan, vice president of communications for the . 鈥淚 think that in terms of replicating a shape that鈥檚 desirable for training, Kelly is head and shoulders above what we鈥檝e seen before.鈥
So far, Slater and his team have released very little information about their future plans for the project or how the technology, which has been under development for the past decade, works. But it鈥檚 markedly different than anything else out there.
“The聽surfing community鈥檚 consensus is that this is the best artificial wave that鈥檚 ever been created.鈥
Every waterpark worth its snack bar boasts a wave pool. Generally, these oversized swimming pools create waves by pumping walls of water through hydraulic tanks. The waves are more brute force than studied design, and it鈥檚 reflected in the result: that offer as much to top-notch athletes as ripples on a lake.聽Even , which manages to make nine- to 10-foot waves using a similar technique, only gives surfers rides of a few seconds. 聽
The man-made waves outside the waterpark are a bit better. uses patented hydrofoil technology to create breaks with better shape and longer rides than their pumped counterparts, using a fraction of the energy. With an eye on recreation and competition, Wavegarden plans to open its first U.S. location in Austin, Texas, in 2016. The company claims it鈥檒l offer 35-second rides with wave ranging from one to six feet.
But while Wavegarden is something you can surf, Slater鈥檚 wave is something you want to surf. 鈥淔rom what we can see from Kelly鈥檚 video,鈥 Prodan says, 鈥淚 think the surfing community鈥檚 consensus is that this is the best artificial wave that鈥檚 ever been created.鈥

Just about everyone in the surfing world is itching to paddle into the prototype wave, yet, predictably, some are concerned about the impact of separating the wave-riding experience from the surfing lifestyle.
鈥淲e are at the whim of nature and the ocean to find conditions conducive to the act of surfing,鈥 says Travis Ferr茅, co-founder and editor of , a leading independent freesurf magazine. 鈥淭his new wave pool has taken out 90 percent of the journey, the lunacy, and now presents surfing simply as the act of riding on a wave, depleting it of all the mystery that comes with searching and living like us.鈥
Commodifying surfing runs the risk of diluting what makes the culture so interesting, Ferr茅 argues. But he鈥檚 reassured by Slater鈥檚 involvement. 鈥淚 must say that if there鈥檚 one person who would be doing this for the right reasons, it would be Kelly Slater,鈥 he says. 鈥淎s core as I鈥檇 like surfing remain, I would not elect anyone but Kelly Slater to bring something like this to the world.鈥