Surfing In Punta Mita

Aug 28 2010 Published by admin under 02 - Staff Picks, 10 - Culture and Leisure

Surfing Punta de Mita - Photo by Ed Fladung of www.qualitypeoples.com

Surf­ing Punta de Mita — Photo by Ed Fladung of www.qualitypeoples.com

Waxed­web

The beach is most noto­ri­ous for one thing … surfing.

Mil­lions of peo­ple around the world look for­ward to that time of year when the weather is per­fect, water is just right, and work can be put aside.

Of the mil­lions many will be plan­ning an excit­ing trip to Punta Mita to surf near the shores of Mexico.

Punta Mita is aware of how impor­tant the sport is to all tourists and has focused much of its tourist attrac­tions on the pop­u­lar activity.

An ulti­mate surf vaca­tion in Punta Mita is easy to plan with accom­mo­da­tions galore.

Lodg­ing

It is not hard to find a pri­vate beach club in Punta Mita that is right on or near the shore giv­ing surfers quick access to surf the waves.

Many of these beach clubs are rea­son­ably priced, per­fectly located, and ded­i­cated to mak­ing your stay stress free so you can focus on what you came to do, surf.

In addi­tion to surf­ing you may enjoy the spas and other onsite recre­ational activ­i­ties at the club.

Surf Gear

To go surf­ing on vaca­tion you are going to need surf gear. It is imprac­ti­cal to travel with your gear, or maybe you don’t have any, so it is another part of the vaca­tion that you must plan ahead of time.

When vis­it­ing Punta Mita you must not for­get the exclu­sive lux­ury of Puerto Val­larta located nearby. There are many surf shops located around the city.

The shops can help you find every­thing you need to make sure you are totally prepared.

Click here to read the entire arti­cle
http://waxedweb.com/surfing-in-punta-mita/

More surf pho­tos by Ed Fladung
http://www.qualitypeoples.com/experiments-4

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San Jose Mercury News — Nayarit is nirvana for golfers, surfers

Explore Punta Mita Mexico - Riviera Nayarit luxury residential real estate and vacation rentals

Explore Punta Mita Mex­ico — Riv­iera Nayarit lux­ury res­i­den­tial real estate and vaca­tion rentals

By Mark Con­ley
San Jose Mer­cury News

If the tide pushes up, punch it,” said my sea­far­ing golf guide, Arturo Cas­tro, one early July day in Punta Mita, Mex­ico.
The state­ment could’ve just as eas­ily been uttered a few miles down the coast at Castro’s favorite surf spot, La Lan­cha, while help­ing this vis­it­ing sur­fista nego­ti­ate the unfa­mil­iar elements.

But at this moment the head pro was speak­ing of my golf cart, which was strad­dling an eight-foot wide cob­ble­stone isth­mus lead­ing to the green of hole 3B at Punta Mita’s Paci­fico course — known as the world’s only island green carved from nat­ural topography.

Like some of the surf spots I had already sam­pled on my first visit to Mexico’s Riv­iera Nayarit, a 40-minute drive north of Puerto Val­larta, hole 3B was tan­ta­liz­ingly haz­ardous. A beauty that could quickly turn beastly.

And for me, now sit­ting in my non­am­phibi­ous Club Car, midis­th­mus, ocean creep­ing, it already had. My Titleist ball had been meekly donated to Posei­don and his warm, crys­talline Pacific off the tee box. I had resigned myself to enjoy­ing the spec­tac­u­lar scenery and just hit­ting another from the drop zone when we got to the green.
Sure enough, there came the tide. It was time to punch it.

Surf Riviera Nayarit - Punta de Mita - Sayuita - San Francisco - Chacala

Surf Riv­iera Nayarit — Punta de Mita — Sayuita — San Fran­cisco — Chacala

There are myr­iad South­ern Hemi­sphere des­ti­na­tions to indulge in surf-and-turf nir­vana (Hawaii, for starters). But there may not be a more enjoy­able combo locale than the largely untapped 190-mile stretch of coast that lines the Mex­i­can state of Nayarit.

It is a com­fort­able, mellow-vibed land of unclut­tered surf line­ups and wide-open fair­ways, with ameni­ties rang­ing from posh to funky and every­thing in between.

It begins with Punta Mita, a 10-year-old, 1,500-acre pri­vate com­mu­nity at the north end of Ban­deras Bay. Its gor­geous penin­sula is sur­rounded by ocean on three sides, which made it a desir­able home to the lux­u­ri­ous Four Sea­sons and recently opened St. Regis — and their accom­pa­ny­ing Jack Nick­laus designed golf courses.

And while you’ve got to be a guest of one of the resorts (let’s say, um, not exactly reces­sion­ary chal­lenged) to play the oth­er­wise pri­vate courses, a good pub­lic option sits right up the road at Litibu Campo de Golf, a new Greg Nor­man course set to host a Cana­dian Tour tour­na­ment in October.

Click here to read the entire arti­cle
http://www.mercurynews.com/travel/ci_15817376?nclick_check=1

Explore Riv­iera Nayarit
http://www.puntademita-realestate.com/tourpuntamita/

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Sayulita local victorious at the Sayulita Classic surf competition 2010

May 04 2010 Published by admin under 02 - Staff Picks, 10 - Culture and Leisure, 14 - Videos

Punta Sayulita Surf Classic - April 17 - 18, 2010First off, a big thank you to every­one who made the inau­gural Sayulita Long­board & Stand-Up Pad­dle Clas­sic on April 17th and 18th an incred­i­bly fun and suc­cess­ful event that was not only a blast for the thou­sands of folks who came out for it but, best of all, helped the local com­mu­nity and coastal ecosys­tem. It was the first of what’s sure to become a major annual event and is already known around Sayulita as “the Classic”.

Kevin Roberts, a prin­ci­pal with event orga­nizer, was thrilled. “This year’s Clas­sic was blessed by good waves and a great com­mu­nity vibe that sur­rounded the week­end event,” he said. “More­over, with the sup­port of the com­peti­tors, spon­sors, vol­un­teers and spec­ta­tors, the Clas­sic was able to raise a total of US$9,000 for the local chap­ter of The Reef Check Foun­da­tion and the Punta Sayulita Foundation.”

In addi­tion to the remark­able nat­ural beauty of Sayulita, our Hon­orary Clas­sic Ambas­sadors made the week­end par­tic­u­larly spe­cial, includ­ing surf­ing leg­ends James “Eco War­rior” Pri­bramCar­los “Coco” Nogales and local hero, Mexico’s National Long­board Cham­pion, Patri­cio “Ticho” Gon­za­lez. They were joined by Mexico’s most rec­og­niz­able celebrity cou­ple, Andrea Legar­reta and Erick Rubin, the Nayarit Sec­re­tary of Tourism, Edwin Her­nan­dez, and the Mayor of the Bay of Ban­deras, Hec­tor Paniagua.

And then there were the amaz­ing com­pe­ti­tions them­selves, which fea­tured an inter­na­tional field of pro­fes­sional and ama­teur surfers com­pet­ing in long­board and stand-up pad­dle (“SUP”) surf con­tests, along with open ocean SUP dis­tance races.

The fes­tiv­i­ties began on Sat­ur­day morn­ing, with an hour-long bless­ing cer­e­mony per­formed by an indige­nous Hui­chol Indian group, cap­ti­vat­ing spec­ta­tors and com­peti­tors alike, and mak­ing way for the great waves in every riv­et­ing com­pe­ti­tion that followed.

In a tightly con­tested Men’s SUP surf con­test fea­tur­ing SUP leg­ends Chuck Pat­ter­son of Dana Point, CAEkolu Kalama of Molokai, Hawaii, and Sayulita res­i­dent, Ryan Helm, a rel­a­tive new­comer to SUP surf competitions—26-year old Ikaika Kawai of Maui, Hawaii—took the SUP title, with Helm cap­tur­ing 2nd place and Pat­ter­son tak­ing 3rd place. Kawai’s win at the Clas­sic qual­i­fied him to com­pete in the SUP World Tour Tri­als tak­ing place in Biar­ritz, France next week­end. “I’m really excited, it was fun,” says Kawai. “I’ve only been com­pet­ing since last sum­mer and this was my first con­test with my new Focus™ gear, the 10’ Pro board and paddle.”

Iron man Chuck Pat­ter­son took charge in the 10k Punta to Punta open ocean SUP dis­tance race, plac­ing first with a win­ning time of 1 hour and 20 min­utes, with Ryan Helm tak­ing 2nd and Dave Collins fin­ish­ing 3rd place.

After two days of com­pe­ti­tion last­ing late into Sun­day after­noon, Sayulita res­i­dent and 3-time Mex­i­can National Long­board cham­pion, Patri­cio “Ticho” Gon­za­lez, edged out “Toes on The Nose” team rider, Dar­ren Eudaly, of Laguna Beach, CA to take 1st Place in the Men’s Long­board con­test. Gon­za­lez pulled off an amaz­ing and exhaust­ing come-back win, work­ing his way through the loser’s bracket after los­ing in his first heat on Sat­ur­day morning.

On the women’s side, pro­fes­sional Mary Osborne of Ven­tura, Cal­i­for­nia took 1st place in the women’s long­board con­test, edg­ing out 15-year old, up-and-coming long­boarder Hal­lie Rohr of San Clemente, CA who nabbed 2nd place with Michelle Richards of Nova Sco­tia, CA in 3rd place.  Hallie’s team­mate on the San Clemente High School Surf Team, 16-year old Emmy Mer­rill, held her own being the only woman com­pet­ing against the men in the SUP con­test and in the 10k SUP dis­tance race. Mer­rill out­lasted sev­eral men in the SUP race, plac­ing 8th over­all with a time of 1 hour and 35 minutes.

Accord­ing to Hon­orary Ambas­sador James Pri­bram, “The Sayulita Clas­sic was a great exam­ple of an event that was pred­i­cated on the good old vibe in surf­ing know as the ‘aloha spirit’. Today surf­ing for me isn’t so much about rid­ing a par­tic­u­lar board or rid­ing the biggest wave or com­pe­ti­tion for that matter. It’s about the peo­ple who are joined at the hip for the love of the ocean. I admire those who give back to the very thing that has given them so much and the Punta Sayulita Long­board & SUP Clas­sic was a per­fect exam­ple of just that.”

The Clas­sic received sig­nif­i­cant inter­est from the media and was cov­ered by both Fox Sports Mex­ico and Tele­visa Sports Net­work (TDN), as well as two inde­pen­dent tele­vi­sion pro­duc­tion com­pa­nies, one of which is going to incor­po­rate its cov­er­age of the Clas­sic into a tourism video pro­mot­ing the Riv­iera Nayarit where Sayulita is located. High­lights from the Clas­sic can be seen on these Mex­i­can cable channels.

Here’s to many more and, if you were unable to join us this time, we hope you can make next year’s Clas­sic and all the other great events hap­pen­ing at Punta Sayulita in the meantime!

Pho­tographs from the 2010 Classic


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Sayulita: Mexico’s Surf City

0131A small Mex­i­can vil­lage caters to surfers and anglers look­ing for a slower pace and great experiences.

Pub­lished: 01/29/09   3:06 am   |   Updated: 01/29/09   3:01 am

This low-key vil­lage about 40 min­utes north of bustling Puerto Val­larta doesn’t have sprawl­ing beach­front hotels or rum­bling dis­cos where tourists do tequila shots out of each other’s navels.Sayulita doesn’t have a bunch of four-star restau­rants, chic bou­tiques or even paved streets. But the curved sandy beach, the lush jun­gle, the lines of warm surfer-friendly swells and the funky, open-air restau­rants attract a lot of adven­ture­some peo­ple from the Northwest.

Sayulita is Surf City, Mexico-style.

We come for the surf­ing,” said twins Becca and Elie Meier­bach­tol of Portland.

And the area is not too touristy,” Elie, 24, said as she looked over a table of local pot­tery. “You get a local feel.” 

The small-town feel is what I love,” Becca said.

The world-class surf­ing and fish­ing and beach explor­ing attracts North­west peo­ple, but the slow-paced, close-to-the-earth rhythms of the Pacific coast town keeps them com­ing back.

MEXICAN SURFING MECCA

Sayulita’s famous surf, which rises from a rock river mouth reef and peels off into near-perfect right and left break­ers, first attracted vis­i­tors in the mid-1960s.

The Mex­i­can gov­ern­ment had built the high­way that con­nected tiny Sayulita – mostly a fish­ing vil­lage in those days – to rapidly grow­ing Puerto Val­larta. Surfers soon dis­cov­ered the tiny town with great waves. Surfers – always a trav­el­ing tribe – spread the word about Sayulita, and more and more vis­i­tors arrived.

Amaz­ingly, the big hotels, chain restau­rants and golf courses never arrived. There are no Senor Frog’s restau­rants. Sayulita has lots of for­eign vis­i­tors – and res­i­dents – but the town remains charm­ingly, stub­bornly, delight­fully Mexican.

Small stores carry gro­ceries, ven­dors ped­dle fruit and fish from bat­tered, cooler-equipped trucks and many res­i­dents toss their wash water out onto the packed sand-and-gravel roads.

SUN, SURF, SURPRISES

Steve O’Neal, who lives in San Fran­cisco, vis­ited Sayulita on impulse in mid-January, mostly because of the leg­endary surf­ing – and the warm water and sunny skies.

I wanted to see what three hours of fly­ing from San Fran­cisco got me,” O’Neal said after he fin­ished his first day of surf­ing Sayulita. “I love it – the great waves and no wet suit is required.”

Sayulita’s south­ern beach has easy waves that are per­fect for begin­ners, while the swells break­ing near the reef can chal­lenge experts, said Nazario Car­ranza, co-owner of the Lunazul surf shop.

Many Mex­i­can surf­ing cham­pi­ons grew up in tiny Sayulita, and those experts are usu­ally in the lineup on good days, Car­ranza said.

Young Mex­i­can surfers – some younger than 10 years old – pad­dle short boards into the crash­ing, usu­ally unride­able shore­break and man­age slash­ing round­house cut­backs and quick tube rides. It’s easy to see why more Mex­i­can surf­ing cham­pi­ons will come from Sayulita. Yet, there is room for surfers of all abil­i­ties – although begin­ners should stick to the south end of the beach, where the waves are gentle.

Nearby areas – a short taxi or boat ride away – offer more world-class waves. Adven­ture­some surfers should check with surf shops or fish­ing char­ters to find these out-of-the-way waves. Some of these breaks are great for begin­ners or long­board­ers, while oth­ers attract wave-slashing short­board­ers. Those will­ing to explore and ask ques­tions can find surf­ing riches that are not far away.

But many surfers love stay­ing right in town.

It is the waves that bring many peo­ple here, but it is the atmos­phere they come to love,” Car­ranza said. “The area and town have a spe­cial charm, and many peo­ple who visit Sayulita come to love it.”

0012LOTS TO LOVE

Vis­i­tors quickly dis­cover that they’re in a real Mex­i­can town – not a posh, pol­ished resort. Most of the town’s streets are packed sand or gravel, although some are cob­ble­stone. Mex­i­can fam­i­lies live in small, stucco houses right next to larger homes and hotels that cater to tourists.

It’s com­mon to see locals mix­ing con­crete on the street or side­walk, cut­ting down coconuts in local gar­dens or cast­ing nets for bait­fish in the surf. Fish­ing guides skid their pan­gas up onto the beach and carry catches to local restau­rants and taco stands. After­noons bring school­child­ren onto the streets – and onto the local waves.

The cen­tral plaza is the place to be in the warm evenings. Locals and vis­i­tors stroll or sit on the con­crete walls, while chil­dren ride skate­boards or prac­tice hand­stands and other gym­nas­tic moves.

On the beach, coconut palms sway in the evening breeze, and pel­i­cans dive into the surf in search of baitfish.

The win­ter months are the dry months in Sayulita. Day­time high tem­per­a­tures are in the 80 to 85-degree range, but a breeze from the ocean keeps things comfortable.

Heavy rains arrive dur­ing the sum­mer months, and many win­ter expats head back to the United States, Canada or Europe.

GOOD EATS

Most of Sayulita’s restau­rants are mod­er­ately priced, casual, open-air places where tourists and locals sit and eat shrimp, dorado – often called mahi mahi in the United States – and other seafood caught that morning.

Even the food carts – often a bad idea for tourists in much of Mex­ico – are safe and turn out deli­cious, sim­ple fare, such as Rico’s tacos with sweet roasted onions and peppers.

Rico’s taco stand is excel­lent,” said Becca Meierbachtol.

And it’s also inex­pen­sive,” said sis­ter Elie Meierbachtol.

And even the swanky spots – such as Don Pedro’s – are open to the soft, trop­i­cal air and offer Mex­i­can cui­sine at rea­son­able prices.

CHASING SOME FISH

Sayulita began as a fish­ing town, and that hasn’t changed – despite the many small hotels, restau­rants and swarms of peo­ple car­ry­ing surf­boards in the streets.

Avid anglers load into pan­gas – a sturdy, open Mex­i­can fish­ing boat – each morn­ing and rocket off to the nearby blue water for dorado, sail­fish, tuna, mar­lin and other big-game fish.

Beach anglers also find hot fish­ing for jack crevalle, snap­per – called pargo in Mex­ico – Sierra mack­erel and other fish.

Off­shore boaters also see hump­back whales, leap­ing manta rays and amaz­ing bird life.

But the big kahuna in this lit­tle trop­i­cal town on Mexico’s trop­i­cal Pacific Coast is still surf­ing. Vis­i­tors surf. Locals surf. And they share the waves and streets and restau­rants and shops. No big hotels, dis­cos or golf courses here.

Just sim­ple peo­ple hav­ing sim­ple fun.

This place is won­der­ful,” said Mag­gie Mork of Peters­burg, N.D. “I stood up on my first wave – a great expe­ri­ence – and it’s beau­ti­ful here.”

All about Sayulita

HOTELS

In Sayulita, they run $60 to $130 a night. When they’re not in tow, Many expats from the United States and Canada rent their homes to visitors.

The Casablanca, a small, clean beach­front hotel with beau­ti­ful rooms and a pool, is $125 a night dur­ing high sea­son, Novem­ber through March. Locals say early Jan­u­ary through Feb­ru­ary is a great time, as hol­i­day crowds are gone and the weather and surf are great.

Infor­ma­tion: www.gosayulita.com

RESTAURANTS

Rico’s taco stand is located near the town plaza every evening. Look for a cir­cu­lar grill, the scent of grilled onions and spices and groups of locals and tourists eat­ing at tables set up curb­side. The food is cheap, won­der­ful and safe.

Bur­rito Rev­o­lu­tion serves mas­sive, tasty chicken, fish, beef and veg­gie bur­ri­tos made right in front of you at an open-air restau­rant. This is a must. The staff trade jokes with cus­tomers seated at a counter in this funky spot. It is located on Ave­nunida Rev­olu­cion near the plaza.

The best beach restau­rants are Don Pedro’s (www.donpedros.com), at the inter­sec­tion of beach sand and Marlin.

At the north end of Sayulita’s beach, La Ter­ra­zoln serves up fan­tas­tic, ultra-fresh Mex­i­can dishes in a charm­ing, open-air plat­form under a palm-thatched roof.

SURFING

Sayulita has good surf­ing all year, but the best swells – from the north – arrive from Novem­ber through April. The fall and win­ter months are the dry sea­son. Tor­ren­tial rains arrive dur­ing the sum­mer wet season.

Those new to the sport can learn the thrill of stand­ing up on a wave. Many good surf schools line the beach. One of the best is Lunazul (www.lunazulsurf.com).

FISHING

For char­ters, Cap­tain Pablo’s is the place to go. No one can miss the boats, bustling beach­side restau­rant and surf school on Sayulita’s beach.

GETTING THERE

A taxi from the Puerto Val­larta air­port to Sayulita – a 40-minute trip on most days – ranges from $30 to $40, depend­ing on your bar­gain­ing skills.

Chester Allen, The Olympian
http://www.thenewstribune.com/soundlife/story/609928.html

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Surf’s up on Mexico’s coast

Want to learn to ski? Head to the bunny hill. But if you’re on a sun and sand vaca­tion on Mexico’s Pacific Coast and catch­ing a wave catches your fancy, head to Sayulita.

About 45 min­utes north of Puerto Val­larta, on a crescent-shaped beach below ver­dant hills, you’ll find per­fect learn­ing waves that pop up over a sand­bar metres from shore, offer­ing a break big enough for the novice, even if the only surf­ing you’ve done is on the Net.

Call it the trop­i­cal equiv­a­lent of the ski resort’s magic car­pet.
Sayulita’s surf is seduc­tive. I started the week wad­ing with the kids, then gave the boo­gie board a try. Cer­tainly I wasn’t the only 30-something dad who seemed to be spend­ing as much time in the water as their chil­dren. Down the beach, how­ever, the real thing beckoned.

It’s a real fam­ily friendly atmos­phere,” says Javier Chavez, who teaches surf­ing in Sayulita and, through his Wild­mex tours, offers trips to larger nearby breaks and surf camps. “The beach is great to chill on with the fam­ily. While some surf, oth­ers can have snacks or do other activities.”

Learn­ing to surf is pretty sim­ple: Lie on your board, pad­dle out a bit, wait for a wave, pad­dle, pad­dle, pad­dle to get out ahead of it, pop up to what amounts to a runner’s start posi­tion, grip­ping the board about a quar­ter of the way back — stand up.

Bev Sanders & Las Olas Crew PhotosThe golden rule is also sim­ple: Don’t steal some­one else’s wave. While the tal­ented locals are gen­er­ous, shar­ing their breaks with new­bies, give them respect. Morn­ings are best for learn­ing. When the waves get big­ger after lunch, sit back and watch the show as the young rip­pers take over on the trick­ier left break just down the beach.

Even on low waves and frothy bur­ble, the “stand up” part is not as easy as it looks. You can expect to fall a fair bit, or be dri­ven nose-first to the bot­tom if you’re too far for­ward on the board, as you get the hang of hanging-10. Thrown into the swell, you’ll be spun around by the big­ger waves like a shirt in the washer, the board leashed to your ankle spin­ning over your head.

After an hour or so of strug­gling with my board and watch­ing more expe­ri­enced surfers, I got up a few times. I was sur­prised at how ele­vated I felt, even on a mod­est wave.

I used to think any­one could learn to surf,” says Chavez. “Sadly, this sea­son we have had a cou­ple of peo­ple who just can’t. Basi­cally they can’t lift their weight from the board, even when the board is lying on the sand. So what I would say is, if they can do a push up, they can surf. If they can’t, they should work on their fit­ness and then learn to surf.”

Chavez says a good teacher will go through the finer points of pop­ping up (stand­ing up the right way on a board), body posi­tion­ing (hav­ing your body on the right place when lying on the board), pad­dling tech­nique, read­ing waves, tim­ing, pos­ture on the board while stand­ing and surf­ing etiquette.

You can get a jump­start months before you hop on the plane. Get in the pool and swim. Go to the gym and work on your arms, chest, lats and back. For bal­ance, spend some time on that half-ball with the board on top that sits in the cor­ner of many weight rooms.

If you decide boogie-boarding is more your style, Sayulita is a great beach for that, too, although you should be a rea­son­ably strong swim­mer as there are rip­tides in some areas. Watch for the red flags.

If you’re tak­ing a les­son or rent­ing a board, you’ll prob­a­bly be out on the water longer than your usual dips between sips of margaritas.

Slap on lots of sun­screen, and wear a water shirt and hat if you have to. There’s noth­ing cool about a surfer with a peel­ing nose.

(Cal­gary Herald)

http://www.surflasolas.com

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