Friday, July 10, 2009

JOE RODDY RIDES AGAIN

SurferMag.com has posted a story by Taylor Soppe about "Ireland's first surfer" Joe Roddy returning to the water on a replica of his original board as part of T-Bay Surf Club's annual Legends dinner dance in Tramore, County Waterford. It's a pretty remarkable addendum to a story I originally heard on my first visit to Ireland in 2006 and retold in Deep Water - that in 1949 the then 14-year-old made a paddleboard from an American woodwork manual using discarded tea chests and took to the waves at Dundalk in County Louth, becoming the first man to surf in Ireland. When he came ashore Roddy recalled "the whites of their eyes and their gobs wide open", which probably wasn't too far from the reaction when the third generation lighthouse keeper took to the waves at Tramore in June this year, some 57 years since he'd last been on a surfboard!
Roddy's first ride caused barely a ripple back in 1949, consigned to historical footnotes - I originally thought it nothing more than Guinness-induced blarney, almost too good to be true - and surfing didn't really gain any traction in Ireland until the 1960's, by which time Joe had turned his attention to developing his own scuba equipment. So it's fantastic that this historic and poetically Irish surfing moment is finally being celebrated.

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