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This is the start.

See what's in store.

Loads of boards! New or used, custom or stock. Check our
updated list now!

Check our selection of new & used boogies.

New and used suits always stocked. Check the bargains.

Daily reports for Constantine & Harlyn.

Whaasss on and whaass haappenniinng!!!!!

The ones we like.

Find out more about the area and its history and places
to go.

Just a little nfo about one or two of our better known breaks.

A few tales of derring do, exploration and adventuring.

Go on......tell (or ask) us!
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Constantine Bay Surf Store
CONSTANTINE BAY PADSTOW CORNWALL PL28
8JJ UNITED KINGDOM
Tel & Fax: +44 (0)1841 520250 Email: des@constantinesurf.com
"....one of the best shops in the county", Wavelength surf mag November 2006
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Surf History
It is generally accepted that Polynesians
from Tahiti and Hawaii were the first to enjoy the sensation of gliding
across the face of an unbroken sea wave, standing proud on wooden surfboards
crafted from the timber of sacred trees. Fifteenth century 'Meles' (Hawaiian
chants sung by elders and passed down generation to generation) record
the surfing activities of the great Royal families and other dignitaries
of even earlier
times. As most schoolchildren will be aware, Captain James Cook was the
first 'civilised' western observer of this pastime in the early 1770s,
closely followed by western missionaries, resulting in a suppression of
the sport. It is commonly accepted that surfing at the time was outlawed
as being an 'unchristian' activity. Some historians now believe however,
that it was gambling that was actually outlawed causing the demise of
surfing by removing the 'sport' from the activities of the noblemen who
used to bet on the size of waves and length of ride. Either way, surfing
disappeared to most of the world for many hundreds of years.
In 1915 the legendary Hawaiian Olympic champion,
Duke Kahanamoku, while touring the world, introduced
the sport of surfing to Australia and America, where previously only glimpses
of the sport had been seen. Surfing was eventually introduced to Europe
in the early sixties by Australian Lifeguards working at Newquay, although
it has been claimed that the first surfers to 'stand up surf' in the UK
actually did so at Treyarnon Bay in the late 1950s.The 'surf culture' of the sixties quickly
became established often being
seen, mistakenly, as a part of the 'hippy' culture of the era. While others
were 'turning on' or 'dropping out', surfers were busy ''tuning up' in
preparation to 'drop in' on new waves, waves never before ridden. That's
not to say that the surfers didn't wholeheartedly embrace the more relaxed
lifestyle, they just took a different line.The Trevose Head area has long been recognised
as home to many excellent surfers and watermen since the 1950's.
Tigger Newling (whose family lived at Treyarnon Bay) dominated the embryonic
European surfing scene of the late 1960's and '70's while younger brother
Mike (who still carries legendary status in Australia) soon became
one of the pioneer professional surfers after the family emigrated to
Australia in the mid '70s. As a result of his membership of the
infamous Newport Plus crew of the late 70's, he and his fellow surfing
hot rats (Tom Carroll, Rich Cram, Derek Hynd and a whole bunch of other hot
Sydney rippers) became regular visitors, basing 
themselves in the area when competing in the
newly established pro comps in Newquay and France. This continued
a pattern of visiting international surfers, originally established by
the likes of Keith Paul, Corky Carrol and Bob Cooper in the early '70s
and carried on by Johnny Gomes, Taylor Knox and Mike Stewart in
recent years. All arriving on 'hearsay' and raising the standards
of the local surfers just by being there.
Being within an easy drive (an hour or so)
from the City of Plymouth, there has always been a regular trickle
of city folk to these beaches. John Copley and Steve Daniel (who
both still rip, Steve on a long or shortboard) spent their school
holidays surfing the local breaks to become, along with Paul Russell and Ian Thompson, the stand
out surfers in the early '80s. The '80s also saw the rise of Chris
Rea (now owner of the Harlyn Surf School), Dave Pearce (acknowledged artist),
James Hodson and Plymouth transplants Rob Erskine (owner of Rebound Surf
(surfboard makers and coaching)) and Steve Nicholls, all of whom still
stand out when the surf is pumping (Rob placing 2nd in the 2000 British
Masters). A young Mark Bennett led the charge through the '90s along with
Tom Mitchell and Nick Lloyd, any of whom draw attention wherever
they surf. The standard has been raised again by the likes of Eugene
Tollemache (who, bizzarrely, picked up the Chilean Pro-Am title while
on a surf expedition there last Winter), Sam Lamiroy, Martin Connolly
and the younger ones like Matz Trout and Cheyne.So what's the big attraction, you may
ask. To the uninitiated it can appear that all there is
to surfing is the burgeoning fashion and accessory business, the 'cool'
image, the surf slang and general youth culture. And to many coastal visitors
that's fine. The very idea of wrestling their way into a cold, damp, wetsuit
in order to battle their way through chilling seas just to be dragged
back to the beach is shocking. But....when the breeze is coming off the
Cornish moors caressing the swells generated by storms a thousand miles
out in the Atlantic, when the sun is creating rainbows in the spray of
breaking waves, when the Ocean is a translucent turquoise that exists
on no painter's palette, that is when only the truly town-hardened could
not wish to join those surfers.
So if you do happen
to visit our beaches, please bear in mind that there is just a little
culture and a little history attached to it all.
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