Hoye camarada te cambio tu vida por mi vida aca en Canada, sin sabor, sin colores y un -40 grados en invierno jajaaaa, pero ya me voy a la ching... para mi Mexico. Cuidate carnal abrazos.
I hope the instructors teach surf etiquette too. I never see surf schools teach it and that's why there are so many newbie kooks that have no idea about what they are doing in the water. I hate surf schools with a passion!
Yup, they should also teach to tell the locals to fk off when they say you can't surf somewhere. Don't snake people and wait your turn you'll be fine 👏
very hard to Surf la Punta if you're not a local and it should be this way....unless you go with ''OASIS SURF SCHOOL'' than you can Surf for 4 hours straight with no problems at all...!!,,it's really worth it and they also have their own Photographer for Pictures that make Exellent Souvenirs..!!
If you had to pick one beach to rent a home nearby for two months (July and August) for a family of intermediate surfers (we can pump our turns and working on cutbacks).
Hi Andrew! Our guides recommend Chacahua or Tierra Blanca. In Chacahua, the waves are different sizes at different parts of the beach so you should be able to find a section that best suits your skill level. The water can be a bit muddy if there's been a lot of rain, so that's something else to consider.
For Carrizalillo beach, I wouldn't be telling the general public to go surf over on the right hand break mate! The locals are very protective of this spot and will threaten you if you don't "F&@k off". Even if you are a good surfer! Thats from personal experience. Other than some local surfers being pretty rude and not liking outsiders on some of their local breaks. Most of the time it's ok. My 2 cent ✌
Lol yeah that’s correct they can sometimes not want people to surf on the right side. I try to understand their perspective but I think it’s common around the world to be like this… I guess..: but hopefully things change.
@@ecoadventurespuertoescondido These days it's not as common as you might think to threaten violence on a tourist dense beginner surf beach. The other problem is the surf schools take people out, who have never surfed before in large swell just to make money. I witnessed this numerous times and thought how dangerous it was for everyone in the water. From what an older local guy told me. There use to be lots more violence in Puerto Escondido to discourage non locals surfing the breaks. It apparently all changed when the locals learnt that they could make money from the tourists and thats when the surf schools popped up everywhere and the rest followed. I guess some locals still want their cake and eat it too. In other words, they want our tourist dollars but don't want to see us in the water. Not cool and I personally wont go back there due to this reason. There are way better places with no agro to surf in the world. Peace
As a surfer that does surfing competitions only for business owners and an 8k entry fee Im worth 22 million from prizes and business deals. We plan to hold our first Escondido tourney this October.
@@ecoadventurespuertoescondido okay. Can you watch the surf and let get some footage? Also do a video on beginner surfing for the wives and girlfriends.
when I first went to Mexico to surf in 1976 there was hardly any locals surfing, the few that did were not interested in sharing their waves at all. Things surf have changed.
Still the same man, but now the charge rent, if you go to La Punta to surf and you don't pay to rent a board or have a "teacher" push you into waves you are going have to deal with a lot of locals blocking you. Fortunately I had a longer board and I'm used to super crowded spots, so I was able to score waves but otherwise it was annoying, I was very surprised to se very experienced surfers being pushed into waves by teachers, then a local told me what's up later, some of the teachers will even be just floating in the water waiting for surfers and offering them to pull and push them around to be able to get waves.