The Show will go on

The Show will go on

I am sure if you have been planning on competing or attending the Cape Kiwanda Longboard Classic this weekend, you have been watching the surf and weather forecast closely. It looks like this year is going to be one of the times where we must pay our dues to the Surf Gods. Big surf and unfavorable winds are what they are predicting. But as a couple of the competitors said to me via email "we are surfers not sissies" and "we love sloppy conditions or we wouldn't surf here" so the show will go on! Makes plans to be here and watch the competition, enjoy our beer garden, watch the Oregon Coast premiere of Compassing by Cyrus Sutton, eat tasty food from the Ribcage and Ben & Jeff's, listen to great music by 3 live bands, bid on surfboards and other products during the silent auction, win great prizes during the raffle, tour our vendor display area, and all of this under our 4,000 sq ft enclosed event tent! It's going to be a good time regardless of the conditions!

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Both cheers of support and loud laughter were heard throughout Pacific City this past weekend as surfers and spectators gathered on the beach to root on the participants in the annual Cape Kiwanda Longboard Classic. This year marks the 25th running of the beloved community event.
Started in 1998 by Bob and Michelle Ledbetter, the contest has grown to become a staple of the NW surf community. It not only attracts surfers throughout Oregon, but this year saw people from Canada, California, Washington and even Hawaii make the pilgrimage.
Welcome to the team Justin Buford! Justin has been a part of the shop since we opened in 2010. He was a true local grom who would spend his days skateboarding in our parking lot and washing rental wetsuits when he wasn’t in school. His family lived just up the street and his step-dad is one of the best surfers in town. His brother-in-law comes from the legendary South County Surf family the Ledbetters. Surfing is who and what Justin is, it’s in his blood. 
It felt a lot like home, Ireland. I suppose in a bizarre way it is, as my ancestors planted their roots in county Sligo on the North West coast of the country in the early 1700's after immigrating from Scotland. Ireland has been at the top of my travel list since long before I found out there was surf there. I formed images in my head of what the landscape would look like from seeing pictures, videos and hearing stories of infamous rocky basalt point breaks and shallow heaving slabs. Every image I had crafted fell short in comparison to seeing it all in person for the first time.