Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

Half-century that’s

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were clashing at Coolangatt­a, surf clubbies and surfers locked horns at Burleigh – heads in bins, blokes thrown in grease traps, high jinks and dust-ups on the hill.

If the surf was flat, there was plenty of fun to be had on the headland – skateboard­ing down the hill, rolling grommets around in the old spinning blue rubbish bins or tearing around the national park on pushies.

The club earned a bad rap during a “darker period” of intense localism in the 1970s and early ’80s and was almost bankrupted by one of its infamous “red and white” member nights at the Playroom in the late 1990s. While no members have even been thrown out, “a couple have come close”.

Some members are no doubt happy their boards can’t talk, but former Surfing Life editor Jenkins said he was bowled over by the enthusiasm of the characters who shared their stories and photograph­s.

“While the aggro may be more a thing of the past, the passion is still definitely there,” he notes.

Jenkins said he was surprised to learn how much the point break itself had changed since the club’s early days.

Pre-groyne and pre-sandd pumping, the sand flowed differentl­y. Burleigh’s continuous break back then rivalled today’s peeling perfect ride at Snapper when it was on.

“In big swells you’d be out to sea so far you’d be looking into Tallebudge­ra Creek,” Noel Gordon recalls.

While the wave hosted competitio­ns and pros, the club’s members maintained a sense of ownership.

“I remember this one time, it was pretty sick,” long-time member Paul Fisher recalls.

“Everyone was hanging out under the shed. And we were always heckling the pros when they’d come past before their heat. And one of the boys was like, Oi, f*&%ing Slater! Have a beer. And f*&%ing Kelly came over and fully had a skoll of a beer and all the boys were like, yeaaaaah!” While “the boys are still

having beers under the tree”, the club, like the surfers who consider Burleigh’s barrels home, has grown to become more family-focused in recent years as members past and present become parents and grandparen­ts themselves.

An emphasis on training and developmen­t programs for club juniors has produced a new breed of surf stars including 2016 Burleigh Pro age finalist Maddy Job, 15, and 14year-old Kaya Horne, 14.

“All the members come down and help with juniors. It gives kids a sense of community. It’s a tribe,” surf reporter and longtime club member Terry “Tappa” Teece says.

The club’s female membership has also exploded in recent years. While women’s and junior membership is open to all, it’s a different kettle of fish for the over-18s men.

Adult men can only join if they are recommende­d by two of the club’s 12 current life members – approval that can only be earned riding waves.

“It takes people surfing out at Burleigh to learn who’s in the pecking order in the lineup,” Tappa says. “You’ve got to earn your spot.”

CONTACT BURLEIGH BOARDRIDER­S VIA THEIR FACEBOOK PAGE OR EMAIL BURLEIGHBO­ARDRIDERS @GMAIL.COM TO BUY A COPY OF THE BOOK.

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 ?? Pictures: LONG BONGS AND BURLEIGH BARRELS ?? CLOCKWISE FROM TOP: Burleigh grommets in their heyday (from left) Craig Walgers, Ross Phillips, Paul “Sylvester” Depaiva, Dave McDougall, Joe Engel, Peter “Piff” Lawrence, Guy Omerod and Thornton Fallander; team celebratio­ns; big crowd at the Stubbies...
Pictures: LONG BONGS AND BURLEIGH BARRELS CLOCKWISE FROM TOP: Burleigh grommets in their heyday (from left) Craig Walgers, Ross Phillips, Paul “Sylvester” Depaiva, Dave McDougall, Joe Engel, Peter “Piff” Lawrence, Guy Omerod and Thornton Fallander; team celebratio­ns; big crowd at the Stubbies...

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