The Scotsman

Africa’s forgotten surfing history reclaimed in new book Afrosurf

- Rogercox @ outdoorsco­ts

The official history of surfing has always felt a little threadbare. Up until relatively recently, the received wisdom was that the Hawaiians had invented the sport, Captain Cook and Co had been the first Europeans to witness it in 1778, and then in the early 20th century, it spread from the gentle rollers of Waikiki to the rest of the world via such ambassador­s as Duke Kahanamoku and George Freeth.

While the rich surfing traditions of the Hawaiian islands have never been in doubt, there was always that nagging thought: With all those perfect rollers breaking on to shores in other warm parts of the world, what are the chances that people from other cultures also had a go at riding waves for fun?

As long- suffering readers of this column will be aware, a couple of years ago Last Words did a little firsthand research into the claim that the Moche people of northern Peru came up with the idea of surfing much earlier than the Hawaiians, with archaeolog­ical remains suggesting they used a reed surf craft called ‘ caballitos de totora’.

Thanks to a closing- down sale at the Eyemouth Maritime Museum, I was able to get my hands on a bargain basement caballito and try it out in small surf off the coast of East Lothian.

My conclusion from this was that the ancient Peruvians definitely developed themselves a bone fide wave- riding vehicle, but they probably weren't able to do much on their giant straw missiles other than hold on tight and head straight for the beach.

It turns out the Peruvians weren't the only ones to develop a form of waveriding pre- 1778.

Thanks to a new book called Afrosurf, a project instigated by Selema Masekela and the team at African surf brand Mami Wata and introduced by University of California history professor Kevin Dawson, the African chapter of the surfing story is now finally being told.

Africa, Dawson writes in his intro, has ‘ a 1,000- year- old surfing tradition’, the sport was ‘ independen­tly developed from Senegal to Angola’, boards were ridden ‘ in a prone, sitting, kneeling, or standing position’ and the first known account of surfing on the continent was written during the 1640s in what is now Ghana.

According to Bruce Brown's iconic 1966 surf movie Endless Summer, when he, Robert August and Mike Hynson visited West Africa they ‘ introduced’ surfing to the locals.

However, as Dawson points out: “If viewers shift their eyes away from August and Hynson, they will see Ga youth of Labadi Village, near Accra, Ghana, riding traditiona­l surfboards, which can still be found at some beaches.

"The ability of Ga men, in the film, to stand on the Americans’ longboards illustrate­s their surfing tradition."

And speaking of longboards, it turns out that olde worlde Africans sometimes rode longboards, too, measuring around 12 feet in length, and used them to paddle long distances.

The English anthropolo­gist Robert

Rattray ( 1881- 1938) photograph­ed paddleboar­ds on Lake Bosumtwi, located about 100 miles inland of Cape Coast, Ghana, and explained that the Asante people used these craft because they believed the god Twi prohibited canoes on the lake.

So the Africans didn't just figure out how to surf before Europeans, they also had their very own SUP craze hundreds of years before us.

Intriguing­ly, it seems African surfers may also have surfed off the east coast of what is now the continenta­l USA long before the first white Americans ever took to the waves there.

According to Dawson, ‘ accounts indicate that, by the 1700s, enslaved Africans were surfing and surfcanoei­ng from South Carolina down to Brazil’.

That being the case, perhaps somebody should make some tweaks to the Wikipedia page on the history of surfing.

As things stand, it claims that ‘ surfing on the East Coast of the US began in Wrightsvil­le Beach, North Carolina in 1909 when Burke Haywood Bridgers and a colony of surfers introduced surfing to the East Coast’.

It might also be worth re- examining the claim that Bridgers and friends were responsibl­e for some of ‘ the earliest appearance­s of surfboards in the Atlantic’.

If there's evidence that Africans were surfing in South Carolina in the 1700s, surely they should get a mention ahead of the white guys who did the same thing a couple of hundred years later in the next- door state?

As for the ‘ earliest appearance­s of surfboards in the Atlantic’ – if Africa really does have a 1,000 year- old surfing tradition, we're probably talking about a couple of fishermen riding homemade boards off the coast of west Africa at about the same time as the Battle of Hastings.

To pre- order a copy of Afrosurf, visit www. mamiwatasu­rf. com

I was able to get my hands on a Peruvian caballito and try it off the coast of East Lothian

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