Windansea Beach

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Windansea Beach
Location San Diego County, California
Nearest city La Jolla
Coordinates 32°49′52″N 117°16′52″W / 32.83111°N 117.28111°W / 32.83111; -117.28111Coordinates: 32°49′52″N 117°16′52″W / 32.83111°N 117.28111°W / 32.83111; -117.28111


Windansea Beach is a stretch of coastline located in La Jolla, a community of San Diego, California. The neighborhood adjacent to the beach is named Windansea after the beach. It is named after the 1909 oceanfront Strand Hotel that was renamed "Windansea" Hotel in 1919 after the owner Arthur Snell ran a "naming contest". The Windansea Hotel which was located on Neptune Avenue between Playa del Sur and Playa del Norte burned down in the late 1940s. Geographically, it is defined by the beachfront extending north of Palomar Avenue and south of Westbourne Street.

Surf Breaks

The main peak at Windansea is a reef break. During the winter months, Windansea can have six-to-eight foot surf. [citation needed] Other breaks in the vicinity of Windansea include Middles, Turtles, Simmons (named after Bob Simmons who died at that break in 1954) and Big Rock.

The Windansea Shack

The distinguishing landmark at Windansea is a palm-covered shack that was originally constructed in 1946 by Woody Ekstrom, Fred Kenyon and Don Okey. "The Surf Shack at Windansea Beach" was designated as an historical landmark by the San Diego Historical Resources Board on May 27, 1998.[1]

Parking Lot and Public Facilities

The Windansea parking lot is located along Neptune Place, between Nautilus and Bonair Streets. Although recently upgraded by the City of San Diego, it offers a limited number of parking spaces. There are no drinking fountains, showers or public restrooms available.

Surfing History

Windansea enjoys a storied reputation as a surfbreak, and has served as home break to many notable surfers, including Pat Curren, Mike Diffenderfer, Chris O'Rourke, Joey Cabell, Mickey Munoz and Butch Van Artsdalen. Steve Pezman, former publisher of Surfer magazine and current publisher of The Surfer's Journal, called Windansea locals in the early 1960s "the heaviest surf crew ever."[citation needed]

The Windansea Surf Club featured was founded by Chuck Hasley in 1962, and included members such as The Endless Summer star and first Vice President Mike Hynson, Skip Frye, Joey Cabell, Del Cannon, Mike Purpus and Rusty Miller, Andy Tyler, Tom Ortner, Brew Briggs, Chris O'Rourke, Richard Kenvin, Miko Fleming, Debbie Beacham, Peter King, Saxon Boucher, Randy Lind, Ian Rotgans, "Big George" Felactu & Longboard Larry.

In 1963, Michael Dormer and Lee Teacher built a six foot, 400 pound version of their Hot Curl cartoon character out of cement, iron, a mop, a light bulb, and a beer can. The statue appeared on the rocks over Windansea beach in La Jolla, holding a beer in one hand while gazing out over the ocean in search of the perfect wave.[2] In 1964 Hot Curl was the inspiration for a string of "Beach Party" movies, including "Muscle Beach Party" starring Frankie Avalon, Annette Funicello, Buddy Hackett, and Don Rickles.[3]

In literature

The title article in Tom Wolfe's book of essays, The Pump House Gang, is about a group of surfers from Windansea Beach who "attended the Watts riots as if it were the Rose Bowl game in Pasadena." [4]

Child of the Storm: How an Angry Young Man Formed a Bond With the Sea and Changed Our Lives Forever, by Kirk Lee Aeder, is a 2012 biography of the life and times of the late Windansea surfer Chris O'Rourke.

See also

To the North:
Marine Street Beach
California State Beaches To the South
La Jolla Strand Park

References

  1. San Diego Government Site
  2. [http://www.sandiegohistory.org/exhibits/weird/hotcurl.htm, San Diego Historical Society, retrieved 19 Sept 2007]
  3. Fantasy Femmes of Sixties Cinema: Interviews with 20 Actresses from Biker, Beach, and Elvis Movies. Tom Lisanti. ISBN 978-0-7864-0868-9. 2001
  4. Pump House Gang. Random House


Photos

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