December 10, 2006

Surf in Cleveland, Before Lake Freezes 

By CHRISTOPHER MAAG

CLEVELAND, Dec. 9 — They surf in Cleveland because they must. They 
surf with two-inch icicles clinging to their wet suits, through 
stinging hail and overpowering wind. They work nights to spend their 
winter days scouting surf. They are watermen on an inland sea.

Given its industrial past, Cleveland largely turns its back to Lake 
Erie, lining the coast with power plants, a freeway and mounds of 
iron ore to feed its steel factories. The shore is especially 
deserted in winter, when strong winds and waves pummel the land. In 
December, as temperatures dip into the 20s and ice gathers in the 
lake's small coves, Cleveland surfers have Lake Erie almost entirely 
to themselves. 

"Surfing Lake Erie is basically disgusting," said Bill Weeber, known 
as Mongo, 44. "But then I catch that wave and I forget about it, and 
I feel high all day."

Scott Ditzenberger hoped to experience the same feeling when he heard 
that the first blizzard of the winter was pounding across the 
Midwest. 

"I was so excited I could barely sleep last night," said Mr. 
Ditzenberger, 35, who quit his job as a lawyer in August to spend 
more time surfing and to film a documentary about Cleveland's surf 
community.

It was the kind of day that lives mostly in Cleveland surfers' 
fantasies. Pushed by the storm's winds, water the color of chocolate 
milk rose 10 feet in the air before slamming onto a beach of boulders 
and logs. The temperature was 40 degrees and falling. One surfer, 
Vince Labbe, climbed onto his board only to get blown backward by 40-
mile-an-hour winds. 

Mike Miller, known as Chewbacca, managed to tuck his head and left 
shoulder into the barrel of a wave before being crushed by a wall of 
water. 

"I haven't seen a break this good in 10 years," Mr. Ditzenberger said.

Go ahead and laugh. Cleveland surfers are used to it. 

When Jamie Yanak sits at a stoplight with his surfboard atop his 1996 
Ford Thunderbird, he said, people point and laugh. Every year a local 
television crew arrives on the beach to film surfers in the snow and 
make jokes about "California dreaming."

But this is not California. And Cleveland surfers are not playing 
around. Many of the roughly 25 committed surfers here work nights all 
year to keep their winter days free for surfing. Mr. Weeber quit his 
job as an advertising art director and makes less money as a summer 
landscaper. He moved his family closer to the beach, to spend more 
time on the waves. 

Sean Rooney, 31, said, "All I want to do is surf." 

The strongest winds and waves come in winter, just before Lake Erie 
freezes. Waves up to 10 feet have been surfed, but the largest swells 
are usually chest-high. Instead of curling into a vertical wall, the 
waves are round like haystacks, and they collapse onto the shore like 
soggy paper.

Surfers learn to avoid ice chunks the size of bowling balls. Some 
wear goggles to surf through freezing rain, which can sting their 
eyes like needles. That is a bad idea, Mr. Labbe said, because the 
goggles freeze to their faces. 

Surfers watch their friends for signs of hypothermia, urging them to 
leave the water when their eyes glaze over and their words slur. Ear 
infections are a common affliction.

To reach the lake, surfers drag their boards across snowdrifts and 
beaches littered with used condoms and syringes, Mr. Ditzenberger 
said. The most popular surf spot is Edgewater State Park. It is 
nicknamed Sewer Pipe because, after heavy rains, a nearby water 
treatment plant regularly discharges untreated waste into Lake Erie.

Love and family obligations prevent most surfers here from moving to 
California or Hawaii. So they adapt. Mr. Rooney chose a surfboard 
that is longer and wider than most modern boards because it adds 
buoyancy in the lake's salt-free water. He replaced its three small 
fins with one large fin, which helps him turn quickly on small waves. 

Because the nearest surf shop is on Lake Michigan, 285 miles away, 
Mr. Labbe builds surfboards for his friends in his mother's basement. 

"Cleveland surfers have a reputation for being gritty and hard-core," 
said Ryan Gerard, owner of Third Coast Surf Shop in New Buffalo, 
Mich. "They just don't care what other people think about them."

Except that they hate being compared with the modern California surf 
scene. Cleveland surfers believe they are the last remnants of the 
original surf culture in the 1940s and '50s, when surfing was still a 
renegade sport of social misfits who scouted virgin breaks, surfed 
alone and lived by a code of friendliness to newcomers and respect 
for the water. They keep their best surf spots secret. They consider 
themselves part of an underground society. And they hope to keep it 
that way.

"Everybody surfs in California, which waters down the experience," 
said Mr. Rooney, who grew up surfing in Orange County, Calif., before 
moving to Cleveland three years ago to work in his family's real 
estate business. "Being here takes me back to that feeling of 
discovery that the founding fathers of surfing experienced." 

Occasionally there are days when the waves are good and the sunset 
falls into Lake Erie like a red fire and the Cleveland surfers bob 
silently in the water, alone in the city. And they laugh at their 
good fortune.

"Nobody surfs here to get noticed," Mr. Ditzenberger said. "We surf 
here because we love it."


Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company 


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