Have your coffee...read...then start bashing......

The term "irresponsible journalism" comes to mind rather easy......
ok...let's go!
Moderator: Wilbur Kookmeyer
I'm not going to give you the "locals only" speech. I'm not going to go into how unethical it is to list the surf spots with directions. But I will go into how you did not even mention the rips that exist at a handful of these spots.
The Point and The Cove are plagued by rips that can either help you or damage you...and inexperienced surfers will get drilled into those big rolling cobblestones, or stuffed into the impact zone, or dragged out to sea.
Boiler Bay, and Deivil's have similar situations that are all very, very dangerous. Not to mention the fact that this ocean is not Malibu. It can and will bless you one moment, and the next moment you are scrapping for your life.
As a surfer in the PNW I have assisted many times with pulling dumb parents children out of rips that they get caught in...usually the whole time the parents are on the beach smiling like it is all fun. And now you go and throw this article out there with out any information on the very real dangers?
Every summer our line ups get more crowded with people that decide they are surfers, and every year the coast gaurd has to pull more people out. And every year there are more injuries and collisions and damage caused by inexperienced beginner surfers.
I won't even get into the indignities that one is subject to when you paddle out at a place like The Point without a written invitation from the local crew. The intimidation, harasment, waxing of car windows, slashing of tires, and bashing of windows.
This ain't the 'Bu, and Moondoggie don't live here.
Kook.
]"Watching surfers perform creates a rush . . . not as much as actually catching a wave yourself, but exciting nonetheless. And the fall season often produces the year's choicest surf along Oregon's north and central coastline"
Who are you calling a sea lion I am not that fat.They look like sea lions coming up for air, these fully wet-suited surfers bobbing on an undulating ocean.
BOILER BAY
Massive swells sometimes break on an offshore reef at this big-wave surf spot named after the steam boiler from the J. Marhoffer, a small freighter that sank here in 1910. Park at the appropriately named Boiler Bay State ScenicViewpoint, but remain behind the fence -- waves often batter the cliffs, and ocean spray may give your vehicle a bath. Directions: 1.5 miles north of Depoe Bay, along U.S. 101.
the small waves here are transformed into what surfers call "tubes."
Other nearby surfing hot spots include Beverly Beach and Moola Beach
DEVILS PUNCH BOWL
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