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By JOE NICK PATOSKI
Special Contributor
TEXAS CITY, Texas Its too flat to surf the beach and
not quite warm enough to chase oil tankers in the bay, but James
Fulbright is still obsessing over the perfect wave.
The 46-year-old Galveston surf shop owner has the classic sun-bleached
look and uniform of a surfaholic, down to the scruffy beard, baggy
shorts and flip-flops. And hes got that hard-headed tude
common to Texas surfers, a pitiable cult for whom lousy natural
waves are a semi-permanent way of life.
When the weathers nice and Gulf is flat, as is usually the
case, Mr. Fulbright and three friends are surfing some of the most
perfectly formed swells in the world by riding the wakes of supertankers
plying Galveston Bay. This mastery has earned them fame in surfing
circles worldwide.
But when its too windy or too cold to surf behind oil tankers,
as it has been pretty much for the past five months, Mr. Fulbright
takes his passion inside a metal building in a salt-rusted industrialpark
near Interstate 45.
There, he obsesses about a surfing technology hes so serious
about, hes almost exhausted his personal savings, he explains
as he bids adieu to two similarly attired gentlemen leaving the
oversized shed.
"Theyre engineers who heard about it and flew over from
France," he says.
"It" is a modified 35-square-foot kiddie pool assembled
from a mess of black plastic vinyl, plywood islands, hoses, pipes,
pumps, pressure gauges, blue paint and wood to resemble a 1/12th
scale model of a beach waterfront inside the building. His wife
used pipe cleaners to fashion little palm trees with sand sprinkled
around for effect.
This is the model prototype of a surfing wave machine that he hopes
will revolutionize the sport of surfing by taking it off the beach
and into water parks around the world.
"Want to see it work?" he asks excitedly, moving to jigger
some buttons and levels before getting a response.
At the far side of the kiddie pool a burst of pressure fires out
of a compressor, creating a small wave that is split into two parts
by a wooden divider.
"See how they both peel down the line?" he says, grinning.
"Its pretty crazy, isnt it?"
Mr. Fulbrights zealotry and imagination are informed by the
realities facing every surfer in Texas, condemned by the eternal
frustration of realizing that no matter how much one wills it, the
Gulf Coast is a lousy place to surf, unless a hurricane or tropical
storm is brewing.
"Gulf Coast surfers are an extremely devoted bunch. Were
the most devoted group of surfers on the planet. We take what we
can get, and drop everything were doing on a moments
notice to ride a wave."
Hard-headedness
But out of such frustration comes determination and creativity
like nowhere else in the surfing world. The combination of terrible
conditions and Texan hard-headedness makes for some inventive options
such as the one Mr. Fulbright has been developing for the past 18
months while securing all the necessary patents and copyrights.
"Ive finally got it going but Ive spent all my
savings. So were desperately seeking funding."
He started surfing at the age of 12. Hes been looking for
a better way to surf ever since. "As you get older, you get
more particular," he says. Hes done the traveling bit,
going to California, Mexico and Costa Rica. "Half the time,
itd be flat there like in Texas, but youd blow all that
money getting there."
While a student at Texas A&M, he and his landlocked pals would
surf behind boats on Lake Somerville. When they weighted down the
boat towing them with extra people, they could generate wave waves
large enough to ride without a tow rope.
He and some buddies took that idea a step further six years ago,
after watching oil tankers cruise the bay between the coast and
the Houston Ship Channel.
The light bulb went off while working at a surfboard fin factory.
"One day, I overheard two sailors who sailed from Clear Lake
to Kemah talk about how their 35-foot boat almost got swamped by
a rogue wave generated by an oil tanker. I thought to myself, Hmmmmm.
I asked them if it was surfable. They didnt surf but said
it might be.
"Well, I bought a 17-foot Boston Whaler," he says. "I
studied the waves. I studied the tides, the currents, and the depths
of the bay. I hung out in a bar in LaPorte where all the pilot boat
captains drink. I started buying drinks. Id asked where they
found waves that they avoided, what channel markers.
"They thought we were crazier than hell asking where to go
surfing in the bay. It took me about six months of reconnaissance
but I finally found some constant spots. Lo and behold, I caught
the wave of my dreams."
Secret surfing
The supertankers left wakes of perfectly shaped swells so good,
their exploits were captured in the 2003 documentary film, Step
Into Liquid, which profiles 50 surfers from around the world and
their secret surfing spots.
Mr. Fulbright and his buddies have sworn to each other they wont
divulge where they go. "This morning I ran into a guy on the
beach who said he had information I could use if I gave him information,"
Mr. Fulbright says. "I said, No way.. "
Still, theyre loyal to their sense of place. Mr. Fulbright
and his friends also have another rule that when surf is up on the
coast, oil-tanker surfing is not an option.
Oil-tanker surfing is not for everyone, Mr. Fulbright cautions.
It requires more planning, patience and precautions than beach surfing
does.
"You cant just jump into it. It took me years to get
it down. We respect distance from the ships, distance from other
boats. Were very particular when we go."
But theres a payoff.
Last fall, he says, "I caught a wave that I rode for three
miles in ten minutes. Nowhere in the world can you ride a two- to
three-mile wave. When its been flat on Galveston for a week,
were surfing till our legs cramp up.
"Its very hard to line up a wave. It takes a boat. It
takes skilled maneuvering. That water is littered with sunken boats,
pipelines, shallow shoals. You have to burn a whole day to do it.
You cant just do it a little while. Someone has to drive the
boat, and nobody wants to drive. I usually have to because its
my boat. But dude, let me tell you this," Mr. Fulbright says,
his eyes lighting up. "Its worth it."
So is going broke and having to hustle for investments for his
wave machine, which he calls Surf City Texas.
"What can we do?"
Oil tanker surfers and Mr. Fulbrights invention go hand in
hand, he contends. Both were answers to his eternal question, "What
can we do to satisfy our surf fix?"
"Ive wanted to have a wave pool since I first started
surfing," he says. "The ones that exist are really bad.
My focus was to make a great wave that is really challenging and
as natural a surfing experience as possible.
"As Gulf Coast surfers were damned and determined to
surf when we want to," he says. "Were so desperate
were chasing around oil tankers. Thats how desperate
we are. But who would have imagined the best waves, better than
any waves in the world, are in our own backyard?"
Or in his own metal building?
Hes already commissioned a logo of a steers skull head
like the Eagles album covers surrounded by big water and set
up a Web site, SurfCityTexas.com. Surfing Magazine ran a feature
in the July issue, identifying Mr. Fulbright as a "Texas tanker-wave
hustler" and calling his idea "the latest, and possibly
greatest, advancement in wave-pool technology."
Now all he needs is dough. "Its not sophisticated technology,"
he says. "Its a bunch of pipes and a pond." That
happen to generate some awesome waves. Almost as good as an oil
tanker.
Joe Nick Patoski is a freelance writer in Wimberley, Texas.
E-mail joenickp@yahoo.com
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