Sprinting
toward the surf, Shonna Cobb flings a fiberglass board onto the wet
sand. With a springy assurance, she leaps atop the narrow 4-foot-long
board and glides into an approaching wave.
In
the seconds that follow, she will have to calculate the wave's advance
and the body movements required to sustain enough speed and balance to
skim over its 4-foot face and into the air.
There
is no soft landing. She completes the acrobatic trick, then falls into
the receding shallow water at Balboa Beach, absorbing the impact with a
tuck-and-roll motion.
"There's a reason why there aren't many women skimboarders," she says with a laugh. "It hurts!"
Cobb,
26, of Long Beach, is a full-time veterinary dental assistant and
former dancer. She also is among the most accomplished amateur female
skimboarders in the world -- and has the scrapes and scars on her shins
and feet to prove it.
This year, Cobb and at least half a dozen other women skimmers go pro.
The
rough-and-tumble sport was born in Laguna Beach more than half a
century ago. Yet skimboarding is still considered the poor cousin of
surfing, which provides longer rides on enormous swells. Skimming also
commands a far smaller market.
"There's
a ton of women surfers in the world today, but not many women -- or men
-- who skimboard," said Butch McIntosh, editor and publisher of
10-year-old Skim magazine. "I believe that is because it is a brutal,
demanding sport that beats you down into the sand."
Typically,
the board hydroplanes across shallow water and, seconds later, smacks
into a wave at just the right angle to glide across its surface. The
goal is to turn around and surf back to shore.
Some maneuvers catapult the rider more than 12 feet into the air. The thrills last for 10 to 15 seconds.
Cobb, who has been skimming since she was 11, calls it "my meditation."
"The
moment I start running toward a wave, I feel totally alive and in a
zone of meditation and endorphin releases," she said, preparing to race
toward an incoming swell on a recent weekday morning. "But if you hit
the wave at a wrong angle, it's tragic. You're toast. I've cracked my
head open a few times."
Over
the last 14 years, Cobb has won all but one of the nine amateur events
she entered. "In that case, I had stepped on a rock and punctured my
foot," she recalled. "So I ran into a nearby animal hospital and had
them stop the bleeding and close the wound with glue. Then I went back
and took second place."
Cobb
is the top contender heading into the inaugural Victoria Skimboards
Professional World Championship of female skimboarding, to be held June
19-20 in Laguna Beach. She leads a field of half a dozen or so
contestants.
"If the waves are big and scary, I can take them," Cobb said. "I'm not afraid to fall."
Winning
the first professional women's world championship requires strong legs,
abs of steel and a healthy dose of fear management. It will also call
for putting up with the mocking from some male skimboarders who refuse
to take their female counterparts seriously.
Men have dominated skimboarding championships for nearly a quarter-century.
"Skimboarding
was born in Laguna Beach, for goodness' sake," said Englund, an avid
surfer, sipping red wine in the city's Surf and Sand Hotel. "Now,
finally, female skimming is going professional. The town should be
blowing its trumpet about that."
Cobb, who has always been fiercely competitive, agreed.
In
preparation for the big event in June, she has hired a physical trainer
and practices as often as possible, preferably at high tide on the
sloping shorelines of Laguna Beach, Seal Beach and the Balboa Peninsula.
Cobb
grew up in Laguna Canyon. As a kid, she skateboarded with neighbor
boys. But she also modeled children's clothes. At 8, she landed a role
in the 1992 movie "CIA: Code Name: Alexa." She portrays a young hostage
rescued by a detective played by O.J. Simpson.
In
Little League she was a pitcher with a 60-mph fastball, and one of the
first girls chosen an all-star. In her freshman year at Laguna Beach
High School, she was varsity goalie on the girls' soccer team. Now she
is dedicated to two pastimes: working as a veterinary dental technician
and skimming.
"In a
perfect universe, I'll win the championship and tour the world, skimming
against chicks who are just as good or better than me," Cobb said.
"Even if I don't win, I'll be skimboarding the rest of my life."
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