LiQUiFY Magazine December 2014 | Page 67

Wayne McKewen is a veteran Gold Coast waterman who has seen everything the ocean as well as mankind can do in terms of coastal changes for the better and worse. Wayne here in an iconic and classic 1990s image, hammering through a Burleigh barrel on his backhand, with the perfect stance and speed line // Photo Wilba “It used to break in the middle of the seaway” ‘focus’ into that. But it won’t stop ASF and the developers trying to do it - using the process to justify getting the land for their foreign casino development regardless of whether ships come or not. Local shaper and surfing legend Wayne McKewen (featured on this issue’s cover) concurs with the seaway swell irony. We caught up with Wayne to get his whole take on the incredible seaway ghost wave, the proposed development and dredging. What do you think about the dredging proposals mate? We mean, do you think the seaway wave will ever return? “It’s a catch 22, I mean if they dredge out there to get these boats in, gee they are really going to get some swell in there. It used to break in the middle of the seaway when it was 8 to 10 foot, and I know that dredging out there is naturally going to form it all up again - nature is going to do it again. You’ll get a build up of sand along the northern (side) and it won’t break from the tip of the wall, but from about three quarters of the way out and along that centre part of the wall and I’m just trying to work out ... I’m kind of hoping, it sounds bad but, that the seaway might break again if they did the dredging and it all comes back