Six Star Magazine Six Star Magazine Spring 2015 | Page 25
“I didn’t get hooked until about 13, but the difficulty of the
catch a single wave? “I think it has to do with the effort I put in
sport and being out in the ocean is what I really enjoyed from a
to go to these remote locations,” he says. “It’s more about the
young age,” Pete says. The fickle conditions only made him love
whole process of figuring out where a good wave is, and waiting
it more. “Surfing is one of those sports that’s hard to duplicate
for the conditions to get good. Cold climates tend to be a lot
because everything is always changing. Once you’ve had a great
more temperamental, so that makes them way harder to score.”
wave, you want to get that feeling over and over.” Regardless of
Sometimes that means travelling a long way and finding nothing
the conditions, through limb-numbing hell and some seriously
but flat water. “I’ve had plenty of skunkings in my life,” he admits.
high water, he’s been chasing that elusive wave ever since.
“I’ve spent thousands of dollars on trips and only got one day of
Anyone who’s visited Tofino knows that it’s beautiful, home
mediocre waves to show for it.” But when the odds break in your
to a steely sea shrouded in fog and
favour, it’s well worth the work and
wind. Walls of ancient trees line the
uncertainty. “When it’s just you and
long, flat beaches and mountains
the crew and the waves are firing,
break straight into the ocean.
that’s what every surfer dreams of.”
Sunny days are rare, warm ones
Pete has fulfilled his fair share
almost unheard of. But if you have
of dreams. Chief among them was
the heart to plunge into the frigid,
a stunning performance on a rare
fighting surf, you can ride every day
blue sky day at Tofino’s North
of the year. And that’s exactly what
Chesterman Beach in November
young Pete Devries did.
2009. It was the final heat of the
Arriving home following a
45-minute bus ride from his school
the next town over, he’d wrestle into his wetsuit and head out
into the dying light to catch the final few winter swells. That
O’Neill Cold Water Classic, a roving
international tournament that, as its
name suggests, generally skips sun-kissed coasts.
Technically speaking, Devries hadn’t even qualified. He
dedication has served him well. By age 15, he’d landed his first
was one of several “wild card” entries offered to