‘San Diego Surf Heroes Going Back to 1910 — When Duke Kahanamoku Tried the OB Pier.’
Twenty years ago, the San Diego Reader ran a long cover story called “90 Years of Curl,” an in-depth review of surfing history, particularly in San Diego, written by Jeannette DeWyze.
Then this year on March 30, the online version of the Reader republished it as “San Diego surf heroes going back to 1910 — When Duke Kahanamoku tried the OB Pier.”
[What OB Pier would that be? The one that is permanently closed right now was opened in 1966. There was another pier built earlier – south of where the 66 pier is.]
This story first appeared in the Reader on December 14, 2006.
There’s a good chance Ralph Noisat caught the first wave in San Diego. He died in 1980, and as he wasn’t a man to brag, his pioneering role might have been lost were it not for his board. He made it himself when he was a boy, and it was still in the Noisat family home in 1998 when Ralph’s daughter, Margie Chamberlain, was preparing to sell the Mission Hills residence. Chamberlain realized the heavy wooden board might have historic value, so she called the California Surf Museum in Oceanside. No one there knew anything about Noisat, but the museum staff was thrilled to accept the board when they heard what Chamberlain had to say about her father.

By David Garrick / 
Commentary — From the Trenches

by Ernie McCray
Tribe Never Consulted During Planning for Hidden Valley Ranch Housing Project
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by Tessa Balc /
The Home Team Act has been introduced in the U.S. Senate which would if pass keep the Padres in San Diego — at least for another year.
Editordude: The following is an unsolicited response to a recent Rag post entitled, “




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