Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeSportA surf fest for young and old

A surf fest for young and old

It’s a wrap – and while not exactly enjoying epic surf, with the first few days being blessed with pretty good First Point, and the remainder having quite contestable beachies, the 2025 Noosa Festival of Surfing made the grade again.

From a personal perspective, surfing first heat of the morning the early rounds of the over 70s in glassy, fun conditions at First Point, almost back to its old form, even though your columnist may not have been, with just a few mates two days in a row was a pure pleasure.

Unfortunately other commitments meant that I didn’t spend as much time on the beach this year as I would have liked, but I did manage to catch a few great performances, including a spectacular final minutes comeback from Tully White to take out a see-sawing women’s logger final at Sunrise Beach from Bali’s Dhea Natasha and locals Emily Lethbridge and Kirra Molnar. Emily was particularly unlucky after having led for most of the heat with some very stylish surfing.

The men’s logger also produced a last-minute turn-around, going against another local in Nic Brewer, but Kai Ellice-Flint has been on fire this year, and as soon as he took off on a sizey left and started walking to the nose, you knew he would produce the goods. But my favourite performance of the week was without doubt that of the youngest and lightest competitor at the festival, everyone’s favourite grom Hunter Williams, who may have had a distinct size advantage in the Golden Breed Noserider, held in the tiniest First Point peelers imaginable, but boy did he milk it with some spectacular long tens and clever footwork to finish a solid fourth behind former world champ Josh Constable, world tour competitor Clinton Guest and up-and-coming Jive Constable. Oh and Hunter also took out the Lions Club Rising Star award alongside Ramona Haddrell.

I’m going to let these amazing photos by Fenna De King (@fenna.deking) and the surf festival’s Melissa Hoareau tell the story of the nine days of pure stoke, and instead look at a couple of intriguing aspects of the event’s history. Although this year was billed as the 34th Noosa Festival of Surfing, for its first six years it was the relatively small Noosa Longboard Classic, developed by the Noosa Malibu Club. In 1998, as a sponsor of the event for the previous four years, I joined with partners John Brasen and Johnny Lee in building a surf culture festival around the club’s existing core events.

Over the next few years we threw everything at it, including the kitchen sink and a lot of global promotion, and it paid off. The festival grew exponentially as we added more and more events on and off the beach and promoted it to all the major surfing markets. Family groups became our bread and butter, adding to the tourist revenue of the town because they often stayed for a fortnight, or even a month. A sidebar effect of this was that our competitor demographic began to widen, from the littlest kids to their grandparents.

When we started, the oldest age division was over 40s. Now it’s over 75s and it should be over 80s because there is now a demand, at least on the men’s side, and the women aren’t far behind. Who knew? When I started surfing in the early 1960s, it was assumed you would have moved on before hitting the grand old age of 30. Now, well, how long is a piece of sinew?

Baby boomers were the heart and soul of the golden age of longboarding (1957-1969) and also, not surprisingly, the stimulus for the longboarding renaissance (1984 to the present). Although I rode longboards several times in California in the 1970s, in the ‘80s as I was entering middle age I was very pleased to see them become cool again, even though it took me a few years to get over riding a thing called a mini mal as a soft segue into the grim realities of thicker waistbands and slower pop-ups.

Strictly speaking, a baby boomer was born between 1946 and 1964, meaning that Midget Farrelly wasn’t one but Nat Young is. Moreover, it meant that baby boomers like me who were born within the first decade, started surfing on longboards, and therefore felt comfortable going back to them. But now what it means is that the youngest baby boomers are surfing in the over 60s and the eldest are in the over 75s. What this means for the Noosa surf festival is that the older age divisions are growing while the younger ones are diminishing. The over 55s, for example, were down to six competitors this year as opposed to 12 in 2023. Meanwhile the over 70s has remained steady in the mid-teens over the same period. The over 75s, held for the first time last year, went up from five to six this year, which may not be much but watch this space!

And while senior surfing might not be as pretty to watch as the younger versions, it sure feels good when you get a good one, even though you know you’ll be reaching for the Panadol later.

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Welcome award reflects Noosa vision

Noosa Council has welcomed news that Noosa Heads has been named one of the Top 10 Most Welcoming Towns on Earth. The coastal suburb...

Free flu shots

More News

Brothers Gruchy in exhibition

Caloundra Regional Gallery has launched its 2026 exhibition program with The Brothers Gruchy – a major, digital‑first exhibition showcasing nine significant works by acclaimed...

Free flu shots

The Crisafulli Government is delivering an expanded free flu vaccination program for 2026, ensuring every Queenslander aged six months and over can access a...

Valentine’s Day with the Kings

This Valentine’s Day, treat your loved one to a night of dazzling entertainment at The Kings of Las Vegas Show – a one-of-a-kind dinner...

Oriana presents Pop Royalty

Get ready for an unforgettable musical experience as the Sunshine Coast’s acclaimed Oriana Choir brings Pop Royalty to the stage, 2pm, March 22 at...

Lots of love at the library

Sunshine Coast Libraries are turning up the romance as they celebrate Library Lovers’ Day! From 9–14 February, visit your local Library to celebrate the stories,...

Georgia shines in Tamworth

Georgia Stafford, an 11-year-old country music singer/songwriter from Noosa, attended her second Tamworth Country Music Festival with three clear goals: to open for Lee...

Noosa Pirates on the move

A recent flyer from the Noosa Pirates Rugby League Club reports that pre-season training is well underway - with robust attendance and enthusiasm as...

Noosa sharks overview

Oceans for All (OFA), formed in 2023, is a working party of representatives from multiple groups with a shared goal: to replace and update...

Butter factory turns up heat

The Cooroy Butter Factory Arts Centre is set to showcase the Sunshine Coast’s next wave of creative talent when its much-anticipated biennial 40 under...

Christmas on the Rhine

With many families breaking away from traditional Christmas celebrations and exploring ways to connect so the whole family can relax, the idea of taking...