ADVERTISEMENT

Eight Things You Didn’t Know About A New River Bore in Burma

Monks, Elephants and waves for miles

Eight Things You Didn’t Know About A New River Bore in Burma

1) There’s a new river bore in Burma.
Yep, in the Gulf of Martaban in Myanmar (formerly known as Burma), fairly close to the capital of Rangoon, a new river bore has been discovered and surfed just last month. 

2) Anthony “Yep” Colas was at the heart of the discovery
The Frenchman has pioneered Brazil’s Pororoca, the Quangchao in China, Malaysia’s Benak and the Bono in Indonesia. His blood levels wax and wane with the moon and no one searches harder or further for new river waves. No surprise then that he was in the mix of the latest discovery.

Rollers on a River.

3) Google Earth this ain’t
“We rely on maps and journals from the colonial days of the British and the Portuguese to discover potential bores,” Colas told Tracks. “We found evidence that navigators in 1800s had issued warnings about waves in the Sittang River.” And when was the last time you planned a surf trip based on a 75-year-old black and white illustration? 

Somehow the SUP seems like a suitable craft for a river bore wave.

4) This bore’s potential is huge 
Logistical issues meant Yep and his crew didn’t surf it till a few days past the peak of the high tide, when river waves are biggest. “I’d estimate that during the peak you could surf waves easily up to 10 foot high,” Yep said excitedly. “I’d put this bore in the Bono category for power and size, which makes it one of the top three in the world.”

Will the monks discover surfing as an alternative form of meditation?

5) Croc free! 
Rivers in this area of Southeast Asia are usually teeming with crocodiles. We are no river surfing experts, but we assume this can hamper the enjoyment somewhat. The Sittang River however is croc free, meaning you just have to worry about water born diseases, tropical dysentery and malaria. 

6) There is elephants though, millions of em. 
“There’s a million monks in Myanmar and as they don’t permit the use of power or engines, most of the work is done by elephants,” Colas says. “The elephants are trained for labor and you can get a ride anywhere. I’d would say though that riding an elephant is much harder than riding a bore.” 

Local transport is slow but reliable.

7) Two surfs a day, 30 minutes rides
“We surfed in the morning and evening as the tide was shifting only 30 minutes a day,” Colas says. “We’d motor up the river at first light and surf four different sections of the river in a two-hour session. Some of the waves we could ride for thirty minutes at a time.” Try getting that at your next Indo land camp vacay. 

Clock up the wave time.

8) This is just the start
This initial mission was totally self funded, and hampered by a lack of infrastructure on land.  Not so much Red Bull branded 1200hp jetskis, but local tinnies squirted by watery two-stroke. Colas though wants to come back, better prepared.  “The environment is totally surfer friendly, it’s a beautiful tropical landscape and the most wonderful human beings live there,” he said. “I’m already setting up a new expedition to chase the beast in full awe during the biggest of spring tides. Stay tuned.” 

Hardcore bore crew

 

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
SUBSCRIBE TO TRACKS
A bi-monthly eclectic tome of tangible surfing goodness that celebrates all things surfing, delivered to your door!
SUBSCRIBE NOW
HAPPENINGS
Your portal to cultural events happening in and around the surfing sphere.
Find Events
SUBSCRIBE TO TRACKS
A bi-monthly eclectic tome of tangible surfing goodness that celebrates all things surfing, delivered to your door!
SUBSCRIBE NOW
HAPPENINGS
Your portal to cultural events happening in and around the surfing sphere.
Find Events

LATEST

The Goons of Doom and DJ Eddy are firing up again after the Easter weekend carnage in Torquay.

Tributes have poured in for the Australian whose boards had been ridden by many top professionals.

URBNSURF is bringing wave garden technology to the city's Olympic Park.

A look at the victims of the mid year cut and which nations are left on tour.

ADVERTISEMENT

PREMIUM FEATURES

The distilled surfing memories of Dave Sparkes.

Peter Townsend with G&S

"Speak softly and carry a big stick; you will go far."

TRACKS PREMIUM

Get full access to every feature from our print issues, read classic Tracks issues from the 70s, 80s and 90’s, watch all of our classic films & more …

TRACKS PREMIUM

Get full access to every feature from our print issues, read classic Tracks issues from the 70s, 80s and 90’s, watch all of our classic films & more …

CLASSIC ISSUES

A threat to Angourie, the death of vibes, and a tongue in cheek guide on how to become a surf star.

PREMIUM FILM

YEAR: 2008
STARRING: JOEL PARKINSON, MICK FANNING AND DEAN MORRISON

This is the last time the original cooly kids were captured together and features some of their best surfing.

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

PRINT STORE

Unmistakable and iconic, the Tracks covers from the 70s & 80s are now ready for your walls.

Tracks
Kandui Resort Interstitial