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Surf’s up for ‘Kingo’ of the waves

Chris ‘Kingo’ Kingston is opening a new surf camp in Goolwa as surfer numbers continue to swell over winter.

Aug 28, 2020, updated Oct 28, 2020

After 10 years teaching people to surf Goolwa waves, PE teacher and passionate surfer Kingston is opening the new camp that gives visitors access to lessons along with an array of fishing gear, bikes, kayaks and skateboards.

The new Beach Road accommodation is part of a wider plan to promote more interest from South Australians in coast visits and surf classes as they deal with COVID restrictions into the summer season.

Kingston said more hardcore surfers were already braving the waves in Goolwa over winter this year as they switched from their usual overseas trips to visiting local beaches.

“I think a lot of people have had more time to rethink their lives and they are chasing something different or a new passion and a lot more people are surfing down here,” he said, adding that he also teaches PE at high school but was winding that back to concentrate on the surf school and camps,” he said.

In July, Kingston hosted a capacity 15-person group at his second surf campsite in Venus Bay near Port Lincoln on the Eyre Peninsula.

He was hoping for high demand at his business Kingo Surfing from more South Australians looking for new adventures over summer, saying it was a “fantastic opportunity” for them to explore some of the state’s pristine coastline.

“Here on the south coast, Goolwa is one of the safest and best learn-to-surf locations in the country,” he said.

The beach faces south so it has swell every day of the year along with a unique environment where sand being pushed into the sea from the Coorong and River Murray means it is unusually shallow further out to sea than most coastlines.

“And there’s not as many dangerous rips,” he said.

The Beach Road site leads directly to the seaside town’s main beach carpark where the striking new Goolwa Surf Lifesaving Club was opened last year, the first stage in the transformation of the entire Goolwa Beach precinct.

Kingston said it had been a highly unpredictable year with surf classes halted during peak February and March surfing schools then switching to one-on-one classes before class sizes have again increased for summer.

After surfing for more than 30 years and running his surf school since 1998, first in Venus Bay near Port Lincoln, he usually teaches about 300 people over the Christmas season.

Kingston said the focus of his classes was to support people of all abilities rather than only the young and fit to negotiate the waves.

He said the west coast of South Australia where his Venus Bay camp was based had “500km of some of the best surfing coastline in Australia”.

“Surfing is my passion, and I have made it my mission to bring the surfing experience a little bit closer to everybody,” he said.

“I think surfing is a form of meditation, when you are out there in the ocean everything else just washes away, you are living in the moment.”

Regional Showcase is supporting South Australia’s rural communities by telling their stories and celebrating their successes. We will compile these stories and then later in the year we will celebrate the best of South Australia’s regions at a special showcase event.

Voting is now open for the Regional Showcase People’s Choice Award 2020. Click here to vote for this story.

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