Skip to main content
C$28 Fast Rate Shipping  Earth Is Now Our Only Shareholder  
Read Our Work in Progress Report

Read Our Work in Progress Report

Our 2025 Work in Progress Report dives into all the new, fun and kinda weird ways we’re trying to lighten our load on Earth, our only shareholder.

Discover

C$22 Fast Rate Shipping

C$22 Fast Rate Shipping

Orders are shipped within 1-2 business days and arrive within 3-5 business days.

Orders are packed and shipped within 2 business days. Orders placed on weekends or holidays are processed on the next business day.

More Details

Earth Is Now Our Only Shareholder

Earth Is Now Our Only Shareholder

If we have any hope of a thriving planet—much less a business—it is going to take all of us doing what we can with the resources we have. This is what we can do.

Read Yvon’s Letter

Patrick Wilson Surfs Ireland

Patrick “Patch” Wilson  /  Nov 21, 2011  /  Surfing, Sports

Autumn in the North Atlantic turns the west coast of Éire into a veritable slab lab.

Eyeing up a promising looking swell chart and coming to the end of a massive restoration project at work, I jumped at the opportunity to hitch a lift in my friend Lowey’s van and get back out to Éire for some waves again. The swell was looking big and the winds not quite right, but I had time on my side and have found over the years that to get the good days here it’s best not to be in a rush and just to hangout and take the place in.

Autumn time and the big lows that sweep across the Atlantic throw swell straight at the west coast of Éire along with a lot of weather. In between weather fronts, when the wind is switching around and easing off a little, you can score perfect slabs, points and beaches if you know where to look on the right tide, wind and swell direction. It’s a gamble of: Should we go here and check this slab or here instead and check this point? But when things come together, it’s well worth the waiting and searching.

Hanging with Fergal Smith, Tom Lowe and Mickey Smith is inspirational stuff. Those boys charge hard, and Mickey is always on hand to capture some crazy images whether it be in the water, in the thick of it, or on land looking for a new angle. It’s been a pleasure to watch and be involved over the last six or seven years as these boys have evolved into some of the best slab surfers in the world.

Cruising around looking for waves here is a different ball game than a lot of the places I have been. Sometimes you will walk 30 minutes through fields full of farm animals and peat bogs before you get to ride any waves, which for me just makes my surf all the more satisfying and generally a lot less crowded. Some of the spots are suffering from litter and general waste. The government makes people go to a depot and pay to get rid of their waste and recycling, which leaves the system open to abuse. In some places, shorelines are covered in plastic bottles and bags. Fishing nets, buoys, old crab pots and line, disregarded by fishermen and the public, are a commonplace sighting on your walk out to any point or slab. After most surfs, we started spending half an hour just picking the plastic bottles up for recycling. Within no time at all, we had collected crates full of bottles.

Surfing slabs definitely comes with its hazards though as I’ve found out before, and now and again on this trip. At one point, I had to wait to see if a heavily swollen ankle and stiff knee were going to be the calling card for the end of my trip after a solid beating into the bottom of a shallow slab. Or, what I hoped would be the case, I’d rest up and get to go again in a few days time with another promising looking week ahead for swell and wind.

Taking a few days out was a treat, and I got to take in the surroundings of Fergal’s house, which is a couple of miles in from the coast and set atop a big old hill looking back into a lush valley of rolling hills and Scots pine trees. His neighbours are all super friendly and will quite happily sit back and talk story for hours on end as seems to be the trend in Éire. Nothing more important than a good yarn. The best pubs here are people’s front rooms, and when you enter the landlord will often come out from the back somewhere, after having dinner with his family, and proceed to pour the best pint of Guinness you will ever have.

In the end, I was lucky enough to experience an amazing run of swell and good winds while on this trip and rested my ankle enough to set a line and run for the shoulder on a few. A couple of sessions really stand out at a slabbing left that is so perfect and so dangerous at the same time. On an 8- to 10-foot day, I managed to snag one of the heaviest waves I have ever had out here, thanks to the boys. Also memorable: Another session a few days later when it was just about paddleable and super perfect with a crazy light turning the barrels a golden green colour.

Thanks Éire for yet another amazing trip, and thanks to the crew here for being so hospitable and making me part of the family again.

Patagonia Ironclad Guarantee Icon

We guarantee everything we make.

View Ironclad Guarantee
Patagonia Ironclad Guarantee Icon

We take responsibility for our impact.

Explore Our Footprint
Patagonia Ironclad Guarantee Icon

We support grassroots activism.

Visit Patagonia Action Works
Patagonia Ironclad Guarantee Icon

We give our profits to the planet.

Read Our Commitment
Popular searches