NEWS

Thousands descend on Cocoa Beach for Surfing Santas

Wayne T. Price, and Michelle Mulak
Florida Today

COCOA BEACH — There is no official record category for a Surfing Santas event.

If there were, Cocoa Beach probably could have claimed it Thursday at the seventh annual Surfing Santas event, held just off Minutemen Causeway. Organizers distributed 648 wristbands to people who wished to ride out and surf dressed as St. Nick.

Santas as far as the eye could see. More than 6000 people showed up to watch hundreds of surfing Santas take to the waves in Cocoa Beach at the end of Minutemen Causeway for the 7th Surfing Santas of Cocoa Beach.  The event raises money for Grind for Life. The event has grown since George Trosset and his son George and daughter-in-law Britteny went surfing in Santa, snowman and  elf costumes seven years ago in 2009.

But if there was a category for a community getting together on a balmy Christmas Eve morning to show enthusiasm, generosity, fun, Christmas spirit and yes, quirkiness — one couple was carrying around a black chicken named Muppet for goodness' sake — Cocoa Beach probably would take home that record as well.

Consider there were an estimated 6,000 people, both surfers and spectators, by 10 a.m. as 45 skydiving "Santa Clauses" landed on the beach in two zones marked "South Pole" and "North Pole."

And there was "Balsa Bill" Yerkes, on a stage near a wall of various-sized surf boards leading the crowd in Christmas tunes on his ukulele just as the parachuting Santas landed on the beach, some of them gliding in just a few feet over the heads of spectators.

"This is so cool," one woman screamed as she took in the atmospherics of the morning.

"I feel like we're extras in a movie," said Todd McGill, who along with his wife, Belinda, were here from Ithaca, New York.

They decided to see what a Cocoa Beach Christmas looks like. After they saw it, they were unsure how they were going to describe to their friends in upstate New York.

"This is unbelievable," McGill said. "I've never seen anything like it."

Tandem surfers Bear Wozick and Cindy Davis warm up on shore.

Neither had Norm Myers of Coventry, Connecticut, who was in Florida to watch his son, Tommy, a tight end at the University of Connecticut, play Marshall University in the St. Petersburg Bowl on Saturday.

Myers isn't a surfer and had no plans to join the hundreds of surfing Santas in the somewhat choppy ocean. He did, however, don a full Santa suit and enjoyed hamming it up as people took his photo next to surf boards.

"I'm here to have fun," Myers said. "This is spectacular. What a way to celebrate Christmas."

Few people Thursday probably were happier than George Trosset, who founded and organized the first Surfing Santas event at his beach house a few miles south of Minutemen Causeway. Each year it grew a little bigger and Trosset started using it to raise money for a local cancer support group called Grind for Life as well as the Cocoa Beach Surf Museum.

Aussies say they own global Surfing Santas crown

It got so popular that Trosset had to move the venue from his house to the beach off Minutemen.

Last year, the Cocoa Beach event raised more than $10,000, mostly through the sale of Surfing Santas T-shirts. No word yet on how much was raised at this year's event, but sales of the T-shirts appeared brisk.

One goal of Trosset's has been to get the famed Guinness Book of World Records to recognize the event. Guinness, however, doesn't have a category for Surfing Santas. Last week, an Australian/New Zealand online gift retailer called RedBalloon found a loophole of sorts.

They organized the world's largest "surfing lesson" at Bondi Beach, a suburb of Sydney, Australia. On Dec. 15, RedBalloon had all the participants — 320 surfing "students" — don Santa attire. Guinness bit and handed them a record.

"The Australians aren't holding it very long, I know that," Trosset said, just before emcee, Hunter Joslin, had the crowd chanting "USA, USA, USA."

Unofficially, Trosset has spent the last year researching various Surfing Santa events around globe and he hasn't found any bigger than his.

Cocoa Beach Mayor Dave Netterstrom added to the festivities, and the quirkiness, by donning a shiny gold suit and Santa Claus hat and posing for dozens of photos. Netterstrom said his first visit to Cocoa Beach was 40 years ago and he remembers how enjoyable it was for him and his siblings to see someone dressed as Santa Claus walking the beach.

Thursday there were hundreds of them — walking, surfing and sky diving.

"Cocoa Beach, Santas and surfing is about fun and feeling like a kid again," Netterstrom said. "The timing is perfect - the morning of Christmas Eve.  Shopping is done. Traveling is done. Work is done.  You take a huge breath of sea air, relax, enjoy and let the holiday begin."

Contact Wayne T. Price at 321-242-3658 or wprice@floridatoday.com.

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