To watch or not to watch when surfing? Specifically, to wear an Apple Watch or not when playing in the ocean. So many pros and cons of surfing with an Apple watch. Letâs cover them.
I have never surfed without a watch. I used to wear a Casio, then a Shark. I was always the girl other surfers would ask if I had the time. I was a late adopter of the Apple Watch (I was using a Fitbit for my fitness stuffs), but I bought it specifically because of surfing. Not a surfing app or whatnot, but to get any ADT (thatâs house alarm for you) alerts when my cats activated motion detection and the police would be called out. You do not want to know.
I always assumed that if you owned a smartwatch, and it was waterproof, thereâs no reason not to wear it out surfing. So when a debate on the subject ensued, I was genuinely surprisedâbut now I understandâŠ
Some of us call it the ultimate surf safety device. Others believe the lineup is sacred and should be screen-free. And some of us just donât want to risk losing a $300 (soon to be $3,500 lol) gadget to a rogue wave.
đ Emergency calls & safety
Probably the biggest reason people love wearing their Apple Watch is the SOS feature and the ability to call and text from your watch.
Amy, one of the Girls Who Canât Surf Good, remembers:
âI broke my leg surfing last summer. I dragged myself to shore and used my watch to call my husband. I never go out without it now.â
This is the kind of story that turns skeptics into believers. If you’re alone or out of phone range, the cellular feature can literally save you.
I personally use the walkie-talkie feature when Iâm back on the beach. My husband and I cycle to the surfâno phonesâso itâs easy to connect if we drift apart.
đ Surf stats & movement tracking
Whether you’re using Strava, Dawn Patrol, or just counting your active minutes, the Apple Watch becomes a little surf diary. I use it to log how long I surfed each day and add it to my journal.
â° Dawn patroller hack
Kristy sets an alarm for her morning surf before work:
âIt buzzes my wrist to let me know when I have to get out.â
No more pulling back your wetsuit sleeve to squint at your 2008 waterproof Casio.
đŠ Shark alerts (yes, really)
Some folks mention Sharktivity or similar apps. Not foolproof, but another layer of awarenessâespecially if you surf in sharky waters.
đș Surf, pay, repeat
Biggest pro for meâaside from the cat/police thingâis the wallet-free surf beer. Tap to pay at the bar post-sesh? Game changer.
𫣠Losing the damn thing
Lisa said: âMy husband lost his during a wipeout. Miracle of miraclesâit washed up and someone returned it. But heâs too scared to wear it now.â
Several surfers are afraid to wear theirs unless itâs under the wetsuit sleeve. Way harder if youâre surfing in the tropics, half-naked.
You can use:
đ Saltwater damage
Apple claims water resistance to 50m (or 100m for the Ultra), but some watches still died.
Rebecca shared: âMine died in less than 20 minutes. Saltwater fried it.â
Pro tip: If yours dies, do not mention saltwater to Apple support đ
đ”âđ« Tech kills the vibe
Becca knows what she wants: âI surf to disconnect. I donât want to be reachable. Thatâs kind of the point.â
Some wear a rescue whistle instead. Others turn off all notifications and put the watch in theater mode so the screen goes dark.
Ask yourself:
If yes to mostâcool, go for it. Just make sure itâs:
đ Final word
Some of us want surf to be the last sacred offline zone. Others just want to know they can call for helpâor pay for beer (me!).
Do what feels right for you. The waves donât care.