Sea Lane, La Jolla – Horseshoes and Tourists

Written by mac meda on January 23, 2010 – 12:35 pm -

Dean Buriston, Jeff Mowery, Chris Hendricks and Richard Krug at the foot of Sea Lane - photo by Dean Burristion

L-R - Dean Burriston, Jeff Mowery, unknown, and Richard Krug checking out the beach at the foot of Sea Lane - photo by Dean Burristion

During summer you would have hard a hard time beating the lifestyle of the popular strand of Sea Lane beach in La Jolla California. The secluded beach was just another saga in the life of Mac Meda … it was not a place for the tourist to go. And it did become a popular place for that romantic  late night spot.

Many men became men and many a fair women lost their virginity; Sea Lane, romping in the sand did not mean building sand castles.


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Body Whomping – WindanSea, Sea Lane, Marine St

Written by mac meda on October 14, 2009 – 7:43 am -

This Whomper is just a split second from eating it at WindanSea. Photo by Brian Munzon

This Whomper is just a split second from eating it at WindanSea. Photo by Brian Munoz

WindanSea’s claim to fame was its surf.  Sea Lane and Marine Street’s claim to fame is its wicked shore break otherwise known as ‘whomp,’ or what locals dubbed when you body surfed it, Bodywhomping. The term originated in the early 1960s at the three beaches due to the sound heard when the wave closed out over you like cupping your hands and a single loud “ whomp” of  air rushed out due to the  heavy blow, slap or bang that the wave gives you.


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La Jolla Beaches – Sea Lane and Marine St

Written by mac meda on October 4, 2009 – 6:30 am -

Jack shows it how it  get done playing Volleyball at Marine St.

Jack shows how it gets it done playing Volleyball at Marine St. Photo by Dave Osborn and taken in the late 1960s

In La Jolla, there are a number of beaches one could go to. First was the fine and dirty sand of the tourist attractions of the Shores, the Casa Pool (which is a fricken seal preserve now) and the calendar settings of the Cove. All three were relative calm and good places to take the family and very tourististy.

And now you have WindanSea, Marine Street and Sea Lane Beaches, which are probably the whitest beaches in all of San Diego. Since day one they were dominated by Meda locals. WindanSea’s “Tourist Go Home” was a common tagging on the Pumphouse in the 60 and 70s.


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