|
D.C. native puts nation's capital on surfers' maps
Examiner Staff Writer Published: Monday, August 29, 2005 11:18 PM EDT
A little to the east of Maui - across 2,300 miles of the Pacific Ocean and about 3,600 feet of dry land - lies the East Coast of the U.S., a surf destination one Washington native wants the world to see through his eyes.
"I was making that same trip in the '60s, looking for waves. In 1998, after commuting the Beltway for years and surfing on weekends, I left my job of more than 30 years in Washington to fulfill my lifetime passion for surfing."
The films do more than show good footage of his favorite sport, said Tony Sasso, a lifetime surfer, city commissioner for Cocoa Beach, Fla., and director of the East Coast Hall of Fame Surf Museum there.
"Most people don't appreciate the riches and culture of East Coast surfing because most of the magazines and movies come out of the West Coast," Sasso said. |

|
Photo Courtesy of Spyder Wright |