ADVERTISEMENT

Dimity Stoyle, Five Feet High And Rising

"I think all the girls did really well out there and we're definitely going to get better the more experience we get."
Reading Time: 5 minutes

ASP Women’s Rookie Dimity Stoyle is having a good year. You’d think if you were unsponsored and without a coach life would be difficult, but this chick is still winning heats. In challenging conditions at the Fiji Pro, she took home 3rd place defeating World Champion Carissa Moore in the quarter finals. Dimity’s not afraid to get dusty in the shaping bay and has just finished another board. As the only girl on the world tour riding for JS, a shaper who boasts Parko as one of his best team riders, it’s safe to say Dimity knows about surfing.

Tracks sat down with Dimity ahead of Swatch Women’s Pro Trestles.

Surfline comments on the Women’s Fiji Pro?

We all got pretty slammed by Surfline after the Fiji Pro; they released some bad articles about us. What I don’t think they understand is we [the current womens world tour] have never had the chance to practice at a wave like that. This is just my first year on tour but I know they haven’t had Fiji or events in Hawaii for so long. Even the qualifying series is held in a bunch of 2ft beach breaks and everyone just expected us to know how to surf it.

Surfing Cloudbreak out of contests?

Even if we were freesurfing at Cloudbreak, there would be 50 other guys out there and I wouldn’t get a wave anyway. If there are no guys in the water you can slowly warm up and take off where you want.

The wave itself?

Cloudbreak is the most difficult wave I’ve ever surfed. I’ve spoken to so many people about it and even those guys who’ve charged it before say it’s one of the most difficult waves to surf. The webcast front angle definitely didn’t look as big as it did from the side. When I watched it after even I thought the waves didn’t look huge, but when I remember back to some of those drops I took…I think all the girls did really well out there and we’re definitely going to get better the more experience we get.

Your board breakdown for Fiji?

I actually borrowed a board for the big day, the biggest I had with me was a 6’0” and I just didn’t feel comfortable on it. I borrowed a 6’4” Mayhem from Steph’s caddy; her husband was one of the lifeguards at the event and he caddied for me, giving me tips on the break. The wave is so powerful and the wind creates a lot of chop on the face, you need a pin tail just to be able to hold in.

That Quarter Final with Carissa?

Andy King and I talked about it after and we thought that Carissa pretty much had a meltdown in that heat. She had so many people with her telling her what to do and where to sit; in the end she completely lost it. All through the event in Fiji I was just thinking about everything. I was figuring out strategies on my own. Before certain heats, like the one against Carissa, I thought about how I was going to do things to get scored and it worked! But I can’t give you all my secrets…

You don’t have a coach?

It’s not so much a choice; I think it just happened that way because I haven’t had a major sponsor that provides a coach. The majority of girls on tour travel with a coach and constantly have them by their side to tell them everything. I like to figure stuff out on my own. When I’m away at events I want to be able to think for myself and keep things simple, focus on getting those two good waves.

Sponsorship?

I’ve stressed about sponsorship so much over the last two years, it’s just been tiring! When I made the tour this year I was so excited! I’ve just stopped thinking about it and I’ve been having the best year! I’m not worried about it anymore because I’m getting paid to do the tour events. If sponsorship comes then that would be an awesome bonus to help pay for travel, but I’m happy, I’m getting paid to surf.

Female surfers getting paid for Playboy?

I’m really not into the whole Playboy thing. I just don’t think female surfers need to do that. I fully respect all the girls who have done photo shoots with STAB and ESPN, the girls are really beautiful and if they have the body then why not flaunt it! They are just working and getting paid. Sponsors want that. I think we should be celebrating how surfing makes women beautiful. It’s such a great healthy lifestyle!

Uploading daily?

We are definitely caught between a rock and a hard place. For most of the girls it’s their job to upload photos and respond to emails, always be on their phones. But when we were all in Fiji and staying on the same island at the same resort, I joked that we wouldn’t have seen each other if we didn’t have to go to the restaurant for Wi-Fi! If the Internet had been in our rooms we would have stayed there! I can’t help but think 10 years ago everyone would have been sitting around a campfire talking.

Surfers giving something back?

Surfing is one of the most natural things you can do, and we get to travel to amazing locations to do it. We definitely have a huge opportunity to give back to communities we surf in. We’ve started talking with Jessie Miley Dyer about something all of the top 17 girls can do together at locations we visit.

Shaping your own boards?

I seriously love shaping! It’s so much fun! I was actually really itching to get back into the bay as soon as I got home after Mexico. I’ve just hand shaped a new board; I copied the outline from one of my JS boards for small waves and I’ve got it over in America. I’m so excited to ride it! The first time you take your own hand shaped board into the surf and get that first wave is the best feeling ever! I’ve hand shaped about five boards now, mostly fun boards. This time I wanted to shape something I’ve actually been riding in competitions.

Does understanding how shaping works create advantages over the other girls?

I don’t get it, there’s some girls in the contests that honestly don’t know what a concave is. It’s so important to know how it all works. Shaping boards and riding all different styles from single fins to alaias has helped my wave knowledge so much – you always have to read the wave and surf it in the right part on those boards. If you watch Steph surfing she has the most incredible wave knowledge. She just always seems to find the barrel! She’ll be over at a beach break in New Zealand and just find a tube and come out. The ability to read waves well is definitely a quality of a world champion.

The new Tour?

The new ASP has been really good, there is so much support for women’s surfing and I think they are really focused on growing it as a sport. The same crew all travel to the same events, so the staff are all on tour with us. I think it’s all heading in the right direction.

When you’ve grown up on the Sunshine Coast there’s no shortage of waves, or boards to choose from to ride the ever changing ocean. Contest jerseys may have replaced alaia sessions for the moment, but no buzzer or 30 minute heat appears to change the abosulte stoke Dimity has for surfing, and life.

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
SUBSCRIBE TO TRACKS
A bi-monthly eclectic tome of tangible surfing goodness that celebrates all things surfing, delivered to your door!
SUBSCRIBE NOW
SUBSCRIBE TO TRACKS
An eclectic tome of tangible surfing goodness that celebrates all things surfing, delivered to your door!
SUBSCRIBE NOW

LATEST

If your filmer tells you to get back out there, here's why you should listen.

One of the defining surf films of the '80s is heading back to the big screen for special screenings in Bangalow and Noosa.

Meet Thariq, the Mentawai grom who grew up with surfing's version of Disneyland right on his doorstep.

ADVERTISEMENT

PREMIUM FEATURES

With his dizzying acrobatics, focused ambition and astute demeanor; Dane Henry is rapidly emerging as the ultimate modern surfer.

West Australian photographer, Adam Serra, is hooked on shooting the waves and culture of this vibrant, Japanese city.

How two waves at a city beach made Tommy Myers a cult hero and helped complete his full circle journey as a pro-surfer.

Surfing’s ‘No Go’ zones have always been hotly debated.

TRACKS PREMIUM

Get full access to every feature from our print issues, read classic Tracks issues from the 70s, 80s and 90’s, watch all of our classic films & more …

TRACKS PREMIUM

Get full access to every feature from our print issues, read classic Tracks issues from the 70s, 80s and 90’s, watch all of our classic films & more …

CLASSIC ISSUES

PREMIUM FILM

YEAR: 2008
STARRING: JOEL PARKINSON, MICK FANNING AND DEAN MORRISON

This is the last time the original cooly kids were captured together and features some of their best surfing.

Their rivalry helped push each of them onto the world stage but their friendship endured. This is the last time the original cooly kids were captured together and features some of their best surfing.

A film by Shaggadelic Productions

This is a Premium Feature only available to Tracks subscribers.

Existing Subscriber?  Login here.
YEAR: 2011
STARRING: DAVID RASTOVICH, OZZIE WRIGHT, CRAIG ANDERSON, RY CRAIKE, DEAN MORRISON & MORE

Seven free surfers embark on a voyage to boldly go where no man had gone before.

Seven free surfers embarked on a voyage to boldly go where no man had gone before.

Not that long ago, in an island chain far, far away, seven free surfers embarked on a voyage to boldly go where no man had gone before. Equipped with an array of surfboards, a packet of crayons and two ukuleles, their chances of success were slim. In pursuit of perfection, they were forced to navigate under the radar of a fleet of imperial boat charters. Despite numerous obstacles, the rebel alliance of wave-riding beatniks continued to make Galactik Tracks into a new surfing cosmos; their search for a Nirvana reaching its climax when they arrived at… The Island of Nowhere.

A film by Tom Jennings

This is a Premium Feature only available to Tracks subscribers.

Existing Subscriber?  Login here.
YEAR: 2014
STARRING: DAVE RASTOVICH

The film features the enigmatic and free-thinking Dave Rastovich at home on the Far North Coast of NSW.

Gathering is a short film from independent filmmaker Nathan Oldfield, the creator of the award-winning left of centre surf films Lines From a Poem, Seaworthy and The Heart & The Sea. The film features the enigmatic and free-thinking Dave Rastovich at home in the sacred playgrounds of the Far North Coast of New South Wales. The film explores Rastovich’s ideas around how the tension between the industrial and the natural in the surfing world unfolds in that place. Ultimately, Gathering celebrates how diversity and difference in ecosystems, relationships and surfing contribute to the preciousness of life. Gathering is easy on the eyes and ears and Tracks Magazine is proud to present it to you. Nathan Oldfield is a maverick, a filmmaker who wants a surf movie to say something important, to move us and make us grateful for the sea around us and the life within us. His films are quiet, beautiful and brimming with sacred purpose. Tim Winton, Acclaimed Australian Novelist

This is a Premium Feature only available to Tracks subscribers.

Existing Subscriber?  Login here.
YEAR: 2015
STARRING: MIKEY WRIGHT, LOUIE HYND, OWEN WRIGHT, CREED MCTAGGART & CAST OF THOUSANDS

In this quintessentially Australian film, the two friends ride waves with the nation’s best surfers.

From dreamy, north coast points to nights beneath starlit desert skies follow Luke Hynd and Mikey Wright as they embark on a surfing odyssey. In this quintessentially Australian film, the two friends ride waves with the nation’s best surfers, down beers with cantankerous locals and visit some of the more innocuous nooks of the continent’s rugged fringes. Wanderlust lets you rediscover the country and the coastline you love. Be careful, you might even be inspired to toss it all in and embark on your own journey around The Great Southern Land.

This is a Premium Feature only available to Tracks subscribers.

Existing Subscriber?  Login here.
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

PRINT STORE

Unmistakable and iconic, the Tracks covers from the 70s & 80s are now ready for your walls.

Tracks