ADVERTISEMENT

Train Surfing

Near death in Padang, Sumatra
Reading Time: 4 minutes

Padang, Sumatra, 1996. When surf-travel was all about getting barrelled, and taking a few images on Kodak film. Memories were postcards bought, diary entries and those photographs that traveled around the world, preceding your arrival. A time when the mission wasn’t all about YouTube clips and a viral video, boosting your fans or your Twitter and Insta followers. Nor was it about killing goats and filming it for a naïve consumer market. A time that when you bought a coke the shop owner poured it into a plastic bag and stuck a straw in it, keeping the bottle. A time when we simply knew that fresh ginger and garlic tea kept the mosquitoes at bay, and keeping mosquitoes away could be the difference between life and death. We had just come back from camping in the village at HT’s. A local girl had died while we were staying there. She had contracted malaria,

There was a Kentucky Fried Chicken in Padang that sold rice with every meal. The chickens were smaller than usual KFC fare, but they weren’t bush meat, so it was ok. After a few weeks of living in a village on an island in the Mentawais, to stumble upon a KFC was like heaven. In crusty boardies and torn shirts we arrived and ate two meals, three meals at a sitting; gorging on fried chicken skin, gristle, and a bit of white meat. We washed it down with beer after ice-cold beer, thin and sunburned after too much time in the sun and too much time without correct nutrition. Red Bulls were sold in warm little glass bottles, with no fizz, and under a different name.

We were hanging out, near the main road, alongside a motorbike hire bazaar. A western band, Colour me Badd (remember ‘I Wanna Sex You Up?’) had played the night before in Padang, and there were plenty of young girls around, who had all hired scooters for the weekend. They were returning them that morning, and we were these foreign surfer dudes, sprawled on the grass alongside, in boardies and vests and brown skin and pink scars, smoking gudangs, drinking bintangs, with cheap Aviators covering our eyes.

Two girls arrived in a jeep, stopped and started talking to some of us. They were University students who wanted to practice their English; the Pommies amongst us took over and started chatting. We were flying out to Bali that afternoon, and all we needed was a lift to the airport. Our boards were already at the airport, languishing in a back room, and all we needed was a bit of space for the five of us, along with our backpacks.

Learning a foreign language is great fun when you start getting a few words right and getting to grips with sentence structure. There’s a kind of feverish excitement when you start talking in a foreign tongue. Much giggling and gudang smoke ensued as we headed off to the airport in the girls’ little jeep.

At some stage amidst the laughter and the frivolity, we noticed that we were no longer moving. The jeep had come to a standstill amidst our chatting. As the conversation died, and we started to look around, we could hear the faint tinkling of bells. I looked from the back through the gap between the two front headrests, and through the front window. I could see an elderly Indonesian parking attendant, and he seemed to be trying to climb out the front of his cubicle. He was looking at us and shouting and screaming and the bells were getting louder. More people started screaming at us and pointing and a few split seconds stretched for an eternity as the airport world stared at us with all their mouths open.

Sitting on the sideways bench seats in the back of the jeep, I turned my head around to trace the noise of the bells, and looked into the eye of the devil.

A colossal black train was bearing down on us, at full speed, as we sat, motionless, across the train lines surrounding the old Padang airport. I started screaming, someone else joined in, the girl turned the key desperately in the ignition and we heard the engine whirr into life, slowly.

‘Seven people dead in horror train smash’ is what the Jakarta Post would have headlined the next day if the engine had not started. As it kicked, she tramped on the pedal and lurched forward a few meters and the jeep rocked sideways and nearly fell over from the whoosh of the train, and the engine died again as we slowly freewheeled down into the parking area, traveling past the shocked parking attendant, who stared vacantly at us, as we drifted in at about three kilometers an hour. The pretty Indonesian girl, who wasn’t driving, started crying and screaming hysterically.

When we had finally settled in the airport to take stock, we soon realized that our boards were locked in some storage room and we probably weren’t going to get them out before the plane took off. Then we were told that the flight had been delayed by a good few hours as Colour Me Badd were on the same flight, headed for Bali. There would be press and media on the flight as well. The flight was going to be full, and chaotic.

All of these things would have irritated us no end in the sweltering heat of the old airport in Padang, but we weren’t thinking about that. At that stage we weren’t even talking.

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

The surfing world's introduction to the blossoming career of the 18-year-old WA charger.

The WSL CT surfer reconnects with her Danish heritage.

The apprentice Plumber with a knack for installing himself in roaring Pipes.

The surfboard glassing and manufacturer caught fire on Sydney's Northern Beaches last week.

ADVERTISEMENT

PREMIUM FEATURES

Why Milla Coco Brown’s unfiltered, full-throttle approach has everyone paying attention.

The tight-knit brothers redefining the scope of a modern surfer.

Three decades behind the lens with Andrew Buckley.

Joel Parkinson 2001 - Tavarua Island portrait and Cloudbreak carve.

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