Nova Scotia

Dartmouth woman making waves in the surfing world

Surfer Claire Parsons is heading to El Salvador to represent Canada at the ISA World Longboard Championship.

Claire Parsons is heading to El Salvador for the world longboard surfing championship

A woman in a black wetsuit stands up on a surf board riding a wave.
Claire Parsons is representing Canada at an international surfing competition in El Salvador this May. (Karl Funk)

Claire Parsons has spent over a decade catching waves on her board. Surfing has helped her through some hard times.

She took her first lesson with East Coast Surf School at Lawrencetown Beach, N.S. Recently, she placed third at a longboard surfing qualifier in Tofino, B.C. 

Now, she's headed to El Salvador in May to represent Canada at the ISA World Longboard Championship.

Parsons said she had some struggles about five years ago and surfing allowed her to let go and deal with life's challenges.

"It has this power to really help you with your mental health," she said. "It makes you kind of just disconnect from what's going on, and you're able to kind of just focus on catching a wave."

A woman wearing a wetsuit smiles and stands on a beach holding a blue surfboard
Parsons got her start in surfing when she took a class at the East Coast Surf School at Lawrencetown Beach. (Jill Salter)

In 2006, Cape Bretoner Michelle Richards represented Canada in the same competition.

Things were a lot different in the surfing world back then.

Richards said there was no women's longboard surfing category when she competed. She had to surf in men's categories, both to qualify for Team Canada and in the world championships.

Her experiences, along with a conference she attended on inclusive sport, led her to create the Nova Scotia Female Surf Mentorship program around 15 years ago.

"This created a safe space for women to communicate and mentor each other in surfing in Nova Scotia," she said.

A woman surfs a wave in a blue and green ocean.
Michelle Richards lives in Cape Breton and has created programs over the years to try to make surfing more inclusive in Nova Scotia. (Adam Hill)

Since then, she's also helped create surfing programs for Black and Indigenous people in the province.

Richards and Parsons have worked together, sharing their love of surfing through these programs. Parsons has seen for herself how surfing is becoming more inclusive.

"An Asian Canadian surfer, it is sometimes hard for me to … connect with and see a reflection of myself in surfing as well, but times definitely are changing," said Parsons.

A woman in a bright red toque smiles and holds up a large bronze medal.
Parsons recently placed third in the CANAM longboard championships in Tofino, B.C. (Jill Salter)

Heading into the world championships, Parsons has the support of the Nova Scotia surfing community behind her.

"Claire, you've done an amazing job and keep it up," Richards said. "Your training has been an inspiration to everybody."

Surf Canada director Dom Domic said in an email that the organization is "very stoked" that Parsons is heading to the championships.

Parsons said she's looking forward to the competition. "I'm really excited to showcase what I'm able to do on a surfboard."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Victoria Welland is a reporter with CBC Nova Scotia. You can reach her at victoria.welland@cbc.ca