A Mountain Town with a Surfing Problem

America’s best kept surfing secret? Missoula, Montana. While the town’s doesn’t have any beachfront access, the store has cultivated a loyal following of dedicated wave junkies. Photographer caught up with the crew this summer for an unexpected day of endless rides on Idaho’s Lochsa River.
Photo: Kevin Benhart Brown doing an ollie on the Lochsa River. Before Marchesi visited Montana, he scouted the area by phone and learned that 鈥淢issoula is turning into a surf town,鈥 at least according to Brown. That statement was enough to convince Marchesi to buy a ticket.

Ian Stokes making a top turn. On a good ocean wave, surfers can hope to catch eight to 12 waves in a session. On a river? “These guys were getting weeks of wave time in one short session,” Marchesi says.

Strongwater’s Luke Rieker, Ian Stokes, and Kevin Benhart Brown prepare the wetsuits and boards for a chilly surf session. The guys’ dedication shows through in their trip odometer鈥攆our hours of driving time for two hours of surfing.

These guys don’t just try and stay on the wave like some river surfers I’ve seen. They’re “taking river surfing to a new level,” says Marchesi.

Surfing Pipeline, the Lochsa River’s best wave and a favorite spot for Missoula-based surfers.

Marchesi got to the river more than an hour ahead of the surfers, who arrived just shy of 9 p.m. But the dark skies didn’t diminish their ability to read and cut up the waves.

Kevin Benhart Brown shapes a board in Strongwater’s workshop, the only mountain surf shop in the country. Many of K.B.’s boards take their maiden voyages in the nearby Clark Fork River.

When not snagging action shots (like this one of Luke Rieker), Marchesi attempted to catch waves of his own, but soon found himself earning the record for most time held underwater. “Of course, the rookie had to have the record,” Marchesi says. “I was under, being pushed by the current and as much as I pulled on my leash, to use the board’s buoyancy to come up, nothing happened. The current didn鈥檛 want to let go.”

The rides can last for minutes at a time鈥攚ay longer than anything you’d get in the ocean.

Luke Rieker smiles after a long ride in the Lochsa river.