Surfing Jeffreys Bay is one of the five most famous
surfing destinations in the world and hosts the annual World Surf League (WSL) surfing event at Super Tubes during July. Spectators and professional surfers from all over the world flock to this event. In 2015,
Mick Fanning had an encounter with a shark two minutes into the
J-Bay Open finals in Jeffreys Bay. Fanning was in the water with
Julian Wilson during the final of the
J-Bay Open 2015 when what is suspected to be a
great white shark became entangled in his surfboard leash. Fanning punched the shark and tried to wedge his board between the shark and his body, and he emerged from the attack physically unharmed. ;The Jeffreys Bay Surf Break A very long, fast, tubing right hand point break breaks along the west side of the bay. The break is regarded as one of the best right hand point breaks in the entire world, in both consistency and quality, in season. It has been divided up into several sections, including, from the top of the point,
Kitchen Windows,
Magna tubes,
Boneyards,
Supertubes,
Impossibles,
Tubes,
the Point, and
Albatross. "Supertubes", which itself breaks for about 300m or more, is regarded as the best part of the wave. On rare occasions (large wave sizes, wide-breaking waves, and even swells),
Boneyards can link up all the way to
the Point for a ride over one kilometre long. Optimal size is considered to be from about 4 to 10 feet (Hawaiian scale), or about 8 to 20 feet wave faces. The initial discovery and promotion of the wave is curious. Another nearby right hand point wave at
St. Francis Bay was first idolised and promoted in the surf movie
The Endless Summer in the 1960s (although both Jeffreys Bay and St. Francis Bay were probably surfed much earlier). Surfers who travelled to the area soon stumbled upon the nearby Jeffreys Bay
surf break, which was found to be not only a faster, more powerful, and hollower wave, but also much more consistent. == Tourism ==