By 1965 the South African Surfing Association was formed. In recent years surfing associations have tried to encourage more black South Africans to take up surfing.[3][4][5][6][7][8]
South Africa was banned from most international surfing competitions due to apartheid.[9][10][11][12]
This beach is the home of surfing in South Africa and may be the oldest surfing venue in Africa. Heather Price, a Zimbabwean-born woman, is considered to be the first ever person recorded stand-up surfing in South Africa, with her photo appearing in a local newspaper in 1919.[13][14]
Jeffreys Bay is one of the five most famous surfing destinations (no.2 on one "best in the world" surfing list) in the world. It hosted the annual Billabong ProASP World Tour surfing event at Super Tubes, though its 2024 edition was cancelled and the event's future remains unclear.[15]
^Bloggs, Fred (1 January 2001). "Chapter 39: Surfing". In Zavalza Hough-Snee, Dexter (ed.). Routledge Handbook of Global Sport. Routledge. ISBN9781315714264.