SUB MENU
 WCT
 WQS
 AMATEUR
 AT RANDOM

NEW STORIES
In conjunction with our annual Surfboards Issue (On newsstands Nov. 18), we will be posting one interview per day with a craftsman who contributed to the issue. This time: New Smyrna’s Mark Wooster.

Surfing's Most (Un)Wanted: Surfing con-artist strikes again, SDPD and MoneyGram unhelpful

SURFING Magazine’s North Shore 2008 / 2009 Couch Tour takes a lay day

In conjunction with our annual Surfboards Issue (On newsstands Nov. 18), we will be posting one interview per day with a craftsman who contributed to the issue. This time: M10’s Geoff Rashe – based in Santa Cruz.

NOAA makes its decision on the Monterey Bay Marine Sanctuary; Maverick’s will remain a “seasonal” PWC zone

NEW VIDEO
The teenage new wave of women’s professional surfing stole the show at the Reef Hawaiian Pro at Haleiwa today

What does the future of surfboard shaping hold? Watch the quest for the perfect surfboard with optimum response through shaping innovations

The Rip Curl Pro Search 'Somewhere In Indonesia' stayed true to the event's DNA: the World's best surfers in the World's best waves.

Nat Young takes 1st place at the 2008 Rip Curl Grom Search Nationals in Salt Creek California. Nationals went down in pumping grom head high surf on November 2, 2008. Watch all the highlights from the surfing competition.

The Vans Triple Crown of Surfing is responsible for making or breaking professional surfing careers. 2008 Will be no different

Peter Troy: 1940 - 2008

By Nick Carroll

Peter Troy, who has died unexpectedly on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast, was one of a vanishing breed of surfer; one who by good fortune, timing, and a bit of a wild streak, cut a completely original path.

Peter was born in Hamilton, Victoria and moved with his parents to Torquay in 1948, when it was still more or less a small country town; his father ran the local general store. He was enthusiastic about the water from early youth, surfed Bells Beach with fellow local Owen Yateman on blow-up surf-o-planes when he was 10, and became one of the Torquay surf club’s top board paddlers, winning a gold medal in the surfboard relay at the Vicco championships. As a kid he witnessed the fabled arrival of the US and Hawaiian surf team for the 1956 Olympic surf carnival on Torquay main beach; when they rode their little Malibu “chips”, it blew his mind. “I was selected with Vic Tantau to give a boardriding demonstration… we were riding the sixteen foot hollow boards and thought we were doing quite well until these guys came along and just changed it all in about an hour.”

By his early 20s, Peter’s career path seemed set: chartered accountancy in Melbourne. Then, after a side project showing surf movies paid off better than expected, he decided to catch the boat to England, in the hope of winning the European titles and getting a wildcard invite to the Makaha event in Hawaii. It kicked off one of surfing’s all-time personal odysseys. Over the next few years, Troy wore coral in the head in a Pipeline wipeout, introduced surfing to Brazil, travelled virtually the entire coast of Africa (38 separate countries), South America, Indonesia (helping pioneer Nias among other surf zones), and most of the Pacific Ocean’s many island chains.


- advertisement -    
 

All this literally a generation before surf camps, boat trips, or anything else we might today consider “surf travel”.

In a recent interview, Peter explained some of the feeling of being one of surfing’s first true grass-roots ambassadors: “Well, to me it was a total opening, because people had never really met a travelling surfer …. And it just kept on going. For some reason or another you’d look at the map and think ‘Oh I’ll go on down there’ and when you got down there you met other people and you started to acquire languages and you started to acquire experience …you met some guy and he’d say ‘Well why don’t you go out to the Galapagos, you know the Chilean navy can take you out there, here’s a little letter,’ and he’d write it on a table napkin or something and you’d give it to the admiral of the Chilean navy and you got a free trip in those days. And each time you became more extroverted in what you did, the easier it was to get to the next place.”

Years down the line, he made a map of his travels; they took in nearly 150 countries.

For a man who prized his freedom, Peter was able to anchor himself surprisingly well. He owned surf shops, made some canny real estate investments, and was a driving force behind the Australian Surfing Hall Of Fame. He also acted – and made himself available as – one of the sport’s honorary historians. In recent years he settled on the Sunny Coast, living right opposite Mudjimba – the small offshore island a tantalising reminder of the joys to be found by getting off your home beach.

Peter Troy died of a blood clot in his lung on the night of September 29, 2008, leaving his wife Libby. He was 69 years of age.


 



Reader Comments 
Posted Tue Sep30, 2008, 7:04 PM — By Phil Davison
from Phil Davison, journalist, London, England. for Nick Carroll. Nick, any chance of finding out Peter Troy's date of birth. I'm hoping to honour his memory over here in the obits columns of the Brit national media. Many thanks Phil davisonphil@aol.com
Posted Wed Oct 1, 2008, 1:22 AM — By Brad
Nick, have there any biographies on Peter, if so are you aware of title/publisher? Cheers
Posted Wed Oct 1, 2008, 7:25 PM — By Nick Carroll
Hi all, a correction to the above piece -- Peter had told me he was born in 1940, but in fact his birth date was 15 November, 1938. Hope this helps, Phil. That birth date explains a lot, I think, about his wanderlust. There was a big difference between kids born just before or during WW2, and the next wave of kids who arrived post-war (the so-called Baby Boomers). Peter's Dad was away at war for a couple of years when he was very young, and the first thing they did when Dad came home was move house to Torquay. Imagine that might have had some influence on the youngster. Brad: no bios of Peter...quite a few articles though. I think he was considering writing a book himself; for all I know there's a ms in a drawer somewhere in his home office
Posted Tue Oct 7, 2008, 8:26 PM — By benedicte
Peter Troy had a great farewell. Most of the funeral guests were wearing colourful shirts, as family requested, in honour to his colourful life. Check out the Sunshine Coast Daily about his funeral http://www.finda.com.au/story/2008/10/08/peter-troy-farewell/
Posted Wed Oct 8, 2008, 3:00 AM — By Chris Bowden
Pete was so much to so many people. But to my brother & I, plus quite a few others I suspect, he was a wise old sage who you could always rely on for stability and guidance, when you were going through those percieved rougher stages that grommethood can throw at you. I was priveliged to have had you in my life Pete & you made me a better person. Thanks and RIP.

Add Comment
Name (Required):
Email (Required, will not be shown to public):
Comment (Required, max chars: 1024):
You have characters left.
 

Type the characters you see in this picture

  


 

   
THE BEST WAVES!
THE BEST SURFERS!
THE BEST PHOTOS!

AND NOW THE BEST DEAL: SUBSCRIBE TODAY AND GET 1 YEAR OF SURFING MAGAZINE FOR ONLY $12.00!

Take advantage of this special offer-act now!



GIVE A GIFT
 
Email:
First Name:
Last Name:
Address Line 1:
Address Line 2:
City:
State: Zip:
Select a payment option:
Charge my credit card
Bill me later
Do you have a promotional coupon code?
Enter Code:
Please send me special offers and exclusive promotions from Surfing's premiere partners.
 


Wanna Surf
Surf Forecasts
Free Surf Cams

 

Surf Offers
Boat Trips
Surfboards
Surfing Wetsuits
Surf Apparel
Travel Gear
Surfing Videos