{"database": "surfing", "table": "posts", "rows": [["104808", "486", "How was your surf today?....share your stoke!", 2683, "Chilly Willy", "Oct 4, 2016", "2016-10-04T06:15:53-0400", "My local break in Seaside Park did a complete 180 after a week of churning NE slop.  Last week, you could only surf at dead high tide due to the impossibly shallow sandbar stretching the length of the town.  I showed up yesterday morning to hit the 9:30 AM high tide, but the nice lines rolling in weren't even breaking.  I waited around for two hours thinking it might turn around.  I saw a scrawny little fox running along the dunes while I waited, and I even made a trip back over the bridge and back to get some donuts and coffee -- but no dice on the waves.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nI came back later around low tide (foolishly without my surfboard thinking it would be too shallow) and saw beautiful rib-high crumbling lines rolling in with a guy on a longboard gracefully cruising and cutting some nice, fluid turns all the way from the outside and ending up way inside.  The NE slop clearly redistributed the sand bars into a much better configuration.  I scrambled back to my car and ran home for my board.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nI'm so glad I ran home.  I rode my Phillips pig for two hours and had a blast, especially when the nip-high sets would roll in.  What a simple pleasure to have a nice open face and carving a nice cutback with that board.  I surfed for a while with one of my coworkers, which was nice and better than surfing alone.  We had drifted down a block over those two hours, but my last wave was a long one that took me the entire block back to where we started.  Perfect."]], "columns": ["post_id", "thread_id", "thread_title", "post_number", "author_username", "post_date", "post_date_iso", "post_body"], "primary_keys": ["post_id"], "primary_key_values": ["104808"], "units": {}, "query_ms": 0.7330000007641502, "license": "Public Domain"}