The world's biggest wave, explained
And how it's transformed a Portuguese town.
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NazarĂ©, Portugal was for centuries just a small fishing village known for its fishermen and dangerous seas. Then one day in 2011, a pro-surfer named Garrett McNamara strapped on a surf board and rode a 78 foot wave right off its coast. It was a new world-record for big wave surfing and the moment that changed NazarĂ© forever. Now, NazarĂ© is the capital of Big Wave surfing. The secret to NazarĂ©âs giant waves lies under the surface, where a huge underwater canyon funnels swells right up to its cliffs, then launches that energy straight up, sometimes 60, 70, or 80 feet. Many surfers visit in the hopes of catching a 100-foot wave.
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