You don’t need much to go surfing. Just a board, a bathing suit, some wax and an ocean. But for professional surfer and vlogger Ben Graeff (aka Ben Gravy) the ocean isn’t a requisite part of the formula.
Earlier this year, Gravy surfed in Alaska, completing a three-year endeavor to catch a wave in all 50 US states. In doing so, he became the first known person to tick them all off. Surfing in all 50 states is as difficult of a task as it sounds, and Gravy experienced plenty of ups and downs in the pursuit. Then there are those obvious, lingering questions like, where the hell does one “surf” in a flat, oceanless state, like Nebraska?
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“I ended up surfing in a wave pool in a water park,” Gravy admits. “In the beginning, I didn’t want to do any wave pools, I wanted to keep it 100 percent natural. By the time I got down to it, Nebraska was so impossible and so flat that I literally just had to settle for a wave pool.”
Finding waves to surf in landlocked states was obviously the biggest challenge of all. Rivers and lakes can offer up surprisingly good waves from time to time, but they can’t be counted on in every single state.
Gravy has long been infatuated with weird waves, but in recent years he’s found a niche for himself in the surfing world as the guy who is known for seeking out what traditional surfers might call novelty waves. Gravy regularly surfs on – and films, because he’s a YouTube vlogger with a channel of 90k+ subscribers – abnormal waves that break behind ferries or in unlikely places as well as unique waves like the one under the Golden Gate Bridge or Kelly Slater’s man-made swell.