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Chairman of the board: Laird Hamilton, from surfing  legend to lifestyle guru.
Chairman of the board: Laird Hamilton, from surfing
legend to lifestyle guru.
Photograph: Jennifer Cawley
Chairman of the board: Laird Hamilton, from surfing
legend to lifestyle guru.
Photograph: Jennifer Cawley

Laird Hamilton's age-busting 10-point plan to supercharge your body

This article is more than 5 years old

Laird Hamilton found fame and fortune surfing the world’s biggest breakers. But, as he tells Tim Lewis, his daredevil streak could easily have led him down more dangerous paths as a young man. Plus, he reveals his life secrets for staying ahead of the curve

Laird Hamilton has ridden many of the tallest, heaviest, fastest and longest waves ever conquered by a human being. Even people who don’t like him – of which there are a few – have to concede that he’s one of the greatest big-wave surfers of all time, if not the greatest. Even if you don’t have the slightest interest in surfing, there’s a decent chance you’ll have seen mesmerising stills or footage of Hamilton streaking down waves the size of a seven-storey building or, somehow, miraculously emerging from the wreckage of one that has curled over and smashed with the force of a Hollywood explosion.

But Hamilton, who is now 54, and who has been catching waves for half a century now (yes, he started when he was three years old) is both the archetypal surfer and not – his wife Gabrielle Reece, a professional volleyball player and model, notes that he has never said the word “dude” in his life. In a sport famed for its laid-back vibe, he has always been driven, even ruthless. Hamilton has become a millionaire many times over, splitting his time between Malibu, California and Kaua’i, Hawaii, because he has become that most un-surfing thing: a brand. You can wear Laird Apparel, eat Laird Superfoods and drink the same “creamer” he uses to jack up his coffee.

Underneath it all, though, Hamilton still goes out on his board pretty much every day. And the tale behind how he became the most famous surfer in history is a remarkable one. “I think I’ve had a few lives already,” he tells me on the phone from Kaua’i, one of the wettest spots on earth. “I know I feel sometimes that I’m maybe like a cat.”

To start at the beginning, Laird’s father was off the scene before his first birthday; Laird eventually tracked him down when he was 21, but there was little interest on either side to pursue a relationship. His mother, Joann, moved from San Francisco to Hawaii and the story goes that three-year-old Laird was messing around in the surf on Pūpūkea Beach one day when he got the attention of a surfer, Bill Hamilton, then 17. Joann and Bill clicked, Joann got a husband and Laird got a stepfather or, as Laird puts it now: “I had an incredible mother and I had a superhero father turned into ultimate rival.”

Early on, Laird found solace in water that he didn’t have on land. With his blond hair and fair skin, he was relentlessly bullied by the Hawaiian kids at school. Today he would have probably been diagnosed with ADHD, but back then he was just considered wild and out of control. Bill Hamilton was young, had a fierce temper and struggled to deal with his often errant stepchild. At least once he struck him with a pipe. “Going through it at the time, not so wonderful,” Hamilton recalls, “but what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger. And the fact is that being an outcast has allowed me to do all the things I’ve done. So in the end, I can only be thankful for that.”

In Take Every Wave, a recent documentary made about his life, Hamilton’s half-brother speculates that without surfing, Hamilton would have ended up in prison. “There’s probably some truth to that,” he laughs. “Definitely the ocean was my saviour. It saved me from a lot of destruction. Or I’d say self-destruction.”

When Hamilton was in his late teens, a friend introduced him to the photographer Bruce Weber and he did some modelling. He was cast as a cartoonish baddie in the surfing film North Shore. However, while other surfers raised their profile by taking part in competitions, Hamilton never did. He says now that he hated the idea of being judged, but there’s another theory: he couldn’t stand losing. He guffaws. “Well, I’d definitely agree that I’m a terrible loser. And competitions would have been disastrous. I think my nature of competitiveness is such that it’s not meant to be used in sport. It’s meant to be used in survival.”

Riding giants: Laird Hamilton surfs Teahupoo in Tahiti. Photograph: Alamy

So, instead of world titles, Hamilton made his name with outrageous stunts. In August 2000, on the Teahupo’o break in Tahiti, he came down what became known as the “heaviest” wave ever ridden, or the “Millennium wave”. It was an outrageously dangerous feat: the wave crashed on to a shallow-water reef; had Hamilton been thrown from his board, there was no escape route. Surfer magazine ran an iconic cover with just the words “oh my god…” on it – what everyone said, apparently, when they saw the photograph. “A real common question I get is, ‘Tell us what it’s like right before you’re going to drop into some giant wave,’” says Hamilton. “And it’s like explaining a colour if you’ve never seen a colour. How many guys have been out there on these things doing what we’re doing? Maybe a couple.”

Hamilton became a superstar, but behind the scenes his life was unravelling. He met Reece in 1995 during a TV interview and, eight days later, Hamilton left his wife and they moved in together. “It’s part of what the ocean teaches you,” explains Hamilton. “You have to make hay when the sun’s shining.” But by the time of the Millennium wave, he was drinking two bottles of wine a night and it was looking like he and Reece were heading for divorce.

In the end, they pulled back from the edge. “Relationships take effort and you have to decide if you want to participate,” says Hamilton. “We had to make decisions about wanting to be together or not be together and what that looks like.”

Hamilton has two daughters with Reece, and an elder daughter from his previous marriage; the children are home-schooled. He denies that he has mellowed, but concedes that he is maybe “more focused” these days. “I’m not buckshot right now, I’m more like a sniper,” says Hamilton. He’s in ridiculous shape for his age, especially considering that he’s broken most of the bones in his body at some point. Hamilton puts that down to an attritional daily regime that calls for alternating ice baths with saunas, and esoteric exercises such as working out underwater with dumbbells. His secret, he explains, is “the ability to suffer consistently”.

In the water, Hamilton, who popularised tow-in surfing and stand-up paddle boarding, has latterly become a pioneer of foil boarding: a hydrofoil extends from the base of the board, much like the latest America’s Cup boats. Instead of surfing, he appears to fly over the waves, reaching speeds that are impossible with the friction of traditional boards.

“Last summer I rode a wave for six-and-a-half minutes in Peru, which is probably as long as anybody has ridden a wave ever,” says Hamilton. “And then we’re riding waves where we’re going over 50 knots, which is as fast as probably anybody’s been on a wave ever. So when you’re at this point in your career and you’re doing things on waves that you have never done and possibly other people have never done – that’s a pretty spectacular thing.”

How to stay at your peak

Laird Hamilton’s fat-burning, age-busting, fun-loving tips for getting the most out of your body

‘There’s so much stigma and weirdness around being older. Get over it – and keep moving’: Laird Hamilton with his friend Don Wildman, who is 83. Photograph: Mark Von Holden/WireImage

1 Forget age. Just keep driving the car I take better care of myself today not as an accommodation to age but to maintain continual high levels of performance and just to feel good. I have a friend, Don Wildman (above), who’s 83 – an absolute stud who works out with weights, mountain bikes, paddles and surfs every day. Don’s a living example of what it’s like when you keep driving the car. What happens is we decide we’re old and we just stop, and everything stops working. There’s so much stigma and weirdness around being older. Don and I were watching a tennis match and the announcer was saying, “He’s 34 years old!” Get over it – and keep moving. Don’t wait until you have a health scare or collapse. Get off your butt and feel better now.

2 Take care of everyday priorities The stuff you do every day – your sheets and towels, the food you put in your body – these are your priorities. Not a fancy car or fancy clothes. For instance, I used to drink red wine every day – nothing like a good Bordeaux – but haven’t had a sip of wine or beer in nine years. Sugar is not good for your body and alcohol is one of the biggest culprits. Alcohol doesn’t taste good anyway. The reason people drink it is to have some sort of sensation, right? So if you’re not into that sensation, it’s a waste of time. It’s a discipline thing, too. As proof to myself that I had the willpower, I don’t do it. Bottom line: if you want your rocket to fly, put rocket fuel in it. I want to be able to do certain things at a certain level.

3 Be a fat-burning monster I don’t eat energy bars when I’m out on the water all day. In fact, I don’t need to eat anything. My body runs off its body fat. That’s because I’m paleo. I consume hardly any refined sugar, a few raw dairy products and almost no wheat or grains. I eat plants and animals. I grew up that way in Hawaii. Paleo researcher-kineseologist Paul Chek taught me that your body has enough fat on it to run for days... and that sugar fouls up your machinery. So after I cut alcohol, I began eliminating sugar and sugary fruit. I refined it over the past two years listening to primal lifestyle guru Mark Sisson and other paleo people. A triathlete can go for hours on a little almond butter and their own body fat. But if you eat refined carbs, your blood sugar spikes up and down. I love espresso. You could give me five shots of espresso, a quarter stick of butter, a quarter stick of coconut oil and other fat, and I’ll drink that. I could go for five or six hours and not be hungry, because I’m burning fat.

4 But don’t be a zealot I have a saying: “Every-thing in moderation, including moderation.” I make it achievable, not stressful for me and people around me. I’ll use a little coconut sugar. I’ve got friends who have to stick to a diet at all times, and the stress of that almost overrides the quality of the way you eat. My eating is not such a hassle that I can’t go anywhere.

5 Golf-ball your bare feet I grew up barefoot in Hawaii and didn’t give a thought to walking on gravel, but people who’d been in shoes their whole life couldn’t even cross the driveway. The feet are loaded with nerve endings and are the key to balance – and I’m in the balance business. In fact, we all are. I also believe the earth is charged with an electrical frequency that matches your nervous system and immune system. Bare feet allow us to absorb that energy. To restore dexterity and balance after I’ve been in shoes too long, I warm up by standing with one foot on a golf ball. I roll it around, poke it, put weight into tender spots. It’s amazing how your system will be stimulated through working your feet.

6 Watch your back I’ve had back issues and injuries over the years. When your back goes out, you’re out of commission. Give it relief with stretching and inversion, and strengthen it with core work. Someone once said, “If you did 20 minutes of headstands a day, you probably wouldn’t age.” Gravity is always pulling us down, and inversion fights it. I do it on a teeter board or an upside-down hammock. I do planks and rotational exercises with medicine balls and kettle bells on a Swiss ball. Any natural pick-lift-twist-drop movement pattern, like picking something off the ground and putting it on a shelf, builds core stability. Best one of all? Stand-up paddleboarding.

7 Do the water workout from hell To me, swimming laps in a pool is like punishment – being in a cage. Out of my disdain for lap swimming, I’ve developed what in my opinion is the greatest exercise routine you can do: a no-impact, high-intensity strength and cardio workout that is a cross between swimming and weightlifting. Holding small waterproof dumbbells, jump into a fairly deep pool and sink to the bottom. Then jump up as hard as you can to pierce the surface and gulp some air. As the weights pull you back, blow it out. Exhale as you fall, inhale after you shoot up. The exercise blasts your legs, which consume five times the oxygen as your arms. It’ll make you a stronger swimmer without having to swim laps.

8 Get role models It’s monkey see, monkey do. It’s hard to be the monkey that doesn’t see. We all need an example, a road map, to tell us what’s possible – a Jack LaLanne [the US fitness surperhero]. Am I going to fret that I’m old and washed-up when I’m mountain biking and paddling alongside Wildman, who’s 83? He lives, wears and eats a youthful lifestyle. And, by the way, who does Wildman use as his role model, since all his friends are dead? Me! So get younger buddies, too. When your friends get older and say: “I want to go play some bridge,” you tell them, “I don’t think so – I want to go jump off the bridge.’”

9 Be innovative in all aspects of your life Coming up with new ideas keeps me young and excited. [Hamilton and Wildman invented the GolfBoard, a kind of skateboard for golfers that won the PGA’s New Product of the Year award in 2014.] I think travelling to unique places gives you an opportunity to be active.

10 Make it fun Having as much fun as humanly possible is one of the keys to staying young, so find activities you love. I forget about time when I’m out there on a stand-up paddleboard. Activities are better than the gym because you’re not looking at the clock. You’ll do more reps in nature than you’ll ever do in the gym. You’ll go for hours and hours. And you’ll be thinking healthy thoughts – not about how old you are. As told to Roy Wallack

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