Getting barreled: how many ways are there to say it? | Photo: WSL

Getting barreled is surfing’s ultimate experience. It’s the definitive and brief moment in which a surfer and Mother Nature align in sync with the universe.

Believe it or not, there’s a book entirely dedicated to dissecting how surfers perceive time in the barrel.

The author, Cynthia M. Peterson, asked a group of passionate wave hunters five questions related to their awareness of time while inside the water cylinder.

The book is a wonderful reading adventure through that rare and special adventure surfers have the privilege to enjoy.

But how many terms, expressions, slang words, short phrases, synonyms, and designations has surf culture developed for the concept of getting barreled?

After a thorough investigation through books, videos, movies, and online forums, we’ve gathered and compiled an interesting and curious list of semantic phraseology that defines surfing’s absolute thrill.

Time Barrel: How do Surfers Experience Time in the Barrel?

Synonyms for the Barrel

Let’s start with the most basic concept: the hollow, cylindrical part of the breaking wave. Here we go:

Tube – the “hollow interior of a wave” or “tube riding,” meaning riding inside the barrel;

Pit – the most hollow part of a barrel-shaped wave, sometimes where the surfer is inside;

Keg – another slang term for the barrel;

Green room – a metaphorical phrase referencing the interior of the barrel, as though the surfer is in a special “room”;

Curl – an older term, sometimes used to refer to the falling part of the wave;

Cave – occasionally used in the same sense as the tunnel‐like space formed by the wave; 

Pipe – even though it immediately brings to mind the North Shore of Oahu’s Banzai Pipeline, it’s actually a reference to the liquid barrel;

Curtain – a less-used word to describe the chandelier of water falling and covering the surfer under the shade;

Cone zone – an Australian term for the water cylinder;

Pitted, so pitted: surfers do everything that must be done to get shacked | Photo: WSL

Synonyms or Phrases for the Act of Riding the Barrel

Now that we’ve identified the subject, it’s time to get us inside the barreling wave’s verb. It’s action time:

Barreled – it’s the straightforward word combo for the moment the surfer finds themselves inside the hollow tube of a barreling wave;

Tubed – riding in or inside the tube;

Pitted – surf slang meaning the surfer is deep inside a pit-like barrel;

Slotted – being perfectly positioned inside a green room;

Shacked – an alternative slang word for getting covered up;

Kegged – somewhat less common perhaps, meaning the same experience;

Wrapped – a less frequent, but used form of being wrapped up in the barrel;

Covered up – when the lip of the wave breaks over the surfer, partially barrel‐like;

Buried – sometimes used informally for being deep inside the saltwater tube;

Coned – an Australian way of saying you’re inside the barrel;

Green room: a very literal way of describing the wave's hollow cylinder | Photo: WSL

Other Surf Slag Related to the Barrel

Finally, let’s see a few practical examples of tube-related expressions surfers often use in conversation:

“He was deep in the barrel, but then the lip closed on him.”

“That inside bowl was serving up some gnarly pits.”

“She got barreled and then got spat out of the tube.”

“That wave’s tubing all the way across the reef.”

“He took off and pulled into the pit as soon as he could.”

“I got properly pitted on that one – full stand-up barrel.”

“She was submerged in the green room and doggie-doored the exit.”

“The barrel’s spray spat him out of the pit.”

“She got piped and then pinched immediately after.”

“You could drive a truck through that keg!”

“He got properly shacked and popped out clean.”

“They were getting slotted all morning. It’s firing out there.”

“You could park a car in that pit.”

Have we missed a term or expression? Please send us an email and let us know which one.

Are you curious about surfing’s rich vocabulary? Here’s the most comprehensive list of surf lingo.

Words by Luís MP | Founder of SurferToday.com


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