BALBOA PENINSULA — Caleigh Haber popped up on a blue foam board wobbling but steady, riding tandem with Rip Curl Pro Pipeline Master Champion Jamie O'Brien. The 6-foot-2 pro surfer had just flown in the night before from his home on the North Shore of Oahu to hit the waves of Newport Beach with a group of kids like Caleigh who suffer from cystic fibrosis.
For two hours Sunday morning Caleigh, 16, of Rancho Santa Margarita and eight others, with families and friends in tow, ripped up the surf near 28th Street in Newport Beach. Each surfer received individual attention from Newport Surf Camp as well as professional instructors like O'Brien.
Ranging in age from 8 to 24, the novice surfers had a fun afternoon in the waves. Turns out surfing or any activity in ocean water helps improve respiratory functions associated with cystic fibrosis, according to a study in the New England Journal of Medicine. This hereditary disease creates thick mucus along the lungs and respiratory passages, causing severe infections. Salt in the ocean air and water helps clear mucus from the lungs by drawing moisture out from the tissue.