Sergio Barreda
Sergio Barreda (30 April 1951 – 25 April 2002), known as Gordo Barreda, was a Peruvian surfer and surfboard shaper. He was a 4-time Peruvian national champion (1968, 1969, 1970 and 1974) and competed internationally one of the most important was the Duke in Hawaii, and was one of Peru's first shapers. He also open the first surf shop in Peru in his mother house in Atahualpa street.
Barreda learned to surf in Miraflores at Club Makaha. His mother Sonia supported his surfing from an early age. A story is told of the school director telling her that Sergio, aged 13, was being distracted and he had to study or surf, not both, and she replied "Sergio will surf." Married Eva Terry and had 2 daughters Diana and Claudia the whole family surf and spend the summers in Cerro Azul.
As a shaper he made boards under the "GB" logo. His surf shop, which started in the garage of his home and with the help of his wife Eva, was the first in Lima. He also put together a team of young surfers who competed under his GB logo and a number of whom followed in his footsteps to be Peruvian national champions too.
In 1979 he discovered the now well-known break of Cabo Blanco in northern Peru.
In 2002 he suffered a heart attack surfing Cerro Azul, and had surgery for it a few days later in Miraflores, but died of a further post-operative heart attack, aged 50. His ashes were spread at sea.
References
- Peruvian Surf Legend Gordo Barreda: 1952 - 2002 by Jose A. Schiaffino (Curator of the Kon-Tiki Surfboards Museum), and translated into English by Hal Waller, in SURF Magazine
- Without a Map: Northern Peru's dusty secrets article by Gonzalo Barandiaran at surfline.com