Carlin Soule Memorial Polar Bear Dip rings in the New Year with salty fun
By Paso Robles Press · Tue Jan 01 2019
By Patrick Pemberton
[dropcap]T[/dropcap]ake a stroll to Cayucos on New Year’s Day and you might think you’ve entered what Rod Serling used to describe as another dimension. The annual Carlin Soule Memorial Polar Bear Dip is perhaps one of the wildest events you’ll come across in San Luis Obispo County — a holiday tailor-made for surrealists, oddballs and goofs. But it’s also an unforgettable taste of what we collectively call “the SLO Life.” If you want to symbolically wash away any unpleasant memories of 2018 — or you simply can’t abandon the previous night’s New Year’s Eve celebrations — there are three (official) polar dip options for New Year’s Day. The Avila Beach dip, which begins at 11:30 a.m., is relatively informal with few rules (One you might want to remember: “No birthday suits allowed”). Typically featuring gentle little waves, slightly warmer water and a smaller (though still robust) crowd, the Avila plunge is ideal for the beginning dipper. In nearby Pismo Beach, the 3rd annual Pier to Plunge, beginning at 8:45 a.m., offers a healthy start to 2019, combining a 5K beach run with an ocean dip, as each runner heads straight to the water after crossing the finish line. The first 250 finishers will win a beanie, while the first place man and woman will win a training session with Nike-sponsored marathon runner Jordan Hasay. But the grand poo-bah of all local polar dips is clearly in Cayucos, where more than 3,000 have been known to gather for this sobering (or not) Pacific plunge. While the climax of the event is the dash into the surf, the real highlight occurs pre-dip on the beach, when a bizarre cast of characters from around the county and beyond gather in a party that’s a mash of New Year’s Eve, Halloween and Mardi Gras. The event began in 1981, when the late Carlin Soule — bored with the slow New Year’s days — invited a few friends and his employees at the Way Station to dive into the ocean. The next year, the event grew to 55 people. Sadly, Soule succumbed to cancer before the eighth annual dip. But his event continued to grow, and today it is a nippy must on any SLO County bucket list. Costumes are encouraged at all plunges, but the Cayucos dip, beginning at 10 a.m., features the most outrageous. Here you might find superheroes and aliens congregating with Elvis for a photo op that even the most sensational tabloids couldn’t have staged. Best of all, some of the best costume models sport four legs and a tail. As the noon dip nears, spectators pack the pier and wait for a second New Year’s countdown. But while the first announces the arrival of the new year, this one reminds us to have fun with it.