Advanced Surf Guiding at Dfrost
Here at Dfrost, itโs all about surfing and fun. Founded in 2008 with a mix of business sense and pure passion for waves, weโve come a long way.
Loredana, the co-founder of Dfrost Almugar explains how everything started and how the surf guiding evolved during the years.
Back then, we did everything ourselves: loading guests into the car, driving from spot to spot, explaining conditions, guiding, laughing, surfing. Sometimes three sessions a day, fueled only by Snickers and light lunches on the beach.
More than a decade later, weโve built a strong team of surf teachers and head coaches, passing on all our knowledge to ensure the best surf guiding in the area.
Taghazout Surf Guidingย
Mohamed co-founder and passionate surfer for life only has to glance at the horizon to know where to go. When guests arrive frustratedโthinking the wind is cancelling the waves โ we always know the right bay, time and place, the hidden corner, the wave that works.
As surfers, we all know the feeling: packing the board, checking surf forecasts, driving from spot to spot, only to realize two hours laterโyou still havenโt surfed.
Thatโs why weโre here. To guide you to the best surfing in Taghazout. To share our knowledge and ensure safety. To give you access to the best boards and spots and above all, to make it fun.
Advanced Surf Spots Around Taghazout
Boilers: Looking for a fast, hollow wave surfable from 1โ3 m? Get ready for adrenaline, wipeouts and the most beautiful scenery.
Banana Point: Prefer a beautiful, slower, peeling wave from 0.5โ4 m? Perfect for longboarders and cruisy rides.
Killers: Want a hard rush? A fast, long wave for advanced surfers, surfable from 1โ5 m. (The name doesnโt come from the waveโitโs from the whales passing by in summer!)
Anchor Point: The crown jewel. A long, peeling, open wave surfable from 1.5โ10 m, allowing endless cutbacks on one ride. Weโve seen beginners tested, intermediates shouting with stoke, and during the legendary Hercules swell, three surfers catching 10 m monsters. If paradise exists, weโd call it Anchor Point.