A morning of perfect waves in Las Flores

The waves don't stop in the preview of Surf City El Salvador ALAS Pro


Special coverage presented by Surf City - El Salvador Travel - Las Flores Resort - Photos by Demarsan - Shotss

The waves in Las Flores continue to be a must-see for the Surf City El Salvador ALAS Pro preview. The break had another morning of tubes in the first section and then walls for maneuvers.

Sebastián Williams, Sol Aguirre, Gabriel Vargas, Bryan Pérez, among others, were some of the highlights of the session.

Below is the evidence:

Bottom of Amado de Jesús Alvarado in a double overhead.
Lucas Pérez del Solar taking out the fins in a section that most mortals would avoid.
It can be said that Peruvian Lucas Pérez del Solar is in good shape.
Kirra Silver chased the swell from Peru and continued to enjoy it.
The first section of Las Flores is a personification of Indonesia in the Central American sea.
Lorena Fica flowing.
Roberto Araki slapping a nice, solid Salvadoran right.
Sam Reidy never misses the Salvadoran classic.
Lucía Indurain will be a tough nut to crack in the open women's tournament; she loves El Salvador.
Alex Suarez's classic and radical backside attack.
Lorena, in another, taking out keels.
Jessica Anderson marking 11:30.
Esnaider Parrales Airlines.
Ericson Ortiz Airlines.
Another one from Lorena Fica, applying pressure.
The state of Colorado in the United States doesn't have waves, but it does have surfers like Max Ascher, who get their boards up there.
Darshan Antequera continued to sell the 11:45 in critical, like yesterday.
He looks like Sebastian Williams in Barra de la Cruz, but he is Sebastian Williams in Las Flores.
Another one who won't miss this stage: Tiago Carrique.
JJ López is the leader of the ranking and shows why in the photo.
Max Ascher in another, attacking fluid.
You can tell that Dorian Torres is happy and comfortable in this one, right?
For the Guatemalan international, Lucas Pérez del Solar started off by putting in a good tube, for the El Salvador international, too. A good habit for the Peruvian.
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