You paddle out at dawn, the water is glassy, and the sets are just starting to peel down the point. You’re feeling good, got your stick waxed, your leash is tight, and you’ve got a tube of sunscreen jammed somewhere. But where exactly? In the old days, that answer was simple: you didn’t. You either stuffed it down the front of your trunks, hoping the salt water didn’t burn your navel, or you left it on the beach to bake in the sand. That little, often overlooked feature of our daily surf uniform—the pocket on a pair of boardshorts, specifically the old-school baggy style—is more than just a place to lose your car keys. It is a quiet revolution in surf culture, a design element that tells the story of how we went from beach bums to functional watermen, all without losing the stoke.
Think back to the classic baggies of the sixties and seventies. Those voluminous, no-nonsense fly-front shorts were a statement of pure freedom. They had a waistband, a drawstring, and often a single, cavernous pocket on the front. That pocket was a hazard. You’d drop your car keys in there, and they’d become a lead weight, slapping against your thigh on every duck dive. A wallet? Forget it. You’d be surfing with a damp, salty brick of cardboard that looked like a map of the inside of a washing machine. The function was secondary; the form was the whole point. You were a surfer, and you looked the part. You didn’t need to carry anything because life was simple.
But life on the beach got more complex. We started needing wax combs, reef-safe sunscreen sticks, and maybe a few bucks for a post-session taco. The classic baggies just weren’t cutting it. You’d see guys trying to stash their cell phone in a towel on the beach, only to watch it get buried by a rogue wind gust. The pocket on the baggy was a tempestuous relationship. It was there, but it couldn’t be trusted. The gear we used was evolving, and the humble boardshort had to step up.
Enter the modern pocket design, a piece of engineering that’s as crucial as the fin box on your board. We aren’t talking about those tiny, decorative pockets on surf trunks that are barely deep enough for a stick of gum. We are talking about the proper, deep, drain-able, zippered, or flap-closure pocket that has become the standard for any respectable pair of baggies. This isn’t about looking like a Swiss Army knife of a person. It’s about keeping your car key from becoming a permanent resident of the ocean floor. The revolution came with the mesh drain. A pocket that holds water is a pocket that drags. It turns a smooth paddle into a tug-of-war with your own shorts. The mesh solves that. It lets the water flow out, turning a potential sea anchor into a barely-there place to keep your wax comb.
Then came the zipper. Not the cheap, corroding metal kind, but the chunky, plastic, corrosion-proof zipper that seals the deal. That little zipper is the difference between a casual beach walk and a frantic search for a lost key fob in the dark, cold, wave-churned shorebreak. For the traveling surfer, or even the local charging the evening glass-off, that zippered cargo pocket in your baggies is a sanctuary. It’s where the rental car key lives. It’s where the headlamp goes for that last surf under the moon. It’s a mental peace of mind.
The evolution of the pocket has also changed how we move. The new baggies are still loose and airy, keeping that classic silhouette and the freedom of movement for a full rotation on a floater. But the pocket is now a low-profile hero. It’s designed to sit flat against the leg, using a curved seam or a hidden flap to keep your stash from bulging out like you’re smuggling a sea urchin. This matters when you’re supine on your board. A lumpy pocket creates a bump in the waterline, and for a surfer chasing that last ounce of glide, that bump feels like a speed bump. The best modern baggies have the pocket positioned so it doesn’t interfere with the tuck, the pop-up, or the paddle.
This change reflects a deeper shift in the surfing lifestyle. We are still the free souls chasing the endless summer, but we are also smarter. We understand that being prepared doesn’t make you a kook, it makes you a waterman. The ability to walk from the parking lot, across a reef, and into the lineup without a beach bag is the ultimate efficiency. That is the gift of the modern surf trunk pocket. It lets you be connected to the wave, but also connected to the rest of your life, if only by a single, dry key.
So next time you pull on your favorite baggies, give a nod to the pocket. It’s not just a hole in the fabric. It’s the unsung gear that holds the stoke together. It’s the difference between a session ruined by a sunburned nose and a session remembered for the best barrel of the season. In the language of the coast, that pocket is pure gold. It’s the place where convenience and the classic vibe finally learned to paddle together.