This is the happy pod from the BBC World Service, I'm Nick Miles, and in this edition, I've met some of the greatest people that would have never been in my life without this crazy little sport.
We're doing the dogs catching waves with their humans.
There were two little boys, no older than six or seven years study the side of the road, and they saluted the team when they went through, and that will stick with me.
The british rescue teams revisiting Morocco a year on from the devastating earthquake.
And could we soon have healthy chocolate?
Over the past couple of weeks, we've been treated to an array of sports through the Olympic and Paralympic Games.
But here's one you might not have heard of before.
Dog surfing.
The World Dog Surfing Championships happened earlier this year in California and attracted a crowd of thousands.
Two people that took part were James Wall and his dog, Faith, and David Fasoli with his dog, Isa.
The happy pods.
Holly Gibbs spoke to them and started by asking them how they got into the sport.
You guys can't see me, but I actually have one hand.
And I was doing some inner peace work in Cruz, California, and Iza was just a puppy at the time, and she learned the waves.
And then we got her in the pool, and then I had a board and it just became one with us.
And how about you, James?
I lost my previous dog, a cocker spaniel, and then I got a new dog.
And with that dog, I always said, hey, I'm gonna do better with this dog than I did the last.
So I saw on tv dog surfing, and thought, all right, that sounds like a crazy idea, but let's do it.
So we started out with Raven, and she didn't do too well.