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Two Tone Hibiscus – Large Surfboard

Here is a surfboard plaque featuring high quality construction. Sure to add coastal flair and sass to your home’s decor. This piece measures 18 by 7.5 inches and is made of wood.

Product Features

  • 18 by 7.5 inches.
  • Made of wood.
  • Made in the USA!
  • Great for Tropical, Coastal, Beach, or Surf themed decors!

Reblogged 7 years ago from www.amazon.com

California Board Company Surfboard (7-Feet)

7 Feet CBC Surfboard with PU Surf Leash and Tri-fin System

Product Features

  • High Density EPS
  • 100% Waterproof core
  • Molded in laminated wood stringers
  • Tri-fin system
  • HD Polethylene slick bottom

Reblogged 7 years ago from www.amazon.com

Best Choice Products Surfing Surf Beach Ocean Body Foamie Board Surfboard, White, 6′

Best Choice Products is proud to present our brand new 6′ surfboards. These boards are built to take the beating only new SURFERS can give, but soft enough that they won’t bite back. We offer some of the best boards in its class for performance and quality. Built to handle first time mistakes beginners make as they learn the skills in the shore break. They look good and feel great. We purchase our boards directly from the manufacturer, so you know you’re getting the best prices possible. New product with factory packaging. Features: very durable foam top. Slick HDPE high speed bottom. Great beginner board for adults and children. Measures 72″ tall, 20.5″ wide, 2″ thick. Free leash and traction pad. Removable fins for easy transport. Best price on the market guaranteed. Please note: our digital images are as accurate as possible. However, different monitors may cause colors to vary slightly. Some of our items are handcrafted and/or hand finished. Color can vary and slight imperfections are normal for metal as the hand finishing process as we feel, adds character and authenticity to those items.

Product Features

  • Free leash and traction pad
  • Great beginner board for adults and children
  • Removable fins for easy transport
  • Slick HDPE high speed bottom
  • Measures 72″ tall; 20.5″ wide and 3.5″ thick

Reblogged 7 years ago from www.amazon.com

Naked Surf | Anodized Aluminum Surfboard Display Rack | StoreYourBoard

Made by the leaders in action sports storage equipment, StoreYourBoard, this Surfboard Wall Rack is a premium quality rack guaranteed to impress. With its 100% 5052 Aluminum construction, you can rest assured this rack will be sturdy enough to meet all your storage needs and will never rust! Whether you are looking for a sleek, minimalistic rack to show off your favorite board, or something more utilitarian to get your boards up off the floor, this Surfboard Display Rack has you covered. One of the best features about this surfboard storage rack is its Anodized Aluminum finish – this provides a beautiful look that won’t scratch easily or leave fingerprints. (We also offer this rack in Matte black in a separate listing.) The two independent arms allows you to adjust the width of mounting which means you can easily fit shortboards, fish, or longboards. With so many great features, there’s no reason you shouldn’t pick up a Naked Surf rack for all of your surfboards! Includes 4 mounting screws and 4 drywall anchors.

Product Features

  • 100% 5050 Aluminum construction – never rusts
  • Soft felt padding to protect your board’s rails
  • Minimalist design is great for showing off boards and not the rack
  • Strong design can hold shortboards or longboards
  • Made in America!

Reblogged 7 years ago from www.amazon.com

Strange Paradise

Once you float down from the empty-wave rapture at the sight of these three setups in North Indo, filmmaker Gabriel Novis — the creative brawn behind 2016’s Brazil-centric Sorria, as well as the cinematic muscle for South American talents like Yago Dora, Jesse Mendes, Ian Gouveia, Mateus Herdy, and more — is going surfing. He told us that watching Mikala Jones, Alex Smith, and Luke Davis park deep into racetrack barrels with nobody around for miles, while he was tyrannically roasted in the hot sun to document the score, reminded him of why he loves surfing in the first place. Hence why he’s zipping up the camera bag for a bit to secure some of his own tube time. Completely reasonable, too, based on what you’ll watch. It’s idyllic envy to the nth degree.

So what was the backstory behind the trip (and the hiatus) for Novis?

“I was in Bali for a while, where I met up with Alex Smith, and we got to work together for a few days in really fun Keramas,” he told us. “It was my first time working with Alex, and it went so well. I like to work with surfers who don’t just surf, but who are creative human beings, and Alex is one of those guys. You can see that he really likes to create different artistic emotions through filmmaking by exploring new places and lifestyles. Every time I came out with a crazy idea, he’d be down. After the second day shooting in Keramas, we said to each other, “We have to go somewhere. Let’s explore. We’re both here, we’ve got equipment.”

It turned out that Alex’s friend from Hawaii was a captain of a boat in North Sumatra. He knew of some waves there that weren’t so crowded. Would Gabriel be interested in going? A “F–k yeah” later, and the two had arranged the trip. Just a few hours after they talked, Alex called Gabriel back: Mikala Jones and Luke Davis were both on board.

Once the pair arrived at the island in the middle of the night, they connected with Luke and Mikala. The crew then jumped on the boat right away and took off, with, in Novis’ words, no idea where they were or where they were going, or how long it would take. Only the boat captain and Mikala, a tenured Indo explorer in his own class, knew some semblance of the target zone.

But an unexpected storm blasted the area, and the combination of strong gusts, horizontal rain, and seasick lineups prevented the group from setting out just yet.

“Because the weather was picking up, and because we had to cross from island to island to get to this particular wave, the captain told us that we needed to wait, so we stayed in this little bay for the night,” says Novis. “But the storm hit us so bad that it actually got us stuck there. We couldn’t even ship out. Everyone was starting to wonder what we were doing here. We were supposed to leave at 4:00 AM to go to the waves, but we were still stuck there almost eight hours later, waiting for the weather to die down.”

Finally, the furious Indian Ocean calmed for a clear path out of the bay, so the crew set off by boat and eventually anchored at the setups you see above. Novis says it was like finding their own treasure: hidden, empty lineups, all to themselves. A paradise, strangely found, with a divine reward at the detour’s end.

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Reblogged 7 years ago from www.youtube.com