Making Your Own Outdoor Toys Is the Best Kind of Addiction

Until the past five or so years ago, when it came to my own DIY ethos, Iโ€™d drawn a line well in front of making surfboards, even though I’d been buying and riding them for two decades. Sure, Iโ€™ve brewed my own beer, fermented my own sauerkraut, and wrenched on my own trucks like the flannel- wearing, beard-growing, walking Northern California stereotype I am, but when it comes to surfboards, Iโ€™d just take one off the surf shop rack, thank you very much. Why spend a bunch of time and money hacking away at a piece of foam to make a board thatโ€™s probably going to be misshapen and barely rideable when there are perfectly good boards for sale at the shop down the street? Or even a custom order form away?

My interest in picking up a planer started only because I had a vague idea for a board Iโ€™d always wanted to ride but had never seen for sale anywhere: wide point up front, drawn-in tail, three-fin setup, 6โ€™5โ€ณ or so. I tried the custom route to bring this board to life, and ordered a few over the years that Iโ€™d hoped would look like the board in my mindโ€™s eye, but there was always something off. Too thick, nose template not exactly right, or the board just simply sucked. Custom surfboards can be a crapshoot, even from world-class shapers.

If I can make a surfboard, it seems to me, I can make most of the other material things that help bring meaning to my life. Better yet, I can fix those things, and avoid buying new. Win, win, and win.

Frankly, it can be a bit ridiculous to force our vision of a good surfboard into the head of a busy shaper who is often just trying to make enough boards to survive financially in the dying days of the hand-built-surfboard world.

Finally, I figured, what the hell, Iโ€™ll do it myself.

I showed up at a little joint called Sunset Shapers in the Outer Sunset neighborhood of San Francisco, where they offer shaping lessons and access to tools, shaping bays, etc. James Mitchell, the shopโ€™s owner, was my tutor, and together we talked over my hypothetical board. He understood right away the sort of board I was trying to build: a big shortboard that would be racy enough to handle powerful overhead confidently, but floaty enough to cruise on smaller, weak-wave days while having enough handling ability to work turns over wide-open faces.

We selected a 6โ€™6โ€ณ blank and got to work.

I was annoyed by the tools right away. Woodworking appliances made to shave down straight pieces of lumber seemed like the most ill-suited tools imaginable to shape a curved surfboard made from foam. Drawing the template and cutting the outline into the big foam core was easy. Sanding down the rails was not that bad at all. Using a sureform to shave down uneven sections like they were big blocks of Parmesan cheese felt natural. But firing up a frighteningly loud, heavily vibrating planer to shape the majority of the board was terrifying.

I imagined every pro shaper probably spent the first dozen blanks totally unsure if they had any clue what they were doing with a power planer. I never felt like I did as I made awkward, stunted passes back and forth across the bottom and the top of the foam blank, trying to turn a rectangle of foam into something resembling a surfboard with a power tool designed to carve mirror-flat pieces of wood.

Yet gradually, unbelievably, an actual surfboard took shape. When I finally put down the last sanding block after making a zillion passes (the most fun part, as you feel like a Renaissance artist smoothing the final rough edges of a marble masterpiece), I was left with an elegant, beak-nosed 6โ€™5โ€ณ with a forward wide point, round tail, and subtle concaves to boost water flow on the board’s bottom, a devilishly difficult task for the newbie shaper to pull off.

It wasnโ€™t perfect. I had a hell of a time trying to get the nose symmetrical, and one side has a pronounced ridge running from tip of nose down the rail. Thereโ€™s a random lump or two on the bottom, as though the board is growing baseball-sized blisters. One of the rails is boxier than the other in parts. Itโ€™s much thicker than Iโ€™d hoped.

To my own amazement, I absolutely loved it. Warts and all. In fact, I may have loved it more because of the little imperfections. Legendary surfboard shaper Dave Parmenter also celebrated the little flaws in a board. He told me once thatโ€™s what makes a magic board magic. Maybe it does, or maybe Parmenter was blowing smoke, trying to make up for screwing up somebodyโ€™s rail. Either way, it turns out that when youโ€™ve made a board with your own hands, youโ€™ll ignore unplanned asymmetries a whole lot more easily than you would when paying top dollar for a professionally carved board. Still, I may have been getting ahead of myself; after all, there was a chance my handshape wouldnโ€™t even surf.

The true test came a couple of days after the board was glassed, when a crossed-up southern hemisphere swell and a northwest windswell combined to send fun head-high peaks breaking up and down Ocean Beach. I waxed up and proudly strolled across the sand, hoping somebody would ask me whoโ€™d made the board under my arm. I paddled my way out to the lineup, immediately stroked into a shoulder-high wedge, got to my feet, bottom-turned, and unleashed the most powerful carve I’d done in months, throwing a fan of spray over two onlookers on the wave’s shoulder. I donโ€™t know if itโ€™s a commentary on my flagging surfing ability or a profound realization that surfers fuss way too much over minutiae of board design, but the first board I ever made with my own hands worked as well as or better than any board Iโ€™ve bought in years.

As it turns out, surfing a board you made yourself is addicting. It connects you, in a small way, with the prior generations of surfers who saw building their own boards as a rite of passage. It deepens your relationship with the other boards in your quiver. It allows you to bring into being something that youโ€™ve seen only in your mindโ€™s eye. Itโ€™s difficult, but monumentally rewarding.

In the years since, I’ve occasionally tackled more DIY surf projects. A wood surfboard I made in Maine (you can read about that in AJ issue 16, available here). Some handplanes that help with bodysurfing. A few abandoned hunks of foam I’ve tried to carve in the backyard. Hand-painted fins.

Now, I want more. A former neighbor of mine builds steel frame bikes in his garage in Florida. I’m flying out there to check that out. A friend of mine made her own backpacking pack, and I hope to convince her to let me plop down next to her at the sewing machine this winter to stitch my own.

If I can make a surfboard, it seems to me, I can make most of the other material things that help bring meaning to my life. Better yet, I can fix those things, and avoid buying new. Win, win, and win.

***

Want to make your own surfboard? Pick up a copy of The Surfboard Book: How Design Affects Performance for a good place to start.

Grain Surfboards, in York, Maine, runs workshops teaching you the art of wooden surfboard building.

Photos: Justin Housman

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