Stand Up Paddle Surfing

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Here in Columbia, SC, we have no SUP community. Wanting to try it with minimal outlay, I ciphered a rig up. First, I made an 84" paddle by joining parts from two broken canoe paddles by splicing them together and whipping the joint with 1/8" climbing tripline. Then I dug my old O'Brien Sensation 11' sailboard out of the leaves and washed it down.

My surf-shop owner friend and his family along with about two dozen aunts, uncles, and cousins were at the in-laws house at Lake Murray. He's SUP'd before down at Sullivans Island in Charleston, but his shop here in Columbia focuses on the clothing and skate community more than surfboards. I packed up the Dear Wife, the 6 month old tot, and we headed up to the lake party.

The surfing members of the crowd were out wake boarding when I put the board in the water and paddled out. The sailboard seemed mega tippy to me, but I weigh in at 215 which is, I know, a touch heavy. Once the board got up to speed though, it was very stable. When the wakeboard boat pulled in all heck broke loose.

My friend jumped on the board and loved it. He thought it was faster than the purpose-built boards he'd ridden at the coast. Then, one after another, tons of kids and adults took the board out and had no trouble paddling, even in the crazy chop on the water from the go-zillion holiday boaters on the lake.

The high point was when my friend's nine-month pregnant wife jumped on the board and paddled out around the point and back no trouble. It's Sunday, her due date is Wednesday!

So, turns out ghetto gear works A#1 to try out Stand Up Paddling. I'm hooked. Heading to the river waves on the Saluda tomorrow. Details to follow.

- Travis in Columbia, SC

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That's cool! But we want to see pictures of the ghetto rig SUP! And, my friend Tim Stamps used an early windsurfing hull as the basis for the design of his race stand up boards- he told me that there's one particular old school sailboard that was really well designed and is still one of the fastest designs out there. His shapes are winners- so there's validation for the ghetto sup!
I brought my boards along on a family camping trip this weekend to Lake San Antonio and knowing that everyone would want to give it a try, I bought a 6-ft wood canoe paddle from Outdoor World. It's not the best Stand Up Paddle but it worked. It only cost $15 and I didn't have to loan out my $350 Kialoa paddle. So if you're putting together the bare-bones SUP package you should go down to Outdoor world and buy the longest wood canoe paddle they've got. It won't be perfect, but it will get you on the water.
I took my two boards a 10ft jimmy lewis and a 11ft laird to a family BBQ and it was funny to see my nephews who all surf , itching to have a go after me being 51 made it look easy.Bearing in mind it was only on a choppy lake not the ocean they all struggled and had to eat humble pie.It was their wives who really showed them up and had a blast getting away from the kids for a while.
Update: I took the whole ghetto rig to the canoing and kayaking portion of a local Summer Camp for pediatric cancer patients where I volunteer to provide safety boater support.

The kids went nuts over the rig. Dozens of them had to try it. Next year I'm planning to take at least three boards and paddles to the camp. I've already started to expand the fleet.

I found a Mistral Tarifa Composite board on craigslist for $50 complete. It's about 10' long versus the 11' of the O'Brien. The biggest difference is the volume: 140 liters for the Mistral versus about a million liters in the O'Brien, and the weight: about 15 pounds for the Mistral versus about 40 pounds for the O'Brien.

One of my buddies who also helps at the camp buddy-ganked the Mistral from me on the grounds that I can't paddle two boards at once. We also both guide river trips for a local outfitter so we scored pro-deals on 84" AquaBound Carbon Fiber SUP Paddles.

Last night my friend and I tried the Mistral out for the first time in the 6 acre pond beside his house. I weigh over 200# and my bud weighs about 150# so I said 'you paddle that little board first, dude.' He jumped on it, fell once or twice, then got it wired and took off with me following on the big board. We tried lowering the centerboard on the Mistral, and boy we were surprised. Even though it makes the board a lot harder to turn, the centerboard really stabilizes the board. It's almost cheating and feels as stable as standing on the sidewalk. We noted how well this 'training wheels' solution would work for newbies, and then we pulled the centerboard back up to keep it pure. Then it was my turn on the Mistral...

With me sitting on the deck, the board sunk into the water about 3/4 of its volume. The Mistral Tarifa is pretty narrow also since it was designed as a light, planing course/slalom racing sailboard. I started out by paddling while sitting which was a good plan. Once the board was moving it jumped up out of the water, not on a plane, but 'planing' as much as working as a displacement hull. I could easily stand up and walk all over the deck if I kept the board moving. I could even move to the extremely narrow pintail that this board has.

The Mistral's shape, weight, and volume would work great on real surfing waves in my opinion. The O'Brien is a pure cruiser with a lot of glide. I'm heading to the Dear Wife's parents' house at Surfside Beach today, and I'm taking the O'Brien. I've got a 9'2" NSP waiting at the beach that I'm pretty sure the technique I learned on the Mistral will also work for me on the NSP if there's waves. If it's Lake Atlantic then I'll jump on the O'Brien and cruise the Grand Strand.

So the ghetto SUP gear saga continues... yes, I know, prove it with pics. As soon as I get too tired to paddle I will.

- Travis in Columbia, SC

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