Surf's Up!
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QUESTION:
I recently found an old surfboard at
an architectural salvage store. I’m not exactly sure what it was doing
there, but I bought it anyway since the price was right. I used to surf
as a kid at the beach. I never owned my own board but would rent one
from the surf shop at the beach where my family went for its annual
summer vacation. The board is light in weight and in fairly good
condition. What can you tell me about it?
Thanks,
Allan
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ANSWER:
It sounds like your board is made
of fiberglass, perhaps over a balsa wood core. While boards like this
are still made today, their heyday was during the 1960s and 1970s.
Long before Sandra Dee became the face that launched a thousand
surfboards, the kings and queens of Hawaii rode the waves on carved
slabs of wood. Balancing on solid planks up to 18 feet long, Hawaiian
royalty dominated the seas in a display designed to reinforce their
dominion over their subjects.
But
Christian missionaries and the subsequent immigration of Europeans to
the islands nearly wiped out surfing by the turn of the 20th century.
Missionaries forced native Hawaiians to abandon their surfboards and
devote themselves to their new religion. Fortunately for surfing
enthusiasts, a young Hawaiian named Duke Kahanamoku almost
single-handedly saved the sport from extinction.
Kahanamoku became a celebrity when he won a gold medal in swimming at
the Olympics in Stockholm in 1912. While swimming was his sport, surfing
was his passion. His surfing exhibitions caused a sensation that fueled
interest in the sport along the Southern California and Australian
coasts. As the sport exploded in those places, his influence revived the
tradition of surfing in Hawaii and by the 1920s several hundred boys
regularly surfed the beaches there whenever the surf was up.
Even
with this renewed interest, however, the surfing subculture mostly
paddled quietly along until 1959, when the movie “Gidget” rolled into
the public awareness like a 20-foot wave at Waimea Bay. By the
mid-1960s, surfing was in full swing with the younger set.
Post-World War II boards shifted in composition from solid wood to
balsa. Bob Simmons made the first balsa boards which are highly sought
after by collectors. Today, hollow balsa wood boards by any maker in
good condition command top dollar at auction. But a surfboard's
composition isn't necessarily an indication of its age.
Boards from the 1960s are readily available and highly collectible.
However, avoid "popouts," the mass-produced boards manufactured to meet
the overwhelming demand for surfboards in the 1960s to early 1970s.
These relatively inexpensive boards have little value as collectibles.
The most desirable boards are those hand shaped by a surfboard
craftsman. A "shaper" refines the profile of a board that has been
produced in surfing world because their expertise can make a board
faster or easier to turn. Many shapers sign their surfboards on the
"stringer"—usually a strip of wood that runs down the center of the
board to add strength. Many of the best surfers shaped their own boards,
and these are hot collectibles. Also highly collectible are name brand,
commercially made boards, such as Hobie, Gordon and Smith, or Greg Noll.

Placing value on surfboards can be difficult because so many things,
such as name recognition, condition, age, composition, general design,
and eye appeal, affect a board’s value.
Unfortunately, surfboards are prone to dings, holes, loss of the fin,
and water damage. This means it's hard to find a vintage surfboard in
all original condition. The more damage, the greater the negative impact
on value. It’s important to see boards closeup, so serious collectors
don't even consider buying them online.
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