Welcome to Stand Up Paddle boarding
Only - $1199
Includes, custom paddleboard tailored to your Body specifications and style (competitor, enthusiast, beginner). Custom color, hand made paddle. Weight? An astonishing 25lbs!
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| Made in the USA, to order, epoxy or fiberglass add to the superior workmanship and strength! | |
The History
Stand
up paddle surfing (SUP),
or in the
Hawaiian language Hoe he'e nalu, is an emerging
global sport with a Hawaiian heritage. It can be traced back to
the early days of
Polynesia. The sport is an ancient form of surfing, and
began as a way for
surfing instructors to manage their large groups of learner
surfers, as standing on the board gave them a higher viewpoint,
increasing visibility of what was going on around them - such as
incoming
swell. To begin with, this started with using a one-bladed
paddle, whilst standing on a normal length surfboard. The
popularity of the modern sport of SUP has its origination in the
Hawaiian Islands. In the early 1960s, the Beach Boys of Waikiki
would stand on their long boards, and paddle out with outrigger
paddles to take pictures of the tourists learning to surf. This
is where the term "Beach Boy Surfing", another name for Stand Up
Paddle Surfing, originates.
The Benefits
The
sport
benefits
athletes with a strong 'core' workout. SUP'ing is popular at
warm coastal
climates and resorts, and is gaining in popularity as
celebrities are sampling the sport, and cross-over athletes are
training with SUP. SUPs have been spotted around the globe,
anywhere where there is easy access to safe waters, as well as
in the surfing lineups of the world.
The first "modern" surfer to bring Stand Up Paddle Surfing out of Hawaii and onto mainland USA was Vietnam veteran, Rick Thomas. In 2000, Rick - on a 11ft Muñoz board, and with a Leleo Kinimaka paddle - introduced California to the new sport.
Surfers have converted because of the versatility of the new sport. Stand up paddle boarding offers surfers the ability to catch more waves in a set, as well as offering a better view of incoming sets.



