Author Archive

Check out the Moonlight Beach Paddle and Swim

Wednesday, May 14th, 2008

  Come down to Moonlight beach  Saturday morning and check out the finish of the first 11 mile race from Wisconsin Street (Oceansibe Pier) to Moonlight in Encinitas. Race starts in Oceanside around 8:30 am and the first finishers will arrive around 10:00 am.  This is part of a Encinitas Festival http://www.encinitasrace.com/oceanpaddle.html for more info.  Map of the course http://www.encinitasrace.com/pdfs/paddleboard_map.pdf  Stop by the NCP tent and take a look at the new boards from NCP and Eaton.

 

  

 

testimonial: Tom Linton

Wednesday, May 14th, 2008

Imagine our shock, dismay even, when the beloved Patagonia “shop board” - a
spunky little 12 foot Stock we’d been lovingly putting our backs into since
the Cardiff store’s inception - took up with a burly Unlimited, 18 foot or more,
and bolted for Vegas. A runaway bride, gone. Why? Was it something we did,
something we said? The burly’s girthy tiller and foxy bow? Is the separation
only temporary while our little blue spunk takes time to “find itself?” Alas, we
may never know: it never calls, it never writes.

Oh the sorrow. The woe. (We can hear your heartstrings throb.)

Now imagine kindly gentleman and world class paddler, Brian Szymanski of NCP,
hearing of our plight, taking pity and mercifully stepping up w/ a charitable
loan: the very same carbon fiber 12 footer, a real sizzler of a stick, his
partner Matt used in last year’s Catalina Classic. Our new “shop board.”

Me, I approached the craft at first w/ considerable pause. My, what big
teeth it had. The hull lines, for one, seemed a sleek bit of departure,
scream(line)ing G - L - I - D - E ; certainly too fast for my mirror. Looked
trippy and tippy for all that speed. And the knee wells. Deep as a couple of
manholes. You could lose whole limbs, appendages down in there, never find them. And what about deck comfort for those of us who mostly paddle prone, those of us not quite up to living, dying (and winning) on our knees like Szymanski? In truth, the doubts really stemmed more from my ability than the board.

Brian was kind enough to take me out on a little “training” session. Gently as
possible he let me know I was, uh… flailing. Big time. He then set about
peeling back whole layers of errant stroke technique. A little less splash, a
lot less flash, some strong steady reach, thrust, and glide - not unlike good
sex I’m told - and I was good to go.

All of which made our NCP “shopboard” really come alive. Those deep knee troughs lower the body’s proximity to water level, making for deeper arm immersion, better leverage, and a more powerful stroke. I can feel the snap and sling - almost a catapult effect - w/ each pull of water owing to the carbon
laminate. And I’m here to tell you the comfort’s there paddling prone. Like
resting on the wings of angels while doing the devil’s dirty down there in the
kelp-slick trenches. My noontime Cardiff to Moonlight paddle, still an ordeal,
is smoother and faster than ever.

NCP’s are built for style and efficiency, very much a product of homegrown soul.
But mostly they’re built for speed. If this sounds at all like you, check them
out.

Tom Linton¼/p>

New This Summer!!

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

Coming this summer NCP hollow 12′ stock boards made from our Catalina winning design $1800.00 plus tax, shipping and handling. Get your orders in today..

San Diego icon Mike Eaton opts for new paradise

Thursday, April 17th, 2008

SD Union Tribune:

Last week, without much ceremony, an era in San Diego surfing came to a close.

Mike Eaton, the seemingly timeless San Diego surfer and shaper, shut the doors on his La Salle Street surfboard production facility in Mission Bay for the last time. Come June 1, the 73-year-old icon, who reckons he’s shaped well over 50,000 surfboards in his half-century as a board builder, will leave the Sunset Cliffs home where he’s become a fixture over the past four decades and take up residence on the big island of Hawaii.

“It’s time,” he said unsentimentally last week. And while that may be true, the San Diego surf community is losing a living legend.

To encompass Eaton’s significance to Southern California surfing in a space as small as this is simply not possible, but we’ll give it a go.

The Eaton bio, condensed, looks something like this:

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He was raised in the waterman culture of Los Angeles’ South Bay, and his swim coach was the legendary pioneer waterman Tom Blake, who instilled in him the traditional waterman ideals at a young age. Eaton learned to surf in 1947. While in the Coast Guard in the late ’50s and stationed in San Francisco, Eaton began shaping surfboards in the garage of Jack O’Neill, who went on to found O’Neill wetsuits.

After working as a dolphin trainer at Marineland in the South Bay (“They said, ‘Can you train a porpoise?’ And I said, ‘Probably as good as anybody,’ ” Eaton jokes), Eaton began shaping surfboards for iconic labels Bing Surfboards and Rick Surfboards, before striking out on his own.

After moving to San Diego in the early ’70s, Eaton became one of the most influential shapers in the area, producing some of the most well-crafted surfboards, including early twin-fins and bonzers-designs, which would have a lasting impact on the San Diego surf community. In the late ’80s, Eaton noticed the surge in popularity of paddleboarding, and began churning out some of the most refined paddleboards in the world, a product for which he is perhaps best recognized today.

In the water, Eaton has always held himself to the ideals put forth by Blake and other influential watermen. To that end, he most recently paddled the Catalina Classic Paddleboard Race – a grueling 32-mile shot from Catalina to the Manhattan Beach Pier – in 2005, at age 71.

“I’d like to do it when I’m 75,” Eaton said last week, “but we’ll see about that.”

SD Union Tribune:
Eaton says the secret to his longevity in the Southern California surf community is that he never really got caught up in it.

“I was a greaser surfer,” he says. “I was into hot rods and cars.”

Eaton was also a sailplane devotee, though he no longer owns one. “I always figured that’s how I’d adios this world,” he jokes.

Today, Eaton still surfs regularly and paddles three times a week, about three to five miles at a stretch. He’s got a spread all set up on the Big Island, where, he says, he’s got one of the last little pieces of country available in Hawaii, and where the waves suit him just fine.

Testimonial: Thank you!!!

Thursday, April 17th, 2008

Hi Brian!

Well, what can I say but the biggest THANK YOU for hooking me up with the paddleboard sessions while I was down in San Diego before the Baja Travesia last week! TR and I were going to stop in and say hi to you at the shop on Sunday but then we realized that it would be closed and you would be out on the water playing :)

So the race, ah yes, the race! Well, we WON!!! I am so stoked to have won this race with my team mates for the third year in a row. The race started off with a paddleboard - relay style - and I was the first on my team to go. It was a 3km section and I rocked it! I was 2nd out of the water and had put 5min on the next person behind me. Not bad for a cold water canadian eh! Anyway, I couldn’t have done it without your help.

Check out my blog for some pics of our water session followed by some pics and a write up from the race. http://challenge-by-choice.blogspot.com/

Over the next little bit, I am going to seriously see how I can afford a board from you. It might take me a little bit but you definately have me hooked on it. The race in Molokai next year sounds awsome - a new challenge for me to tackle. Please keep me in mind too if you ever have a board that maybe has some “issues” that you might get rid of for a bit cheaper. Perhaps I can do some good promotion of the sport up here in Canada for you!

Thanks again - take care - hope all is well - will stop into see you during my next visit to San Diego!

Cheers - jen

PS - don’t hesitate to ask me if you ever have any questions about getting into adventure racing! Its such a wicked sport!


Jen Segger-Gigg
Challenge by Choice Coaching
Strength Trainer, Running & Multi-sport Coaching