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  2. Jimmy Lewis (surfer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jimmy_Lewis_(surfer)

    The Jimmy Lewis Cruise Control 11'0.7 is still in production and is the most sold stand up paddle board in the world. The Jimmy Lewis board is entirely hand-built in the Kinetic factory in Vietnam, using a sandwich-structured composite. Jimmy Lewis claims that the manufacturing is done almost exactly the same way as he builds boards on Maui ...

  3. Standup paddleboarding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standup_paddleboarding

    Some Hawaii surfers used oars for their convinience to make pictures of traditional surfers' training. [5] John Ah Choy was a local Hawaiian who surfed, but as he got older and was unable to get up and down from his board, he would stand on his board from the break and paddle out with a canoe paddle to catch waves.

  4. Tom Blake (surfer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Blake_(surfer)

    While in Hawaii, Blake became fascinated by the traditional surfboards preserved at the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum in Honolulu. These included a variety of styles, from the shorter alaia to the heavy, 16-foot long olo boards traditionally reserved for royalty including one owned by High Chief Abner Pākī. On his 1926 visit, he was able to ...

  5. The stand-up pedal board is this summer's must-try activity - AOL

    www.aol.com/article/2016/04/14/the-stand-up...

    For anyone who has avoided stand-up paddle boarding because they're afraid of falling, this new board may just be the answer you're looking for. The stand-up pedal board is this summer's must-try ...

  6. Paddleboarding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paddleboarding

    Thomas Edward Blake is credited as the pioneer in paddleboard construction in the early 1930s. [2]While restoring historic Hawaiian boards in 1926 for the Bernice P. Bishop Museum, Blake built a replica of the previously ignored olo surfboard ridden by ancient Hawaiian aliʻi (kings).

  7. Alaia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alaia

    The alaia's roots span back a thousand years. [3] Lala is the Hawaiian word describing the action of riding an alaia surfboard. Lala is a word found in the Hawaiian dictionary meaning ‘the controlled slide in the curl when surfing on a board.' [4] Princess Kaʻiulani's alaia board, measuring 7ft 4in long, is preserved at the Bishop Museum.