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Surfing Vicariously: Nicaragua – III

This is the last installment of Surfing Vicariously: Nicaragua…for now. The crew here at localshapers.com booked tickets to Panama and will be provide the next episode of Surfing Vicariously. For now, check out the last round from our friend Ricky. Enjoy!



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Billabong Pro Tahiti 2012

Who’s ready for the 2012 Billabong Pro Tahiti at the famous death slab, Teahupoo? We sure hope that this year delivers as last year did. The chances of a Code Red repeat are slim, but you never know what mother nature can stir up in a quick second! Check out last year’s highlight reel to relive the epic contest that went down in some thick chopes.

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Surfing Vicariously: Nicaragua – Part II

The waves have been pretty mellow the last few days here in San Diego, leading us to wanderlust and planning trips abroad. To ease our woes, we can enjoy some more frothy glory shots from our buddy Ricky down in Nica.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Offshores and hefty air sections? Yes please. Summertime grovel has us itching to get out of San Diego, and with shots like this filtering in, we won’t be able to take it too much longer.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Throaty.
 

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August 2012 – Shaper of the Month – Siegel, Pooh Surfboards

Ryan Siegel Surfboard Shaper

The fortunate combination of having roots in Orange County and being an aged resident of San Diego breeds a unique type of shaper. Ryan Siegel happens to fall into that well-rounded, yet distinctively individual category. Having a style of their own, his boards are honed to the places he surfs. Not only does he produce fine hedonistic crafts of surf pleasure, but Ryan is also a noble manufacturer of custom fit orthopedic braces. He builds the tools that help people with locomotion difficulty move around and function as best they can. Enjoy the interview below.

Where did you grow up and when did you start shaping?

When I was 14, we found a broken board at the beach. It must have been a 6’4” or 6’6” – in that range. The nose was broken off and of course all we could yield was a 5’5” or 5’6” off it. We ripped the glass off, cut the rails, and went to town. We thinned it out a bunch, glassed it ourselves, and it was a nightmare. We had no idea about glassing or anything then. Tight weave, what do you mean? Don’t you just use a dip brush to dab resin on the first coat? It was all wavy and bumpy- we didn’t even know to sand it. Once the water couldn’t touch the foam anymore we were ready to go.

I grew up in Tustin, but I also spent a lot of time in San Clemente cause my folks had a place down there. Every day growing up we would always go to the …Lost shop. This was when their factory was behind the shop and they had just started. We’d watch Matt shape and Drew Brophy in there with the pens. I was always trying to save up and buy a …Lost board. Every time the painting would rub off a little bit I’d go and have Drew touch it up. Those guys were super awesome influences growing up.

You also have the surf ghetto right there with Brad Basham himself, the godfather of surfboard creation in San Clemente. He was always helping us out as kids and answered whatever questions we had. Go in there and you’ll find any tool you need to shape a surfboard and glass it. He was kinda like a mentor, and still is. I take my boards in there to get glassed and he looks at my stuff and says “You f-ed up!” or “This looks good.” We talk a lot about Mexico. He’s a cool guy.

Other shapers I used to use around there are Chris Kaysen and Dev Gregory. Dev used to shape for …Lost a lot. In my college-era, I was down here in San Diego, so I spent a lot of time with James Accardi, Handley, and Ned McMahon.

Building surfboards is obviously your passion, but tell me about your day job. You build orthopedic braces for people who need help with mobility including kids with cerebral palsy?

Yeah, my friend Ryan has been ordering boards for 2 or 3 years. I made 4 or 5 boards for him and he was always hitting me up like “You can come work for me anytime.” I didn’t really know what it was all about. I kinda wanted to leave the blank manufacturing company and finally did. Then I immediately got a job here, making boots.

I work with sheer forms a lot, but the material is a little different. I’m using plaster and a lot of plastics, but it’s a lot of the same skills such as using your eye to shape something. I would definitely say that shaping surfboards helped train me for this.

Which blanks have you been using that you’ve found to work well?

surfboard blanks ryan siegel of siegel, pooh surfboards

Since I used to run a surfboard blank manufacturing company, I was using a lot of those, but I just ran out. We were called Homeblown back in the day and then we switched to Málama. We made blanks from soy and caster instead of petroleum and we used MDI. I’m out now so I’ve been buying US Blanks or sometimes I’ll hit up Artic Foam in Oceanside.

What are some of the spots that you surf around San Diego and use as a testing ground for your boards?

It has a bunch of rocks and it goes way out into the ocean, but I’d like to not name my favorite spot. There are some breaks I know pretty well out there. It’s got a good home feeling vibe, pretty mellow, and the waves are good. I’ll go out there or in Ocean Beach mostly. Every once in a while I’ll hit Blacks or this guy that I work with drags me north sometimes. But I grew up in Orange County surfing Trestles, T-Street, State Beach, Newport, and Huntington.

Which board templates have you drawn from for some of your shapes?

surfboard templates ryan siegel

Back when I got started, I grew up shaping a lot of …Lost rocket fish type deals and semi-fishes. I pulled a lot from some of the double wing swallows that they used to do. I also have a couple good Chas templates. I’ve worked with Ned McMahon who shaped for Sunset and T&C. I adopted a lot of curves from the stuff that he grew up with.

My buddy Keola Rapoza used to work for T&C too and shaped for them in Hawaii. He was a pro longboarder and I got some of my longboard templates from him. On my single fins, I drew from the generation two Al Merrick single fins and an old MR that my buddy had. It’s a good retro-style single fin and I use that nose a lot. The tail is pretty squirrely; it’s kind of thin and pinned out, so I don’t go with it too much – unless someone wants to get weird.

What would you suggest is an ideal board to get for summertime San Diego?

It depends on what you want to do. If you’re in San Diego, you’re pretty much stuck longboarding. I made a pretty good 8’6” that my buddy lost on the freeway. I need to build a new one of those. I usually rock a good thinned out longboard that’s just fun all around. Otherwise, for a shortboard, fishes are great – they’re kind of mandatory in your quiver in San Diego, whether it’s just overhead or tiny.

What aspect of shaping do you enjoy the most?

ryan siegel tight planingAt this point, I’ve shaped like 400 boards. I’ve been doing it for 15 years and I really look forward to when my weird friends call me up and say they want to experiment and get something way out of the ordinary. That’s the fun part.

Otherwise, in regards to shaping basic conceptual boards, it’s always different and custom. It’s exciting to build boards for people individually. Whether it’s longboards, shortboards, or really short boards – which I’m a proponent of. 5’6” is good. I’ve gone 4’8” and that’s the lowest, it’s pretty fun.

My favorite board of all time would be the …Lost 5’5” x 19 ¼”. That board is just all around perfect, I’ve ridden in in 12-foot surf and tiny knee chopper days at the Jetty. It’s just good for everything. You’ve got the double-wing swallow that comes in and acts like a nice narrow shortboard tail, but it also allows the tail line to come out and give you the width to just pig through flat sections and beat the wave down the line. And you don’t need a nose either; it just gets in the way most of the time.

Besides surfing, what inspires you to shape?

Ryan Siegel Wide PlaningMusic is a big part of my life, I used to play and tour around. I listen to everything and anything from jazz, to hip-hop, to blues, to old po-dunk country or whatever else. I have a lot of artist friends. I don’t really get it, haha. I’m not a good artist in the sense of drawing and painting. Shaping is my art, as well as Music.

I love Pandora because it throws different stuff at you. Yesterday, I was listening to Nora Jones radio, and that’s cool. Whatever flies and I feel like that day. I listen to a lot of hip-hop and old school punk too. Sometimes I put on some NOFX radio and go to town in my shaping room.

I’ve seen a few Sezio brand boards floating around with your name on them, what’s the story behind that?

Sezio started out as a collective of artists out of Ocean Beach and Point Loma after college. Our buddy Zach took it and kinda ran with it. He turned it into a non-profit organization and is blowin’ it up all around. They do a lot of mainly musical shows and acts; stuff like that. They also curate a lot of local art shows around here in San Diego.

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Surfing Vicariously: Nicaragua – Part I

Tired of work? Surf Vicariously.

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Surf with us as we follow our buddy Ricky Burrows down South to Nicaragua.

This category is dedicated to following our buddies around the world and hearing about their experiences with the surf and finding surfboards when in need. You might see a few finners and barrels along the way but thats just how it goes.

broaken board nicaraguaRecently our good friend went on a little surf trip down South to Puerto Sandino, Nicaragua. He has seen some good swell so far and has documented some broken boards. Life on the road in need of a surfboard can be rough. It is always tough to find someone with an extra board they are willing to sell or even a local surf shop that has a few boards. It’s always awesome when you discover a local shaper whos in tune with the local waves and knows what boards work well. Stay tuned for part 2 of Surfing Vicariously: Nicaragua where Ricky does a little recon for us about some local surfboard shapers in Nicaragua.

Lately I’ve been doing some recon on a few breaks a bit off the beatin path which has been a blast. Was super stoked to get hooked up with a panga boat driver who took me out to a sick nearby point just south of my spot. After a nice session out there I decided to venture north up the coast the old fashion way – on foot. There were a few casualties along the way: one being my prized wolf tee and two, my virgin arm meat.