Killing mean waves softly
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Andrew Edwards
Many surfers would resent being called “softcore,” but one local
manufacturer is seeking to make soft surfboards respectable.
Costa Mesa’s Softcore Surfboards is the brainchild of Gary
Sipiora, a lifelong surfer who broke away from graduate school to
design what he called the Cadillac of soft surfboards.
Sipiora, 45, lives in Corona del Mar and was a graduate student
studying child psychology at Chapman University when he walked into a
surf shop and noticed boogie board companies had improved their gear
since he started surfing. But soft surfboards, often used at surf
schools, were essentially unchanged since the years when classic rock
was simply known as rock.
“The bodyboard industry was evolving with nice, new materials, and
this was the same stuff I saw in the 1970s,” Sipiora said.
During a monthlong break from classes, Sipiora began collecting
foam samples, and after classes resumed, he realized he was more
interested in plastics than his textbooks.
“I wasn’t ready for final exams; where’s my passion?” he said.
For the past seven years, Sipiora’s career has been dedicated to
designing and selling soft surfboards. He spent his first two years
doing research and design and the past five building and selling
boards. Softcore boards are designed to be soft for learners’ safety
but sturdy enough to ride without being thrown off by a strong wave.
The plastic used for the deck skin is soft without being squishy
and is designed to make it easier for beginning surfers to stand up,
Sipiora said.
“If water gets on it, you’re going to slip?” he asked. “No, you’re
going to get traction.”
The plastic used for the board’s bottom was crafted to be more
rigid than other soft boards on the market and is built around a
wood-and-fiberglass stringer.
The vast majority -- about 90% -- of Softcore’s boards are sold to
surf schools, but Sipiora is confident an experienced ripper could
enjoy a ride on one his boards. A few surf shops carry Softcore
boards, and for now Sipiora relies on direct sales for about 5% of
his business. The wholesale price for a 7-foot Softcore board is
$270, he said.
One surf school that teaches young surfers on Softcore Surfboards
is Mary Setterhome’s Surf Academy, which runs summer surf camps in
Santa Monica and Huntington Beach.
Setterhome said Softcore boards are not “corky” like other soft
boards that often bob in the water and tip their riders into the
surf.
Softcore boards, Setterhome said, can be shaped to order for
different classes.
“He knows the breaks here in California,” she said. “Believe it or
not, he will listen to what you need for your students, and different
schools need different boards because they have different kinds of
students and different kinds of waves.”
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