Hawaiian Longboard Surfboard Display

Hawaiian Longboard Surfboard Display
Hawaiian Longboard Surfboard Display
Item# T0318
$8.00

Product Description

Display this Hawaiian Longboard Surfboard Display on you shelf in your living room or office. Hawaiian Longboard Surfboard Display is approximately 2.5" wide and 9.5" tall.

Surfing History:

It is generally accepted that Polynesians from Tahiti and Hawaii were the first to enjoy the sensation of gliding across the face of an unbroken sea wave, standing proud on wooden surfboards crafted from the timber of sacred trees. Fifteenth century 'Meles' (Hawaiian chants sung by elders and passed down generation to generation) record the surfing activities of the great Royal families and other dignitaries of even earlier times. As most schoolchildren will be aware, Captain James Cook was the first 'civilised' western observer of this pastime in the early 1770s, closely followed by western missionaries, resulting in a suppression of the sport. It is commonly accepted that surfing at the time was outlawed as being an 'unchristian' activity. Some historians now believe however, that it was gambling that was actually outlawed causing the demise of surfing by removing the 'sport' from the activities of the noblemen who used to bet on the size of waves and length of ride. Either way, surfing disappeared to most of the world for many hundreds of years.

In 1915 the legendary Hawaiian Olympic champion, Duke Kahanamoku, while touring the world, introduced the sport of surfing to Australia and America, where previously only glimpses of the sport had been seen. Surfing was eventually introduced to Europe in the early sixties by Australian Lifeguards working at Newquay, although it has been claimed that the first surfers to 'stand up surf' in the UK actually did so at Treyarnon bay in the late 1950s.