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Native Hawaiian surfboard maker Brandan Ahuna is reviving the Sport of Kings for the surfers of tomorrow by looking to the past

From the instant Brandan Ahuna first saw a wooden surfboard while working as a professional lifeguard‭, ‬he was hooked‭. ‬“I took off on my first wave and stood up on it‭, ‬rode it all the way‭. ‬The board rode as good as it looked‭. ‬It was unbelievable‭.‬”‭

Ripping that single wave connected Ahuna to his own culture in a way even a kid raised on a Hawai‘i homestead found exhilarating and ancient‭. ‬“I just said to myself‭, ‬look here‭, ‬I am a Native Hawaiian riding this traditional Hawaiian surfboard‭, ‬I feel like I should be able to make this myself‭.‬”‭ ‬

Today Ahuna is among a handful of native alaia surfboard shapers‭, ‬reviving a lost skill‭, ‬and linking indigenous craft to ocean sustainability‭.

Wood-on-Water Connection
After that first ride‭, ‬Ahuna began making wood boards for friends‭, ‬studying how pre-contact Hawaiians shaped theirs with visits‭ ‬to the Bishop Museum in Honolulu‭. ‬He has been modernizing‭, ‬tweaking and improving designs ever since‭. ‬Now a bespoke board maker‭,‬‭ ‬he matches the wood and the length to the style of the rider and the size of their waves‭.

“When I ride my alaia‭, ‬I have more connection with nature and the ancestors‭, ‬just because the board was once a tree‭, ‬so it had a‭ ‬spirit‭, ‬a mana‭. ‬That wood-on-water connection is amazing‭, ‬it feels different‭.‬”
—Brandan Ahuna

Not only different‭, ‬but healthier for the shaper and the sea‭. ‬Modern boards are a mix of fiberglass and foam‭, ‬a collection of noxious chemicals‭, ‬where Ahuna uses salvaged local wood‭, ‬driftwood and recycled hardwoods‭. ‬Hawai’i’s endemic trees are protected‭, ‬so he partners with local sawyers and contractors to source wood that has fallen naturally or can‭ ‬be repurposed‭. 

Bespoke Boards
“All my boards are functional pieces of art‭,‬”‭ ‬Ahuna says over lunch at Mauna Lani‭, ‬Auberge Resorts Collection on the Big Island of Hawai‘i‭. ‬Classic wooden surfboards‭, ‬known as alaia‭, ‬were ridden for hundreds of years before Europeans arrived on Hawai‘i’s shores‭. ‬While the boards are beautiful‭, ‬with delicate inlays and a grain that seems to glow from inside the plank‭, ‬Ahuna’s aren’t just wall-hangers‭, ‬his boards are meant to be surfed‭.‬

Alaia surfing had all but disappeared until the Hawaiian cultural renaissance met up with 21st-century surfers‭. ‬On first glance‭,‬‭ ‬Ahuna’s boards look more like snowboards or a skateboard deck—they are flat‭, ‬short‭, ‬and only an inch thin—and crucially‭, ‬they lack bottom fins and so don’t grip the water the way a modern board will‭, ‬they don’t have the same control or lift‭. ‬Ahuna’s boards are celebrated for sliding down a wave’s face with what Hawaiians call lala‭, ‬literally‭, ‬on the diagonal‭. ‬That is‭, ‬they are unpredictable‭, ‬fun‭, ‬an adventure‭. ‬

“My grandfather told me, put it out there. It’s up to you to take it where you want.”
—Brandan Ahuna

It takes about two weeks to complete each board‭, ‬Ahuna says‭, ‬he remains a Big Island lifeguard by profession‭. ‬Where ancient Hawaiians used stone tools‭, ‬water and natural resin to fashion boards‭, ‬Ahuna’s workshop is his garage and looks like any modern woodworker’s‭, ‬with bandsaws‭, ‬planes and sanders‭. ‬His three daughters‭, ‬ages 17‭, ‬11‭ ‬and 6‭, ‬will pitch in to help on breaks and weekends‭, ‬“when they’re stuck at home with dad‭.‬”

Today‭, ‬Ahuna enjoys teaching local kids and his own children about traditional surfboards and can imagine himself passing on board-shaping skills to future generations of Hawai‘i’s grinders‭. ‬These sustainable and historic boards have become Ahuna’s kuleana‭, ‬his ancestral obligation‭.

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