
fish
What's the differences between the Falcon and the Greased Pig
Hey Todd,
What’s the differences between the
Falcon and the Greased Pig
as far as the way they ride and what kind of waves they’re good for?
Thanks,
Kent
Hello, sorry to not get back with you sooner….
have been very busy here. Anyway,
the Falcon is a version of my
Rascal II model with a more pointy nose.
The Falcon is exceptional in very small scale, weak waves….
very fast like a fish, but with the responsiveness of a modern board for modern performance maneuvers.
The rocker is very flat on the Falcon.
The Greased Pig also excels in small wave performance surfing.
It is a bit more versatile than the Falcon and will surf clean in up to head high waves as well as small little crumblers.
The Falcon is really a specialized design for the real small-scale crumblers…..and is best suited for making the weakest stuff a speed course and demolition of any thing even close to resembling a lip in the dismal conditions.
Hope that answers your questions. Please feel free to ask any other questions you may have. I know you would be stoked on a magic Proctor Falcon or Greased Pig.
If you let me know your height, weight, experience/ how long you’ve been surfing, the type of waves you need the board for, and the dimensions/ basic design of your current board; I will detail the best design and dimensions for you.
Aloha,
Todd
Hey Todd,
Thanks for the information, I think the Greased Pig is what I’m looking for. I’m currently riding a 5’4″ x 19.25″ x 2.1875″ Proxy Rascal and a 5’10″x 18.75 x 2.25″ Al Merrick KSmall. I love the paddle, speed/flow and responsiveness of the Rascal and the KSmall works better with waves that have some shape.
I’m looking for an everyday board
to surf Huntington Beach,
something that rides more like a performance board but has more speed for the average HB days.
Like everybody I’m looking for the balance of speed and maneuverability, I’ve ridden small wave boards that are fast but don’t seem to redirect, turn sharply or fit a wave with some curve (flat tail rocker?, wide nose?, wide tail?) and other grovelers that have a lot of tail rocker and turn great but loses that drive.
So I’m thinking with the stinger along with the vee in the tail will keep it loose/responsive
and the low rocker will keep it fast. So if you think the Greased Pig is the right board for me what dimensions would you suggest? I’m 5’2″, 145 lbs., 25 yrs. experience.
Thanks,
Kent
Hi Kent,
The Greased Pig is the perfect board for you. 
I would go 5’7″ -5’8″ x 18 3/4″ x 2 1/4″ single wing swallowtail. The overall rocker is a performance rocker just flattened throughout with lower entry and spiral vee running off the tail.
That gets it into waves quick,
down the line speed bursts,
yet keeps the tail nice and free
with that spiral vee.
So you get a board that basically has the responsiveness of a performance board, yet maintains the essential speed for small wave ripping. It is versatile enough to speed course knee high mushy Huntington as well as shoulder to head high punchy Huntington.
Please feel free to ask any other questions you may have. I know you would be stoked on a Greased Pig. Looking forward to your reply, Aloha,
Todd
Twin Fang, Quad Fang fish surfboard dimensions
Hello, my name is Alex,
i was looking the boards on your website,
and i like the twin fang, and the quad fang,
but i’m not sure about the length, width, and thickness…
im 6’2, 192 pounds,
i’m not a very good surfer,
i can do small cutbacks and snaps,
nothing powerful….
i still have some problems on speeding… i usually surf on knee to chest conditions
could you tell me what length, width, and thickness, you think would be good for me…also, which one of your boards….
thanks a lot
Hi Alex,
Sorry to not get back with you sooner….It was my birthday and I took a couple days off to surf out the last swell.
What are the dimensions and basic shape of the board you are currently riding? and what are the waves like where you surf? i.e. where are you writing to me from?
This will help me to dial in the exact right dimensions for the magic board for you.
Please feel free to ask any other questions you may have. I know you would be stoked on a magic Proctor. Looking forward to your reply,
Aloha,
Todd
Happy birthday!!! and Its ok , lately ive been really busy too.,,
i’m from brasil, i’m 18 years old,
and i’m spending a few months here, i just bought a used surfboard, its 6’1, fish, quadrifin, and a deeeeep double concave. it feels like skateboarding..
the waves i usually surf are waist /knee high, sometimes bigger, here, on California,
i’m surfing at oceanside, san clemente, this area…
and the waves where i live in Brasil,
aren’t much different..
i’m looking for a board that can help me to improve my surf…
a fast board.. i really liked the fish models (twin fin and quad fang) but i dont know if they are the right model for me..
what do you think?
peace
I trust you to give sound advice and help me cut through the hype and confusion
Hey Todd,
I am absolutely loving the quad board
you made for me a year or two ago–
#6902, 6’6″x19″x2.5″.
If you recall, I’m 5’9″, about 158 lbs, and in really good shape.
It is my main board for almost everything
I encounter between Oxnard and Jalama.
It has really taken my riding up a huge amount– I am ripping all over the wave, turning much faster and harder, able to take off better and really get into the waves and take lines I had always dreamed of but couldn’t pull off. It is so much fun pumping the board up and down the face, generating speed, then cutting hard on the top of the wave and on the bottom of the wave. At Rincon I can take a big drop, make a nice bottom turn, and pump down the line and get around sections….all that great stuff I really struggled with before…
I have yet to find a situation where it feels better as a thruster than as a quad.
It feels like the board paddles faster and also moves faster as a quad,
and probably because I am a front-footed
surfer to a fault,
(years of skateboarding I guess),
it never feels too loose for me.
My bottom turns have really progressed and gotten much more aggressive, so the quad does not feel too loose for my style and technique.
Despite my total satisfaction, I am wondering about a second board. It would be a step-up board–
something that helps me paddle into bigger,
juicier waves like you can get on a
good day at Tarantula’s–
well overhead to double overhead. I had really good luck with a Becker 7’6″ mini-gun thruster design up there– it got the waves early, held great and caught the face even on almost vertical or air drops, and was very maneuverable once it was flying with the kind of speed that a big, powerful wave generates. But I dinged that board (someone else dropped in on me and cut it up bad) and it was never the same after the repair (nose felt too heavy) so I sold it. I picked up a used 7′ Matt Moore thruster, and it feels great, but doesn’t seem to have enough volume and/or length to actually catch big waves very well. I am a strong paddler but I have seen stronger out there, especially on North Shore Hawaii. Even though the MM 7′ board is longer and probably has more volume, I think the 6’6″ quad board you made me actually paddles faster! I haven’t actually tried the 6’6″ at T’s on a bigger day, but I probably will try it until I have something else…
So I was at Jalama just yesterday, with well overhead to double overhead set waves, and I was using my Clyde Beatty Rocket Fish, approx 6’4″ length, big twin fin with tiny little baby trailer fins for a quasi-quad. (I was expecting it to be smaller up there so I took the Fish. I was pleasantly surprised that real sets were still coming in, I guess you could say.) It had the huge advantage of paddling power for catching the waves, but of course felt too squirrelly to try any big moves- I had to be ginger with any bottom turns and carve careful lines.
Despite its loose, skatey feel, I have to say that I absolutely loved the extra paddle power I was getting with the Rocket Fish– reminded me of the extra paddle power I had been getting with the Becker mini-gun.
On top of that, I read all about Kelly’s exploits on this weird, tiny, thick board he made that is more or less a K-Step board with the nose cut off. And I know that good riders are pulling into heavy waves like Pipe on boards way shorter than I would think could be used….so it raises the question, is it really more about total volume, or is length also essential for holding on the wave during and after the drop?
Or, is wave face holding really more
about rail/tail shape and fin setup?
Clearly, if Kelly can ride a 5’6″ or something board at places like Teahupoo and Pipe, length is perhaps not such a critical issue.
Tow-in boards are short, too, so by simple deduction I have to conclude that length is not the crucial factor for big-wave holding power– it’s really more for paddling power. Then again, the tow-in boys don’t have to deal with vertical semi-air drops, either. But, if a short, thick fish can have plenty of paddle power, maybe I don’t need a gun or mini-gun for bigger days when I mainly just need to paddle faster??
So, anyway, bottom line is I am kind of wondering whether something just a touch thicker, and/or a touch wider, and/or a touch more pin-ny in the tail, and/or with slightly bigger fins would be the ticket for a step up board that would help me in bigger, stronger waves, but that would still feel a lot like the board you already made for me. Something that would potentially perform as well as my 7’6 mini-gun, without actually being a minigun? Something that is also good for a front- or center- footed surfer?
It shouldn’t feel too loose in a big,
fast wave, but should feel loose
enough in smaller waves, too.
Finally, why not just get a mini-gun? Well, I guess I still am thinking there is a board out there that really should work well for me in almost anything I will encounter here in So. Cal— if it’s just got a bit more paddle power than the board you already made for me, and holds well at high speed, then it should work in just about anything. If it’s strictly designed for big waves, then I worry it will feel sluggish in the small stuff, and I will have to bring at least a two-board quiver on some of my surf quests. I would rather look at the buoy readings, make the call and pick one board, and if when I arrive at the surf spot it turns out I made the wrong board choice, the board still works pretty well. One time I took the Becker to Jalama and it was way smaller than I was expecting– below head high with only Cracks working– and that board totally sucked in those conditions.
In fact, for now, I think on my next big wave session I am just going to take the 6’6″ board you made for me and see if I can get the job done with that board….I suspect that if I can paddle hard enough it will take great care of me once I’m on the wave. Put it this way– I was way happier making do with a Rocket Fish on well overhead waves than I was making do with a 7’6″ mini-gun on shoulder high waves– the fish still made for an epic session and the mini-gun was total crap.
Of course, for a “step-up board” I would just as soon go with one of your more stock designs rather than a fully custom design if you think you have something that you would recommend. I think I read somewhere that you are combining one of your groveler designs with the Blackbird design…maybe something like that is the thing to go for? Maybe a board with slightly more volume than the one you made for me, possibly with two different fin setups- bigger fins for well overhead, and smaller ones for head high and below waves?
Anyway, I immediately thought of you because
a) you already made one “magic board” for me;
b) you are a very progressive shaper
and are thinking about these kinds of things; and
c) I trust you to give sound advice and
help me cut through the hype and confusion.
I have surfed Hawaii North Shore in double-overhead + at Haleiwa, Lani’s, and Chun’s, and I know first-hand that I will probably still try to get hold of a serious 8′ mini-gun or something when I am there, because those waves were insanely fast, thick, and powerful for their size– like nothing I’ve ever seen anywhere, and those boys over there can paddle like nothing I’ve ever seen before, too. But I am starting to think that there is a more conventional board shape that should work well for me in just about everything that we see here, even on our biggest west swells– something that is not necessarily a mini-gun or gun design.
Granted, those North Shore boys are
on a whole different level–
they were still using boards about a foot shorter than me and doing just fine….so I realize that it’s not just the surfboard, it’s the surfer, too. If I could paddle like a pro or a North Shore local I probably could do it all on the board you already made for me.
But I’m just an intermediate surfer,
don’t do contests, and am looking
for a board that works for me,
not a board that works for a pro.
Thanks and I look forward to hearing your thoughts–
–
Chris M
Hi Chris,
Good to hear from you. Sounds like you’ve been well and been getting plenty of waves. Stoked the board we did is going good for you!!
I always enjoy getting the feedback
from everybody…so cool…
Anyway, I read through your very thorough breakdown; thanks, good job on explaining your thoughts; it has helped make it very clear for me to know exactly the direction you should go.
You are spot on with your ideas
regarding overall volume for paddling
as opposed to just length.
In the majority of the waves we get here in California anyway, you can get away with a shorter board if the overall volume matches what is right for you as an individual surfer. Judging off what you have written here and the dimensions of your last board, I think you could stay with the length of 6’6″ but go 19 1/2″ x 2 5/8″ with a thumbtail. This will give you the paddleability necessary for the bigger/ hollower days when more water is moving.
The thumbtail comes in good on those
days too with a nice positive hold in the power.
I would keep the rail volume close to the same as your current board; maybe slightly fuller, but mostly just more foam in the middle for paddling and
keep the deck domed foiling down to a rail
that is still going to be responsive and
positive through turns.
I would keep the same overall rocker and hull contours as that particular rocker is very versatile generating speed in smaller waves, yet still holding in on the powerful ones. Possibly just a touch less entry rocker for early entry into waves and increased drive down the line and carry through flat spots…same tail rocker.
Let me know your thoughts. Please feel free to ask any other questions you may have. Looking forward to your reply, Aloha,
Todd
Hey, Todd,
That sounds like the ticket. I think I will order this from you, but not right away– in a month or two.
Chris M
Ok Chris, Sounds good….
just lemme know when you are ready to roll, or if you have any other questions please don’t hesitate to ask.
Have a great day,
Aloha,
Todd
Greased Rascal is great for knee high to head high
What would be the board that pushes back more through turns than the accelerator
but yet is more responsive/maneuverable than the rascal 2? I guess it would be something between the lines of those two models. Maybe the module? Yesterday you mentioned the greased rascal, which seems to fill this gap too.
Mauricio P
Hi Mauricio,
The Greased Rascal would fill this gap, but so would the Greased Pig. Either of those are insane for more push back than the Accelerator and more responsive than the Rascal 2.
The Greased Pig is slightly more versatile
and will work in gutless small and even up to slightly overhead, whereas the
Greased Rascal is great for knee high to head high.
Both can fit in small, yet tight hollow beachbreak kind of stuff too, which I know you get there. Just to give you an idea regarding dims – Greased Pig you would ride right around 5’10” x 18 7/8” x 2 ¼”; and the Greased Rascal right around 5’8” x 19” x 2 ¼”….the rails on both are more shortboardy, but fuller than the accelerator rails, yet less volume than the Rascal rails. These are a couple of my current favs…Let me know any other questions you have.
Have a good evening brother,
Todd
Thanks for your insight! As soon as I sell a couple of my older boards I’ll order up a greased pig. Out of curiosity, what dims are you using on this board?
Mauricio
Is the Quad Fang better in very small waves than the Rascal?
Hello,
I have a question is the Quad Fang better in very small waves than the Rascal?
if it’s better perhaps we could change model for my order.
Can you explain the difference
between these two boards
in very little waves?
Thank a lot.
Christophe
Hi Christophe,
The 5’7″ Rascal you chose from stock is the ideal board for you….and is a super sweet board. You are going to be stoked!! The Rascal is just as fast as the Quad Fang or Twin Fang,
but the Rascal is much more
responsive and high performance
of a design;
the Twin Fang and Quad Fang models are a bit more retro feeling board and not as quick through tight turns as the Rascal….so you have made the best choice.
Thanks for the order….I’ll be looking forward to hearing your feedback. Aloha,
Todd
what are the waves like that you need a Rascal for?
Hi Proctor Team,
I live down in Huntington beach and have been hearing a lot of good things about your boards. I was wondering if there was a dealer close to Huntington so I can walk in and take a look at some boards, or is the only shop in Ventura?
All the best,
Lawrence
Hi Lawrence,
I build the majority of my boards custom…
direct to surfers,
so I do not deal with accounts really except for distribution companies outside of the U.S. The best thing would be for you to come up to our Ventura factory/ showroom…this is where all the boards are made. If you can find a way to make it up, it really is worth it. The best thing to do is to set up an appointment letting us know when you are coming up and I can meet with you, show you the different board models we have in stock here that would work good for you…It is a good idea to bring your old boards to show me what you are coming off and the explain to me the direction you want to go with your surfing i.e. more carvy, more airs, fins free stuff, etc…
then I break down what is going to
be the best board design
and dimensions for you to go with to get you where you want to take your surfing. That is what I have done for over 17 years with surfers and this unique personal approach really gets you the board that is going to be the best for you.
Please feel free to ask any other questions you may have.
Looking forward to your reply,
Aloha,
Todd
Hey Todd,
Many thanks for the email.
Your website is probably the most
informative website
I have come across in my search for the ultimate small wave board. It doesn’t take much to get me up to SB. I’m traveling a fair bit the next 2weeks for work, but will try to make it up during the latter part of Feb. I’ll keep you posted. Look forward to visiting the shop.
All the best,
Lawrence
Sounds great Lawrence,
I look forward to hearing from you/ meeting you later in the month.
Aloha,
Todd
Hey Todd,

Is the shop in ventura open on sunday? Do you also carry used boards? If so do you have any lil rascals in the 6’3 to 6’6 range? All the best, Lawrence
Hi Lawrence,
Sorry to take so long to get back with you….had a lot on my plate lately…anyway, we are not open on Sundays, but we are open Saturdays. I don’t have any used Rascals in that size range at the moment, but I may have a friend who is going to sell a 6’6″ Rascal….he is sizing down to a 6’3″. He really likes his 6’6″ but has recently dropped like 20 pounds so is ordering a smaller one, but probably will be looking to sell the 6’6″ maybe….I could check into it if you like? What is your height, weight, age, how long have you been surfing,
what are the waves like that you need a Rascal for?
If you let me know those things, I am more than happy to detail the perfect dimensions/ design for a Rascal for you. Please feel free to ask any other questions you may have. I know you would be stoked on a magic Lil Rascal. Looking forward to your reply,
Aloha,
Todd
Hey Todd,
No worries…
I grew up surfing on the outer banks
(North Carolina),
started surfing in the fifth grade…In 2001 I moved to New York where I worked in finance. by 2006 I was married, just welcomed my first daughter into the world, and could count on two hands the number of times I had been surfing. Life’s too short…we pulled the rip cord on NYC beginning part of 2007 and moved to socal. I’m still in finance, so 2008 was an interesting year, but still able to spend more time with my girls and in the water…
I’m 6’3, 190-200lbs, and 30yrs old.
grew-up surfing longboards and your typical shortboard thruster range in size from 6’8 to 7’0. Looking to broaden my horizon on surfboard design to challenge and improve my surfing..I think the rascal would be a good substitute for my longboard, plus I live in Huntington beach,
where the waves sometimes have soft shoulders
even when chest to head high and would be a good substitute for my shortboard.
I have never really surfed fish designs…
so this is a new experience for me. if I had to guess the optimal dimensions on a rascal for me would be 6’3,21, 2 3/4… but to avoid early frustrations, I might want to get something a little bit larger..what do you think? experienced wise, I would classify myself as intermediate..not taking anything vertical, but I love speed and power moves…
Many thanks,
Lawrence
but I’m a big guy (210 lbs) and don’t want a big fish
Hi,
I am interested in the little rascal,
but I’m a big guy (210 lbs) and
don’t want a big fish.
If I’m 5’11”, how short on the board can I go? I would really like a shorter, skatey board (say between 5’6” and 5’9”) that I can play around with in the shorebreak. Is this possible?
Thanks,
Tony
Hi Tony,
What your looking for and wanting is very possible….in fact with the Lil’ Rascal it is reality….I recommend you go
5’8″ x 20 1/2″ x 2 5/8″ Rascal….
flat deck with full boxy rails…..
this would be the magic for you….
Please feel free to ask any other questions you may have. I know you would be stoked on a magic Rascal to go looney bins mental in the shorebreak. Looking forward to your reply,
Aloha,
Todd
it generates the same speed as the style of retro fish you’ve been riding, but with more hold and responsiveness for modern performance type of maneuvers
I’m considering a custom Lil’ Rascal II
to surf here in Texas but have a question first: What size/dimensions would you recommend for me?
I’m 6′ and weigh 175lbs and ride a Keel-fin retro fish that I love (6′: 16.5″ x 21″ x 16″ and 2.5″ thick w/full rails) though it does tend to spin out and it gets squirrely in larger stuff.
I’d like the new board to be my all around
small-wave board (head-high and under).
What do you think?
Hi Louis,
The Rascal II would be the perfect board for you.
Basically it generates the same speed
as the style of retro fish you’ve been riding,
but with more hold and responsiveness
for modern performance type of maneuvers.
I recommend going 6’1” x 20 5/8” x 2 ½” with the tail and nose widths a bit over 15”.
Please feel free to ask any other questions you may have. I know you would be stoked on a Lil’ Rascal II for Texas.
Looking forward to your reply,
Aloha,
Todd
The Rascal II is a very easy board to ride and is not too advanced for you.
Hi Proctor Team,
I got around a year ago into surfing (I am 33 years old) and loving it. I started out with a 8.0 Softtop and have now a 6.10 Rusty Piranha quad fin made out of Suftech’s Tuflite (22×2.75). I surf mainly Sands in Goleta, a beach break.
My question for you is: I am still not that great and don’t get all the waves I would like to. I certainly don’t rip, but working on going down the line. Surfing the beachbreak here with usually knee to waist high conditions makes me feel, however, my board is a bit to big. I am fairly light (157 lb) and athletic.
It seams I have problems pushing the
tail down into the wave,
however, which I guess is an advantage if I take off further out, but since the waves are fairly small but fast and steep when they break,
I have problems taking off in the pocket.
and if I do a pearl a lot.
Long story short, what board does Proctor
have that would work for a SB beachbreaks,
for a, advanced beginner, that still paddles easily (volume), but is a bit easier to get into the steep section of the wave. I like the way the Rascal II looks, but I am not sure if this is too advanced for me. Also, I like how resistant my epoxy board it.
Thank you so much
Andreas
Hi Andreas,
Nice to meet you. Well, you are on a right track by noticing that the length of your current board and the flatness of the rocker/ bottom is making it difficult for you to catch and drop into the type of waves you most commonly surf.
The Rascal II is a very easy board to ride
and is not too advanced for you.
Also, you’ve done your homework well because that is just the board I would recommend for you at this stage with your surfing. The ideal dimensions for you would be 6’4” x 21” x 2 ¾”. You will notice the length and width of the board is less than your current board.
The shorter length will help you with the
shorter, steeper take-offs,
while the narrower width will allow you to angle your board easier into bowlier take-offs by enabling your board to lay over on its rail quicker as your angling in. The volume is the same as your current board and that is to keep it nice and quick paddling….this will get you in earlier so you don’t have to take off late.
I make boards out of polyester (traditional foam and fiberglass) construction, as well as our unique “Proxy” custom epoxy construction. The Proxy construction is very strong and holds up to a beating much better than the polyester boards do….they also ride unreal and are slightly more buoyant than the polyesters.
Please feel free to ask any other questions you may have. I know you would be stoked on a magic Proctor Rascal II.
Looking forward to your reply,
Aloha,
Todd
A super fast, yet even more versatile version of the Rascal II.
Hey Todd and Charissa,
Hi this is Craig in NewYork. Happy New Year( a little late) Congrats on the site, it looks good.
Todd can you please tell me about the falcon? that shape looks sick!!!!
Also Is the G4E the same as the IVP? Thanks for your time as always.
Craig
Hi Craig,
Good to hear from you bro….are you all healed up now, or still in the process of mending?
Well, let me tell you….the Falcon is all I’ve been riding lately. I made myself the first prototype and have been loving it.
It is basically the same exact dimensions as you would ride the Rascal II; same rocker and hull contours, but with a slightly pulled in, yet pointed full nose for tighter turning rail arcs in the pocket;
A super fast, yet even more versatile version of the Rascal II.
The G-4.E is the latest version of the Groveler IV.p –
it has some refinements to the rocker that make it faster in the small stuff and looser with more hold on the bigger, pushier stuff.
These slight modifications have tuned this board into what is now my most versatile high performance shortboard…..
so we have changed the name from being a Groveler (which is most often associated with strictly a small waves design) to the G-4.E (E standing for everything)….and G-4 just sounds cool.
Ok, well hope that answers your questions. Feel free to ask any others you may have.
Aloha,
Todd
Hi Todd,
Thanks for getting back to me so quickly. So I am on the mend but it is slow going. I chose to get surgery about two months ago. The dr. went through my mouth to get to my spine. How gnarly is that? The operation was a success and I am feeling way better. I have no nerve damage and 100% range of motion. I just have to stregthen my neck, shoulder and arm. So I am doing crazy physical therapy 4 times a week. I am back in the pool and am able to swim, but have not surfed yet. I only got to ride 6’5″ a couple of times so I can’t give you any feedback yet. Anyway about mid February I should be cleared to surf again. Surfing is my motivation to work hard while I am rehabbing I just keep thinking about throwing sick buckets and I am going to make that happen without a doubt. My goal is to be able to surf better than ever. I know it won’t happen over night but it will happen.
So the falcon is going to be my next board for sure. I just know it is going to work for me.
Have you ridden it any beach breaks yet? if so how did it go? What dimensions do you suggest? Could I get by with the falcon and IVP as my whole quiver? Alright brother I look foward to hearing back from you.
Be well. Craig
Hi Craig,
Wow….that sounds like a regimen for sure, but one that I know will be worth it!! I went through a knee injury where I had to do major rehab to get back too….it took about a year before I was back to full activity….but it came back as good as ever. It will be the same for you amigo….
I’ve ridden my Falcon in mushy point surf, hollow point surf and beachbreak – kinda hollow/ kinda mushy….and it goes insane in pretty much everything.
The Falcon is the most versatile of the
Rascal series without losing any of
the speed characteristics of the
original Rascal design.
Based off the dimensions of your last board, I recommend going 6’1” x 20 ½” x 2 5/8”. I think you would be covered as the falcon and Groveler for your all around quiver.
Please feel free to ask any other questions you may have.
I think the Falcon would be the perfect weapon
for your east coast arsenal…
and it is a good design for the rehabbing process also since the paddling and speed doesn’t require any unnecessary or jarring motion for it to fly.
Speak soon brah…
Todd

