A surfing benchmark
“The kids had grown up and left home, so we were trying to decide what to do with their surfboard,” says Michael. “The idea of making it into a bench was my wife’s, as are all great ideas in our family.”
Now, even when the Laprades aren’t down at the water enjoying their California creation, they often stumble across surfers-in-training who are. “My wife and I were out in the boat one day,” recounts Laprade, “when some passersby pulled over, and, thinking no one was home, the teenage girl hopped on and posed for a photo.” The little surfer girl caught her wave, and then some. “Our daughter, Cassie, glimpsed the pair scampering off. It’s actually become a landmark.” -Pat Lynch
Originally published in the July/August 2006 issue of Cottage Life magazine. Copyright © 2006 by Cottage Life. All rights reserved. Reproduction of any article, photograph, or artwork, for other than personal use, in whole or in part, without the written permission of the publisher is strictly forbidden. |
|

Cottagers in the Thousand Islands aren’t
always looking out for the next big wave, but if they’re ever in the mood to shoot the tube, a surfer’s
paradise awaits at the end of Michael and Janice Laprade’s Honey Bee Island dock. When the Laprades, who hail
from California, bought the 130-year-old cottage six years ago, they brought a piece of their home state
north, transforming a surfboard into something that’s still good for a ride.
The surfboard was
mounted on a pair of wooden blocks, which were sanded to fit its concave base, and affixed with fibreglass
resin. A pair of floor flanges screw into the wooden blocks, and a couple of 17" threaded pipes act as legs.
A second set of floor flanges mount to the dock, and are the bench’s feet.
