Tom Pōhaku Stone
Tom Pōhaku Stone paddles out to the break on his favorite surfboard – not a modern, fiberglass board, but a board he built with his own hands. Stone is an educator, craftsman and former pro surfer. He’s obsessed with reviving and perpetuating lost aspects of Hawaiian culture, like perfecting the art of crafting papa he‘enalu (surfboards) in the traditional Hawaiian way.
About a quarter mile from shore, he takes off on a small, playful wave. Tom wears his traditional malo, and seeing him surf here at Kahana Bay can make you feel like you’ve been transported 1,000 years back in time.
Tom Pōhaku Stone shaping a surfboard.
Why is surfing so special to Native Hawaiians?
Standing on a board originates in Hawaiʻi. Surfing is who we are as native peoples. We come from the ocean, we love to surf waves. We surfed waves for generations, and we surf waves still. And that's what those boards are about, it's about being able to constantly ride the waves of time. It's an endless wave that never stops."We’re not land people, we’re ocean people."
How did hand-crafting surfboards start for you?
I was a pain-in-the-butt kid, right? And I so wanted that beautiful shiny fiberglass board. And we come from a family that just didn't have that kind of money. My dad, he said he'd take care of it. He got a piece of wood, he cut it out. Started carving it in the traditional way.But at the end of it, I just looked at the board and told my dad I hated it. And in his anger, he just took the board, broke it, lit it up in the fire pit and burned it. And that's actually the number one regret I've ever had, and I've only had a few.
That was an awesome thing my dad did for me. I'm glad before he passed away that I really had the opportunity to express that to him. That I began to go down this pathway, that he had given me that gift, and that he saw the boards I made and he was pretty ecstatic. He was happy.
“When you stand up on a wood board, it's like listening to a beautiful symphony playing that's just soothing to your soul.”
What’s it like riding a traditional wood board?
When you stand up on a wood board, it's like listening to a beautiful symphony playing that's just soothing to your soul, and you just embrace it. It's a harmonization between the wind, the motion of the water, the breaking of the wave. I'm not in this time era, or this time point or era. I'm out. I'm in another place. And I love being in that place.
Why is carrying on what you’ve learned so important to you?
This isn't my knowledge, this is my kūpuna's (ancestors) knowledge that they gave to me and now my kuleana (responsibility) is to give to those that want to carry it on. That's what's important, passing that tradition on.Browse Hawaiʻi Adventures
In 1998, Honolulu Cookie Company was established using a recipe for premium shortbread cookies baked [...]
Visit the Southernmost bakery in the U.S.A. Home of the world-famous Punalu'u Sweetbread. Located in the [...]
Island of Oahu- Discounted rates on Jeep Wranglers, convertibles, SUVs, vans and cars from major [...]
Aqua-Aston Hospitality is reinventing the travel industry with a robust portfolio of services and [...]
Nicklaus + Oceanfront + Eighteen = Amen. And that is what you’ll say completing the namesake course [...]
An idyllic Hawaii getaway, Aston Mahana at Kaanapali is an ultimate tropical retreat on Kaanapali Beach. [...]
Refreshing beverages and a select casual dining menu let you relax and enjoy your time in the sun to the [...]
A warm greenhouse-style restaurant offering Hawaii Regional Cuisine featuring fresh fish, local produce [...]
Oahu Hawaii car rental service for the Island of Oahu. Special discounted rates through large national [...]
Aloha, E Komo Mai! Relax in comfortable surroundings and experience island hospitality that makes Hawaii [...]
Aston Maui Hill is located in the lively town of Kihei on Maui, where island living is blended with [...]
CFX Hawaii is your partner to a successful experience. Quality-oriented, our kamaaina staff is ready to [...]