Monday, July 9, 2007
First of all... I must give props to my friend, mentor and inspiration for mowing foam...
Several years ago, I met Skip Frye. He invited me to attend a Sunday morning service at Horizon Christian Fellowship on Mt. Alifan in Clairemont, San Diego. That morning was a pivotal turning point in my life. It was a free invitation to have Jesus Christ in my life. I never knew it was so easy... just asking. Skip and I and our buddy Chad Cavanaugh attended every Sunday morning while I lived in Clairemont. We used to take turns buying each other breakfast. Skip started that one... and we kept it going. He invited me down to his shop one day to talk about his transformation through Jesus. He told me to be there by 9AM, and I watched while he shaped a fish surfboard. I was fortunate enough to live right up the hill on Milton and Fairfield, there in Bay Park, so I could drop in and shoot the breeze whenever time allowed. I was fortunate enough to watch over his shoulder on various drop-ins while he shaped a Fish, Long Fish, Swish, Fish Simmons, Eagle, Double Eagle, Egg, his new Braden model, Magic, etc. I didn't always get to see the whole shaping process, but I learned what I could. I just kept my mouth shut, observed, and tried to stay out of his way... a fly on the wall sort of thing. One time out in the parking lot, he studied my MagEgg that he shaped during the Diamond Glassing days (I passed that one on to my good friend Gabe Galvez after I broke my tailbone with it on a 13'er one gnarly Thanksgiving swell out front of the Army and Navy Academy (The lip was so thick, it pulled both the board and me under and the board credit-carded me between the legs, trying to regain it's boyancy). Another time, I was in a really bent soul arch on the nose and the wave broke onto the tail, jerking the board and nearly breaking my back. I figured that someone was trying to tell me something about that board. It had been repaired so many times, that it felt like an old 50's tanker. I got to watch Skip shape my two Frye (a 5'10" and a 6'9" Long Fish). He is a true Artisan and Master Craftsman. He gave me the inspiration to use the name Artisan as my trade name. Watching him turn a blocks of foam into works of pure art has been a wonderful experience and has become some of my fondest memories. He didn't take me under his "wing" to the extent that he took Josh Hall (another amazing Artisan and Craftsman), but he taught me the most important thing in my life... how to "mount up on Eagles wings." Thanks Skipper!!!!!!!