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| "This is what I've been doing all my life, man," says Bert Burger, "just cruising up and down the coast looking for waves and sleeping in my van." It's an Australian spring afternoon and after a few hours' trying, Surfing magazine has tracked Burger down in the north coast town of Ballina - |
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at a skatepark.
Bert - tall, gangly and just past 40 years of age - is wearing skate pads and a coat of sweat after three hours zooming round the park. This after a long surf in the morning, followed by a sleep in the back of his van.
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It's an unconventional sort of day for a grown man; but Bert's an unconventional human. The bloke whose boardmaking techniques formed the basis for Firewire - and who left the company a year later - thinks different seemingly by habit. Bert is on a brief holiday before heading back to Thailand, where he's been busy setting up a factory base for the second coming of his pre-Firewire brand, Sunova. |
Back in 2005, Sunova was a home brand for custom orders. Now it seems Burger has learned some business lessons himself. He plans to take Sunova into the global market, manufacturing and selling stock models and custom orders worldwide out of the Thai factory, and projecting numbers of up to 20,000 down the track.
| Burger's innovative approach to the craft has seen him painted as a "boardmaker's boardmaker", the little-man inventor who fell foul of Firewire's investors. Ironically his plan for Sunova involves large-scale production in Asia, a move that's been alternately sneered and groaned at by old school surfers and boardmakers both in the US |
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and Australia.
"I've been told it's selling out," says Burger, "but I always say to people who tell me that: ‘Have you tried to start a surfboard building company lately?' There's a no-man's-land now with boardmaking.
You're either making 100 boards a week or 10 - if you're in between that, you fight to survive. "I want to make these boards for surfers everywhere, not just at home."
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He walks to his van, opens the back door and begins pulling out some recent equipment. There's a total balsa-veneer mini-mal: "My son started making this when he was 10 - he finished it at 12. It's actually two boards that he's fitted together." Next to it is a fascinating combination board: a parabolic-railed, Corecell-decked roundtail with a |
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Who knows how many variants he'll end up offering through Sunova when its online ordering system is up and running. Bert figures that's still a few months off.
http://www.surfingmagazine. |
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