Spreading the Surf City image
Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- The International Surfing Museum will soon have a
new weapon in its fight to bring the sport of surfing to the masses.
The museum at 411 Olive Ave. is planning to take its show on the road
this summer using a new customized trailer packed with information on the
sport’s history, legends and memorabilia.
Though still under construction, museum officials are looking forward
to the mobile surfing museum, which will sport the look of a woody car
and serve as a microcosm of the main branch.
“It’s like having a satellite that’s on wheels,” said Natalie Kotsch,
the museum’s founder. “And it will certainly portray the museum better
than a card table and some fliers.”
The mobile museum could cost up to $20,000, a cost that is expected to
be covered primarily through sponsorships and donations from dedicated
surf aficionados.
Some donations from craftsmen include wood veneer for interior walls
and cabinetry, as well as plans for local artists to deck out the
trailer’s aluminum outer skin.
The mobile museum will measure 28 feet long, stand 8 feet tall and 6
feet wide. It will have an entrance at one end, an exit at the other,
with plans for an entertainment center to play scenes from surfing films,
music and actual surfers in action.
Kotsch started the surfing museum in 1988 to commemorate a culture
indicative of the community’s Surf City image, as well as a sport that
has gripped her passion since 1982. The mobile museum is an outgrowth of
that aimed at spearheading the main branch’s community outreach effort.
At present, the museum can only reach out to the public with what its
leaders can stuff in the backs of their cars.
During festival and out-of-town events, the museum’s volunteers pack
their cars with card tables, fliers, merchandise, and a photograph
exhibit attached to a number of painted doors in an attempt to bring
information on surfing to residents living between the northern end of
Los Angeles County to San Diego.
Keith Jackson, the surfing museum’s business manager in charge of
turning the mobile unit into a reality, said the trailer-turned-surfing
resource has a dual purpose.
“Not only does it bring to light the rich history behind surfing and
its culture to people who have never been exposed to it, but it promotes
the city at the same time,” he said. “For example, visitors at the Fender
Museum in Corona came from the Inland Valley, some of whom had never been
to Huntington Beach. They bought T-shirts, learned about surfing and the
city’s pier, and before you knew it they were interested in visiting.”
All that’s missing now, he said, is a truck to tow it.
FYI: For more information about the International Surfing Museum
call (714) 960-3483, e-mail at o7 [email protected],f7 or visit
the Web site at o7 https://www.surfingmuseum.org
f7
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