Mode:  
Home Sports > Stand Up Paddle > Product Lineup

SUP Product Line Up

Since 2007 Velauno has been the leading SUP Center of the Caribbean. We carry these fine SUP board and accessory brands:

  • Bark Raceboards
  • Laird Boards and Paddles
  • Ron House Boards
  • Gerry Lopez Boards
  • Takayama Boards
  • Robert August Boards
  • Infinity Boards
  • Oxbow Boards and Paddles
  • Amundson Boards
  • C4 Boards
  • Surftech Paddles
  • Kialoa Paddles
  • NSI Accessories
  • Dakine Accessories
  • Stand Up Journal Magazine
  • Stand Up Paddle Magazine
We currently have over 80 boards in stock plus demo, rentals and used boards for sale. Check out the complete list of boards available at Velauno here -->> SUP List

Paddles 

Our paddle inventory is huge. Check this out. 
  • Surftech paddles in aluminum, glass or carbon starting at just $99
  • Kialoa Professional paddles all hand made in the US with models in aluminum, full carbon and adjustables starting at just $199
  • Oxbow 2-piece carbon from $249

Accessories

There is not much to accessorize your Paddleboard but if it exists we have it!
  • Dakine boardbags, paddlebags, traction pads, board carriers and leashes
  • NSI traction pads in every color
  • Surfco Paddleguards
  • NSI Paddlegrips
  • C4 Pads
  • Rainbow Racks
  • Thule Racks for your car


Stand up paddle surfing, or SUP, is a variant of surfing where the surfer uses a paddle to move through the water while standing on a surfboard. Stand up paddle surfing is derived from its Polynesian roots. The Hawaiian translation is Ku Hoe He'e Nalu; to stand, to paddle, to surf, a wave.

The popularity of the modern sport of SUP has its origination in the Hawaiian Islands. In the early 1960s the Beach Boys of Waikiki would stand on their long boards and paddle out with outrigger paddles to take pictures of the tourists learning to surf. This is where the term "Beach Boy Surfing" originates, another name for Stand Up Paddle Surfing.

In the early 2000s Hawaiian surfers such as Dave Kalama, Brian Keaulana, Rick Thomas, Archie Kalepa and Laird Hamilton started SUP as an alternative way to train while the surf was down. As the years went on they found themselves entering events such as the Moloka'i to O'ahu Paddleboard Race and Mākaha's Big Board Surfing Classic. Now you can find Stand Up Paddle Surfers in many of the Outrigger and Paddleboard races as participants with in heir own division.

One difference between the modern idea of surfing and SUP is that the latter does not need a wave. In SUP, one can paddle on the open ocean, in harbors, on lakes, rivers or any large body of water. One of the advantages of Stand Up Paddle Surfing is the angle of visibility. Because of the standing height over the water one can see both deeper into the water and further across the surface of the water, allowing better visualization of features others lower above the water may not be able to see, whether it is the marine life in the harbors, lakes and coves or the incoming swells of the ocean marching on the horizon.