Legendary Shaper Mike Croteau Passes Away

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The surf industry has lost another industry giant with the May 4th passing of legendary shaper Mike Croteau. Mike passed away due to complications with his medication prescribed from surviving a successful brain tumor surgery on May of 2007. A Memorial Paddle out ceremony for Mike is being planned for Sunday May 24th Memorial Day weekend in conjunction the Santa Cruz Longboard Union Coalition Surf Club Contest at Steamer Lane, Santa Cruz.

A local of the North Shore Oahu, Santa Cruz, and La Jolla, Mike was known and celebrated worldwide for his innovative shaping genius that spanned over 45 years. A protege of Master Shaper Dick Brewer, Mike consistently created innovative, cutting edge progressive designs, yet freely shared his skills and knowledge with surfers and shapers on every continent.

Mike is survived by his wife, three grown children, three grand kids, and forth grandchild on the way. A Memorial Fund has been set up to help Mike's family with financially devastating Medical bills.

Memorial donations should be addressed to:

Mike Croteau Memorial Fund
P.O. Box 1862
Soquel, CA 95073

Rusty Extends His Respect to Family and Friends:

I think the first time I put a Skil 100 planer in my hands and pulled the trigger, it was Mike's.

The initial torque on the barrel freaked me out. I thought the machine was going to jump out of my hands.

Mike used to make all kinds of funny weird sounds and noise instead of real words sometimes.

I heard a harrumpfsnortgiggle come from behind me.

He was 6'3" and looked more like a bodybuilder than a surfer. His reputation for being unpredictable and short fused magnified his physical presence. Probably 250lbs and zero body fat. Mike got this simple, bemused, delight out of my reaction.

He let me butcher the blank for a few minutes and then relegated me to a far corner in the shaping room.

I ended up with a 6'10" swallow tail that I thought was way too thin for me. I have distinct memories of the board being incredibly difficult to paddle compared to my previous board. I also have vivid recall of how the board flexed and jumped out of turns. It was a lot of work to paddle and catch waves, but once up it was a joy to ride.

We would surf together at Wind n Sea and Blacks. Winter of 69/70 I was next to him when we had to push through a substantial north peak set. We didn't have leashes then. I think I tried to turn turtle and got violently dismissed. He did a duck dive long before duck dives were invented. He simply tried to push his board under the breaking 6 foot wave. His board was probably about 8'0", 20.5 wide, 3.75" thick, spruce stringer, double 6 top, single 6 bottom. He made it through with the front half of his board.
The back half ended up on the beach. Physically unfazed but not very happy.

At Wind n' Sea, he was at home in the power that back in the day was considered a North Shore Hawaii training ground. If his size didn't get your attention, some of his antics would leave indelible and formidable impressions. He took bites out of unwelcome visitors rails. If you really pissed him off, he would simply take your board from you and knock your fin off with a palm heel and point to the beach. A little trick he learned from Fred Kenyon. Fred, a martial arts pioneer in Southern California and Wind n' Sea local, had some how ended up as Mike's surrogate older brother during his time in La Jolla.

Mike was 4 or 5 years older than me, but was already living a gypsy life. One afternoon I had to take Mike to the public library in Pacific Beach. He had a vision: his new surfboard label was to be called Mars Orange. He had checked out books with pictures of Mars. We looked at dozens of images and picked the best one. He had to have board laminates printed up with his new logo. I have no idea how many he built but some of the first Mars Orange boards were shaped in the Bridgeman garage. Another La Jolla board builder, Guy Hansen, spent quite a bit of time with Mike, surfing and creating forward-looking mind machines.

There were some incredibly futuristic endeavors. One board comes to mind:
A board with two 2' holes in the mid deck, cut at slight backwards angle through to the bottom. These were meant to function as vents. The bottom had a long oval shaped concave that the vents opened into. There was a faring, flush with the bottom, which covered the front half of the concave and functioned as the vent exit. This Magic Carpet/hovercraft rode on a cushion of air.

His stay in La Jolla/Pacific Beach lasted a year or so.

He headed up to Santa Cruz. Later that winter we hooked up to surf. My family had moved to Carmel Jan 1970. I did my second semester of 11th grade up there. I'd surf Carmel Beach on the weekdays, surf permitting. Weekends, I would drive my fathers 1960 black VW Beetle to Moss Landing and beyond to Santa Cruz if necessary. One weekend I hooked up with Mike and we were driving around looking for waves.

At the time I was 6'4" 210 (still growing) and Mike was 6'3" and 250 lbs of muscle. To casual observers it had to have been hysterical to watch these 2 xxl people climbing in and out of a little black VW bug, with boards strapped on top, to check the surf.

Mike managed to get a little media attention in the early seventies. He shaped and modeled for an Agua Jet hollow, honeycomb, board design.

Crotanimal, was, by all accounts, indestructible. He ran into a farmer's boundary chain, dirt biking at the Hollister Ranch. It would have cut a normal person in half.
Mike was in the hospital for a month. He lost 70 pounds. He healed, regained his strength, and kept shaping. Mike ended up spending time in Hawaii. As it was with most of us at the time, he dreamed of being connected to Brewer in some way, shape, or fashion.

I remember seeing Shaun Tomson on a board at Sunset that looked different, in a good way, from the other equipment of the day. It was a Croteau shape, sporting Mike's Equipe target logo. Uberclean, minigun, with a low entry, blue rails, looking like a good fit. Shaun still has fond memories of this board.

Conceptually still valid.

Mike was obsessed with speed and power. He was a mad scientist and an artist. The boards he loved to build reflected that.  Long, clean lines that always seemed to flow together from every angle.

I lost track of Mike later that decade. 30 or so years later we reconnected one morning at the Shores. He was just passing through. He spoke fondly of his son was still passionate about board building. As always, his head seemed to be brimming with ideas. He was driving north later that morning. That was the last time I saw Mike.

If I were to ever write a book about my life as a board builder, my time with Mike Croteau would be an early chapter.

Rest in peace my brother.

Rusty

6 Responses to “Legendary Shaper Mike Croteau Passes Away”

  • Guy Hansen June 4, 2009

    Rusty,

    Your memory of events and accounts of and with Mike are spot on! Wow, I remember the "air board" you mentioned with the 2" holes in them. It took over 2 hours to sand that board's hot coat just to get the foil and farings back to Mike's original shape! (The board worked really well at Sunset Beach.)

    Very pleased and very relieved with the turn out of surfers and shapers from Central and Northern Cal who showed up to pay their respects to Mike and support his family at the Steamer Lane Memorial Paddle out.

    The local Santa Cruz Sentinel newspaper ran a front page article on Mike which was also published in newspapers in San Jose and Monterrey as well ( Link to this article - http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/ci_12408441?source=most_emailed)

    Mike definitely impacted many people in the surfing world with his design genius, and magical boards. Perhaps his greatest legacy though was his incredible skills with his high performance modified shaping tools. Absolutely legendary to anyone who ever worked beside him...

    Rest in peace brother indeed...

    Guy Hansen

  • Rick Novak March 26, 2010

    Wow, just now belatedly heard that Mike had passed. RIP bro. Mike stayed a season with us at the house in Sunset Beach that Lynn and Jim Richardson and I rented. I remember that "airboard" too, and listening to facinating debates re its merits between Mike and Jim. And I remember fin-and-hotcoating a lot of those Equipe target logo boards too, probably including the Prawn's.
    Mike's favorite trick for getting waves at crowded Sunset was to let someone surf past him, and then take off air-dropping into the wave behind the guy and yell him off the wave. Mike would just free-fall into these solid 10 foot Hawaiian waves like they were little shoulder high beachbreak peaks. What a character!
    Rick Novak.

  • Tasha July 14, 2010

    Uncle Mike was a very humble man and will always be remembered by his daughter Beaulette and son Titan. We were admiring some family boards the other night that we keep in the dining room.

  • Glenn Fye September 28, 2010

    Mike was one of the people that made La Jolla magic. I have great memories of knowing him. I shot the photographs for the Aqua Jet ad and remember the day we went just north of Windansea to take his picture for the ad. Mike was one of a kind!

  • Bruce Fowler February 23, 2011

    I had Mike build some boards when I oversaw the "O-Shop" around 1980. He always had a devout following of guys ready to try his latest ideas. As a shaper myself, I had a keen appreciation for Mike's ability and dedication. He was leading edge to the end, and his courage in designing what you believe in will always serve as inspiration to me.

  • cliff west July 16, 2011

    I had the pleasure to live, work and surf with mike in the early seventies, in Santa Cruz, Ca.
    I met mike at the Haut Shop on swift st,in the early seventies. I worked next door for The Overlin Brothers, making surfboards. I had heard Mike purchased a Husky 650, a very fast, hi performance dirt bike. Mike always wanted the fastest and the best of everything. Then I heard about the accident. Mike had not seen a cable, streched access road, as it was getting dark. Mike took it in the gut,like a cheese slicer, at 60mph. Mike was in Intensive care for 6 months and pronounced dead 3 times. But he pulled through as the cat with nine lives.
    One morning while checking the surf at the Lane, and there was Mike, kind of. He looked very thin, grey, and fragile, hardly being able to stand. We talked and he needed a place to live and work. I took him in and gave him a room in our house. I had my own fiberglass shop at the time, with a spare shaping room, and offered to let Mike use it. Mike worked a deal with Mike Mitchell, who was managing Oneills showroom, to put target boards in the showroom. Oneill was going to start making Reno Abillera and Shaun Thompson models and send them to their dealers, and Croteau, was to be the shaper. Mike also had a good custom board following, so he had plenty of work.
    Mike got stronger and stronger every day. Mike could not just live life, he had to take everything to the max. Surfing, music, cars, alcohol, drugs, ideas, all went to excess. One side of Mike was the Mad Chimp, you just wanted to stay out of his way. The other side a big puppy dog just wanting to please you and have fun.
    Mike was one of the most creative and imaginative people in everything he did. Mike had an altered sense of realty. One reason, I was told, as a child MIke was always the biggest kid on the block. He always got what he wanted. Money for Mike, was just a means to an end, here today gone tomorrow.
    One innovation of Mikes was the diamond nose, the start of(rounded) blunt safety noses on surfboards, that became a standard. At that time, all noses were leathally sharp and pointed for asethics.
    One night at dinner, mike sketched a radical design on a napkin. Wings were very popular, single and double, so mike designed a triple wing. The board had a bullet concave leading to a double concave feeding into the triple concoave wings. The next day the napkin became realty, Mike was truly a foam sculptor and designer. What a challenge to glass and sand. The finished board was a sculptued work of art. Mike gave the board to Tim Watts, one of Mikes teamriders to test. I saw tim shred big center peak at the Lane and the board worked flawlessly. From Napkin to reality in less than 24 hours. I really felt, at the time, Mikes ideas and shapes were so advanced, other shapers were contantly trying to find out what he was up to and creating their shapes from his designs. Mike could create.
    Like it was said before, everyone who came into contact has a "Mike" story or three.
    I feel very fortunate to have shared some time with Mike,and experianced some of these "stories", first hand.

    RIP Mikey
    Cliff