T9: What are five adjectives your friends would use to describe you?
Christie: Introspective, Kind, Nerdy, Frothy, Creative.
T9: What drew you to surfing? What do you love about it today?
Christie: The Gulf Coast isn’t known for its waves, so surfing didn’t jump out to me as an option when I was a kiddo. I was shocked the first time I saw surfing on TV when I was around 10. “Dad! Why don’t their feet need to be strapped to that board?!” I became obsessed with the idea of surfing around age 14, a couple boys at my school brought their boards to school one day (I have no idea why) and I was so shocked that there were waves to be surfed (barely surfable, in retrospect) just on the other side of my county.
I had always been a fish, but the first wave I caught on a rented board when I was 15 hooked me for life. The feeling of the ocean propelling me along was so much more exciting and pure than getting pulled behind a boat! Everything became crystal clear: This is what I was put on this earth to do! My parents were a little less enthused than I was about this new life path.
I love all the same things now: that exhilarating feeling of the takeoff, watching the water fly by, sitting in the ocean for hours, the feeling of purpose in purposelessness. And then I love some new things, like always finding room to improve, always learning, and needing to stay in shape to stay surfing for as long as possible as I get older.
T9: You’ve said that when you want something new, you tend to make it yourself. Where do you think that instinct comes from? What kinds of things besides surfboards have you made?
Christie: My parents are both very much DIY folks, my mother especially. She weaves; she upholsters; she grows food; she makes bread and yogurt; she makes pots. She got me making art from as soon as I could hold a crayon. So when I was young we were always making things for fun. My dad shared his garage with me and let me use his tools, so I first got into making art out there in high school and then very rustic furniture in college. I really made whatever I could from wood scraps lying around, cast off windows and doors from dumpsters, and his collections of random nails and screws.
As an adult, I’ve made a lot of swimsuits; built a lot of seeding tables, simple garden structures, furniture and light fixtures out of driftwood; made lots of ceramic bowls, plates, and mugs, the tiles for the backsplash of my current kitchen. Together with my hubby, Pat, we’ve built multiple cute rustic cabins and one house for ourselves out of earth (super adobe). And just about every kind of food you can imagine, we’ve tried to make it from its rawest state.