Stab Magazine | Mason Ho and Tommy Peterson's timeless Fireball Fish

Now Live: Best Surfing I've Ever Seen With Nate Lawrence

1 Views

Mason Ho and Tommy Peterson’s timeless Fireball Fish

“It’s more than a surfboard, it’s a piece of living history!” 

style // Mar 22, 2016
Words by Jake Howard
Reading Time: 3 minutes

When you ask Mason Ho about his Tommy Peterson-shaped Fireball Fish he blushes and says, “it’s a deep one for me.”

Last year at Bells, Mase spent some time with the great and mysterious Tommy Peterson, younger brother of the late Michael Peterson.

“My dad used to hang with him and MP back in the day,” he says. “Every time I see Tommy I’m like, ‘What’s up uncle?!’ I’ll ask him about whatever I’m kind of into at the time. Last year at the Bells event I saw him, and because I’d been watching Searching For Tom Curren, I wanted to know about the board Curren was riding.”

Mason Ho sipping on the freshest shade of blue.

The board Mason is referring is the mythic 5’7” Fireball Fish on which Curren shattered boundaries in maxing Bawa back in 1994. Thick with square, boxy rails, the board’s signature feature is a set of channels carved through the belly, but rather than running throughout the board, the channels abruptly end with a step in front of the fins before the tail goes flat.

So Mason asked Uncle Tommy about the board and “he ended up making me one in three days. It was fully done in three days. It has a lot of sentimental value.”

But the Fireball Fish has much more than sentimental value. Tommy Peterson’s genius is a tie that binds some of surfing’s most inspiring performers.

There’s something unexplainably beautiful about watching someone work a board too small in waves of consequence.

It goes without saying, but in the mid ‘70s the brothers Peterson were a force. MP was putting on the most radical performances with the most radical equipment, and Tommy was right there in the shaping room and the water. And hence, the trend of stylish, aggressive performances on cutting-edge, unorthodox equipment was born.

Skip ahead some 20 years and by the early ‘90s Tom Curren was on the same trajectory. Growing bored with winning on tour, he walked away from competition to explore the innermost limits of fun on a range of innovative boards. During the now-famous Rip Curl Search venture to Indo in 1994 (organised by Derek Hynd), Curren applied the 5’7” to great effect. (He also had a 5’9” Fireball Fish, as well as boards shaped by Maurice Cole, Al Merrick and Dave Parmenter). Sonny Miller jockeyed the camera and history was made. Both Bawa and Sonny Miller are now gone, but the footage continues to stand the test of time.

https://www.youtube.com/embed/IKPvVkDh5vE

As the story goes, Peterson originally intended the board for the Gold Coast’s Jay Phillips, but when Tom and South African Frankie Oberholzer came through Coolangatta the young Phillips was already on his way to a pro junior event at Bells and he lost his claim to the board.

But here’s where the story takes a turn. Shortly after the Search trip, Mr Curren was back in Australia, enjoying the points of NSW and doing some design experimentation with Mark Thomson—father of Daniel Thomson and occasional co-conspirator with minds like George Greenough and Bob McTavish. Before leaving the Thomson household, Curren gifted the Fireball Fish to young Daniel. (It should also be noted that Daniel grew up riding one of MP’s personal single-fins).

Tangentially, in 1991 Daniel and a mop-top Kelly Slater first crossed paths in the parking lot at Lennox Head. Daniel’s father was doing some work with Quik at the time and they “had some deep design rants with the king talking about extruded styro/carbon flex-tails and such,” recalls Daniel.

Flashback 1991. Kelly Slater and I In the parking lot at Lennox head after sharing a fun surf. – Daniel Thomson. Photo: @tomosurfboards

Nearly three decades passed before Tommy Peterson’s Fireball Fish resurfaced under the feet of Mason. And like Curren before him, Mason’s inspiring a generation of surfers to look at waves—big and small—a little bit different.

“I surfed the board everywhere—Pipe, Waimea Shorebreak, the sandbars, West Side a few times, I put it in all these situations where it should have broken, but it didn’t so now I just put it away, so it’s nice and safe,” says Mason. “I don’t think I’m going to ride it again, hopefully I can grab another one this year.”

Pow! Pow!

These days Peterson is semi-retired, but the design wheel keeps on turning. During the recent Quiksilver Pro he hand-shaped a new finless slider for Kelly. And with Mason getting a wildcard into the Bells comp, he’s pretty excited about reuniting with his uncle.

“The thing is, it’s about more than a surfboard. It’s like this little piece of living history,” says Mason.

Comments

Comments are a Stab Premium feature. Gotta join to talk shop.

Already a member? Sign In

Want to join? Sign Up

Advertisement

Most Recent

80 Men And 48 Women Enter The CS Gauntlet — Only 15 Will Survive

Your 2024 Challenger Series x Gold Coast Pro preview.

Apr 26, 2024

The Best Surfing I’ve Ever Seen: Nate Lawrence

Kolohe, Cola Bros, Luke Davis, Crane, and "the most magical 3 weeks ever had in…

Apr 25, 2024

Snapper To Return To The CT In 2025(!) + WSL Announces Season Wildcards

Next year is looking up. Here's what we know...

Apr 25, 2024

Kelly Slater Will Surf In Tahiti And Fiji CT Events — And He’s Bringing A Secret Weapon With Him

What's it like to coach an 11x champ? We asked Glenn "Micro" Hall.

Apr 24, 2024

Watch: A Masterclass In Belated Drops At The Teepee Capital Of The World

And the rest of the O’Neill team sticks the landing in Hawaii.

Apr 24, 2024

How Sophie McCulloch Broke Her Back At The Box Three Days After Being Cut From The CT

The untold brutal side story of finals day in WA.

Apr 24, 2024

The Cut Wasn’t The Surf Fans’ Idea — But It Might Be Our Fault

Psychoanalyzing surfing’s highly sadistic audience (us!).

Apr 23, 2024

How Surfers (And Skiers/Snowboarders) Could Be Using Buoys Better

Snow in Japan = waves at Pipe = snow in Utah, @PowderBuoy told us.

Apr 22, 2024

How Did Sydney’s Hottest Landscape Architect Stack So Many Clips Less Than 10Kms From Centrepoint Tower? 

Fraser Dovell is a man of culture, taste and jabbing North Av lefts in the…

Apr 22, 2024

Full Frame: The Other Side Of Nazaré

The death of a wave, and the birth of an entire genre of surf. 

Apr 21, 2024

Jack Robbo Double Beats Double John At Margies, Gabriela Bryan Dodges Dolphins For Maiden Win

The cut is finished - WA finals recap.

Apr 21, 2024

Watch: A Leisurely Day With Fingal’s-Most-Wanted Foamball Wrangler

Lungi Slabb and filmmaker Beren Hall offer insight into the exact specs which bring GoPro…

Apr 20, 2024

The Stab Interview: Chippa Wilson

On childhood bullies, surfing bigger waves, the making of 'Zipper', and what's on the horizon…

Apr 19, 2024

Medina Cooked at WSL Judges’ BBQ, George Pittar Flares En Route To Finals Day

Four heats, a nine point ride, and some brotherly tears.

Apr 19, 2024

Ferrari Boyz: Harry Bryant (Redux)

A Land Cruiser, a shitting collie, a tank of petrol, and a wild Haz in…

Apr 18, 2024

Surprise! Margies Ran At Southside Today

No rest for the wicked - day 5 WA recap.

Apr 18, 2024

A Dispatch From The Best Run Of Swell Northwest Australia May Ever See

Three weeks of pumping surf, two decades ago, that changed this writer's life.

Apr 17, 2024

Nichols, Silva + Spencer Cut, Robinson Lives To Fight Another Day

Waiting: a polite term for slowly losing your mind - here's what happened in WA…

Apr 17, 2024
Advertisement