Want to SUP with your pup? These tips will help you learn to paddleboard with your dog

No doggy paddling required.

Samantha Eastburn is living her dream, spending her days on the water in San Diego with dogs as her constant companions. The Arizona transplant runs a business called SUP Pups. She has trained thousands of dogs and their human companions to stand up paddleboard (SUP) together.

Eastburn is stoked about paddleboarding’s physical and mental benefits for both humans and dogs. “It’s a sport, it’s a hobby, it can be therapy,” she said. “I see dogs all the time leave the lesson and they have this little pep in their step. It builds their confidence, and it’s a bonding experience for both of you as well.”

With the right coach, board, and water, Eastburn says, anybody can learn to paddleboard. Here are some tips to help you and your canine BFF take to the water.

A blond dog on a paddleboard.
Photo by Teresa Bergen

Whale fails at social distancing with paddleboarder

A paddleboarder attempting to keep his distance from a whale off Southern California had a hard time of it because it kept coming at him.

A paddleboarder attempting to keep his distance from a gray whale off Southern California had a hard time of it because it kept coming at him.

“A couple of times he popped up right next to me, I saw the tail pop up right next to me,” Doug Griffith told the Orange County Register. “I just think it was a once-in-a-lifetime experience. I spend a fair amount of time in the water and you don’t see a whale every day.”

Also on FTW Outdoors: Watch ice fisherman pull a 50-pound fish through tiny hole

Photographer Matt Larmand, who captured video of the close encounter off Capistrano Beach in Dana Point on Sunday, told the Register it’s the closest he’s seen whales come to shore along this stretch of beach. It came within 10 to 15 feet of the beach at times. It also came quite close to Griffith, who told the Register it kept zigzagging at him.

“[The whale] was not keeping the 6-feet away like he was supposed to,” Larmand told the Register.

[protected-iframe id=”e479105595d377ba04f14556420864c2-58289342-9134387″ info=”https://www.facebook.com/plugins/video.php?href=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2F340189479437567%2Fvideos%2F263532628118838%2F&show_text=0&width=560″ width=”560″ height=”315″ frameborder=”0″ style=”border: none; overflow: hidden;” scrolling=”no”]

For Griffith, who was paddling with his son and dad, the outing was a nice alternative to the whale-watching trip he and his son Fritz were scheduled to be on in Baja. It was canceled because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“I don’t need to go to Baja now,” Fritz told his dad.

Follow David Strege and the outdoors on Facebook.