Best board ever IMO. Had one in the mid 80s to mid 90s, ocean beach, pacific beach, la jolla shores & solana beach...with yellow & blue churchill fins....
It must have been the mid-70's when I went to Solana Beach, to pick up several Morey Boogieboard blanks/cores and skins to assemble at home (much cheaper to build yourself, and with the option of skin colors). I paid "X" then sold for "X-PLUS!" This funded my own Boogieboard, and skateboard obsession. Not quite 50 years later, there are contact cement marks all over my parents old garage floor! Almost like a historic account of my homespun Boogieboard business. Soon I added leashes and ruby red urethane skegs to them, and drove up the sell prices. A 16 year old capitalist in the making. Some, I even branded their initials in, after they paid. Happy customers, everyone!
Got here through a bodyboard collectors group, loving the content on other items and your input on reselling, you´re giving away extremely great information. thank you
Thanks for the reply I just found out a 1972 model is in a musium Any more advice you can give me would be brilliant They may be worth a lot Thanks Jon
Hi I love watching your videos My Grandma lives in LA Newport Beach I have 2 morey boogie 136 for sale but I have no idea how much or how to sell I think they are rare I bought them in 1975 in Newport Can you please give me some advice Thanks so much
Have you just did the simple search MOREY BOOGIE and checked solds and HIGHEST PRICE. That would show you highest to lowest. Then look to see if you see it. Not sure which one you have. The can be tricky to ship. One of the only boxes I buy is an adjustable box from a box store. It is 4 inches thick and adjusts. I can get two boogie boards to ship with it. So many boogie boards just dig down in the solds. All you can do is then best guess. Condition is a huge factor. If you have any more questions send them in.
There's a few other boogies that will bring coin but not everything will sell for high dollar. To get the highest amount the deck slick and rails should all be in decent condition with little to no delamination. Also this is extremely key, the boards must be as close to flat as possible. A little bit of rocker or curve is fine but dead flat is what were all looking for.
@@goldenstatepicker they both looked pretty solid. Just dropping some knowledge for other people who want to resell. The brands are important but each company(BZ, Toobs, Morey, etc) all produced a wide range of boards. The ones that bring in solid money are the pro models that are flat because we want to ride them again. I personally am on the hunt for a Morey Mach7ss but only a Dave Hubbard model and only the white deck and blue rail version that had Knee slots. Theres a whole laundry list of boards us collectors are after but its mostly focused around boards we wanted but couldn't afford as kids. We've seen so many people putting absolute trash up for sale for hundreds of dollars that we even have a running joke of the $699 price tag.
Best board ever IMO. Had one in the mid 80s to mid 90s, ocean beach, pacific beach, la jolla shores & solana beach...with yellow & blue churchill fins....
It must have been the mid-70's when I went to Solana Beach, to pick up several Morey Boogieboard blanks/cores and skins to assemble at home (much cheaper to build yourself, and with the option of skin colors). I paid "X" then sold for "X-PLUS!" This funded my own Boogieboard, and skateboard obsession. Not quite 50 years later, there are contact cement marks all over my parents old garage floor! Almost like a historic account of my homespun Boogieboard business. Soon I added leashes and ruby red urethane skegs to them, and drove up the sell prices. A 16 year old capitalist in the making. Some, I even branded their initials in, after they paid. Happy customers, everyone!
Got here through a bodyboard collectors group, loving the content on other items and your input on reselling, you´re giving away extremely great information. thank you
ricardo silva e sousa thank you formwatching
Thanks for the reply
I just found out a 1972 model is in a musium
Any more advice you can give me would be brilliant
They may be worth a lot
Thanks Jon
You can try an Auction an set high starting price and see what happens. Without me seeing them it's hard.
I own two 1972 15x35’’ {in fair shape} original bodyboards made In Honolulu by Tom himself, considering all offers..
Hi
I love watching your videos
My Grandma lives in LA
Newport Beach
I have 2 morey boogie 136 for sale but I have no idea how much or how to sell
I think they are rare
I bought them in 1975 in Newport
Can you please give me some advice
Thanks so much
Have you just did the simple search MOREY BOOGIE and checked solds and HIGHEST PRICE. That would show you highest to lowest. Then look to see if you see it. Not sure which one you have. The can be tricky to ship. One of the only boxes I buy is an adjustable box from a box store. It is 4 inches thick and adjusts. I can get two boogie boards to ship with it. So many boogie boards just dig down in the solds. All you can do is then best guess. Condition is a huge factor. If you have any more questions send them in.
There's a few other boogies that will bring coin but not everything will sell for high dollar. To get the highest amount the deck slick and rails should all be in decent condition with little to no delamination. Also this is extremely key, the boards must be as close to flat as possible. A little bit of rocker or curve is fine but dead flat is what were all looking for.
Anthony Leone thanks Anthony I sold both boards.
@@goldenstatepicker they both looked pretty solid. Just dropping some knowledge for other people who want to resell. The brands are important but each company(BZ, Toobs, Morey, etc) all produced a wide range of boards. The ones that bring in solid money are the pro models that are flat because we want to ride them again. I personally am on the hunt for a Morey Mach7ss but only a Dave Hubbard model and only the white deck and blue rail version that had Knee slots. Theres a whole laundry list of boards us collectors are after but its mostly focused around boards we wanted but couldn't afford as kids. We've seen so many people putting absolute trash up for sale for hundreds of dollars that we even have a running joke of the $699 price tag.
Anthony Leone thanks again. I used to ride one at Steamers lane Santa Cruz in the 70’s 80’s
Mike , great score on the sweater machine ,sometimes it's ok to pay up for quality items. Great content as usual .✌
Good videos
I have a mach gripper morey boogie
Ever think about reading that bible?
I do and if you watch some of my videos I talk about the bible. I think tomorrows video just might speak of John 3:16