McKevlin's manager serious when it comes to surfing waves
Edward Fennell
The Post and Courier
Mark Gasque, general manager of McKevlin's Surf Shop, checks out one of the nearly 500 surf boards the shop keeps in stock.
Edward Fennell
The Post and Courier
Mark Gasque, 43, general manager of McKevlin's Surf Shop at Folly Beach, pressure watches some signage on the side of the building.
A sign on the side of McKevlin's Surf Shop at Folly Beach reads "Pop Outs" — with a big red "no" insignia stamped over the lettering.
Translated, the sign means no machine-hewn, cheapo, cookie-cutter surfboards are sold there, McKevlin's Surf Shop General Manager Mark Gasque said.
It might also be said that Gasque is not a cookie-cutter businessman. A former machine and equipment operator for the city of Charleston for 20 years, the 43-year-old Gasque once dug 6-foot pits "so phone company repairmen could work comfortably." He has worked as a lumberjack and a surveyor "and at a few other places."
A McKevlin's employee for nine years, Gasque does just about anything and everything necessary to keep the business going. His duties include not only managing up to eight employees at a time, but also hand-finishing and repairing surfboards. On the day he was interviewed, he was pressure washing the sides of the building.
"Anyone who works here pretty much has to be a jack-of-all-trades," he said.
The shop carries anything you might need for the beach. Up to 500 surfboards are in stock at any time, and the store has a women's section.
"Girl surfing has exploded," Gasque said. "It's not a guy sport as much as some guys would like to think it is."
The surf shop was founded in 1965 by Dennis McKevlin, whose support for surfing and those who love it helped him get elected to Folly Beach City Council, and one of the councilman's sons, Teddy.
Teddy moved on to other enterprises and Dennis McKevlin died in 2005. The shop now is owned by Dennis' son, Timothy.
"We turn (sell) about 1,000 (surf) boards a year," Gasque said. He said customers come not only from all over the Lowcountry but from all parts of the U.S. and even abroad.
"We had a couple here from Holland," he said about a recent encounter.
Gasque enjoys meeting other surfers and sharing information and experiences about the sport and the making and maintenance of surfboards. "I love this job," he said, "Not too many people can say they love their job."
Asked what he dislikes, Gasque mentioned that unmentionable word again: "pop outs." He said pop outs, which he described as low quality, mass-produced machine molded and shaped boards that are invading American beaches from China and Europe, are pushing out time-tested, hand-hewn, custom boards made in America.
"Corporations are taking over surfboards," he lamented. "You will end up with only five models," not the endless varieties created by local craftsmen to best serve individual surfer's needs, he said.
Reach Edward C. Fennell at efennell@postandcourier.com or 745-5560.
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Comments
This article has 1 comment(s)

Posted by iceman1978 on October 9, 2008 at 2:12 p.m. (Suggest removal)
I've known Mark for many years now. McKevlin's has a great selection of surfboards.