My advice for such a board is to go:
- wide for stability
- fast (flat) rocker for enjoying the gutless faces. A tad of nose rocker at the tip with help in take offs however.
- not too wide a tail to be able to "apply the brakes" in a whim
- as short as possible to be able to react instantly to the constantly changing waves. Basically as short as you can manage to still padlle out at your break (depends on rips, amount of whitewater, etc...)
- long enough to beat your crowds (to keep away from other surfers/SUPers). But too long and you will nosedive
The first 2 points are not strong points of the Hokua-style boards in my opinion (although you CAN use them in these condition, for a very intensive workout).
For my 100kg, in mediterranean (slow) waves, currently my best board is the Gong 7'4" x 32.5" x 130l shake (see
,
www.gong-galaxy.com/magazine/pics/1-hour-4-boards/ ). In more powerful (fast) waves with bigger bars of whitewater to go through, I would use a bit the same shape but in the 8' range for more paddling speed. I have ordered a 8'3" for this purpose:
www.gongsup.com/+PHOTO-8-3-Empire+.htmlThe Jimmy Lewis Kwad seems also very good for these conditions (although may be a tad long), or the Naish 7'3" and 7'8" (although a tad narrow). The 2013 7'11"x32" starboard or the 8'2" widepoint seem interesting, too, but there are others...