a surfer cant 'stand on water' solely due to the float of his board, unless its a very big board.
you are deffinately right about the website leaving a big piece out. the website doesn't discuss how a surfboard
planes (what makes your board skim across the top of the water when you ride), but it does discuss how it
floats (what keeps you from sinking to the ocean floor while youre waiting for the next set.)
the website probably says nothing about lift because it is a tremendous pain in the @$$ to caluclate. to directly calculate lift you need to know the distribution of pressure and the wall shear stress around the entire body, which are measurements we usually dont have. Sooo..we get lift in terms of a fun little thing called the lift coefficient.
Cl =
L/(.5*
p*U^2*A)
where
L = lift,
p = density of fluid, U = velocity of flow, and A = reference area
The lift coefficient is usually found through experiments or some kind of ridiculous numerical analysis.
Anyways, in short (that ship has sailed right?) usually most lift comes from pressure forces, but viscous forces also play a role, lift (like drag) is highly dependent on the shape of the object (think racecar vs. station wagon), and the speed of the flow is also critical (this is why its easier to ride a bigger board in slower waves).
obviously this is an over simplified model, but i hope it at least gives some idea of where lift comes from.
sorry for the long post...apparently i have spent way too much of my life dealing with engineering and fluid mechanics...
