Surfers at the air-water interface form a large subset of the domain of active matter systems. They range from the water strider in the biological world to soluto-capillary effect driven artificial boats. In this work, we propose a general protocol to capture soluto-capillary effect driven interfacial surfers. By locally modifying the air-water interface using the perturbation from a micro-air-pump, these boats are reliably captured in the region of influence (ROI) of the perturbation. The surfers begin to explore the available space freely again once the perturbation is switched off. This method is successfully generalized to a couple of distinct surface-active chemicals used as fuel for the boats. Control experiments involving passive particles validate the results as being significantly better than purely mechanical "herding" of the particles. A possible mechanism behind the observed "trapping" is proposed.