Loren Luyendyk and Aubrey Falk
Spreading the Green Gospel Surfers Without Borders Take Sustainability to
Barra de la Cruz and Beyond By Ethan Stewart Independent
www.independent.com/news/2009/feb/12/spreading-green-gospel/
KaleGray.com
Loren Luyendyk (left) and Aubrey Falk spent most of last summer taking
the slow road through Baja and mainland Mexico sharing surfboards, art,
and the powers of permaculture with the people they met along the way.
Spreading the Green
Gospel
Surfers Without Borders Take Sustainability to Barra de la
Cruz and Beyond
Thursday, February 12,
2009
By
Ethan
Stewart
Generally speaking, the legacy of the traveling surfer is a pretty crappy
one. Armed with surfboards, cameras, and cash, passport-toting wave
hunters have been leaving behind their home breaks for decades now and
jetting, sailing, or driving to far-flung exotic locales in the name of
surf discovery. In and of itself, this act of stoke-searching exploration
is beautiful; unfortunately, what the single-minded surf junkie typically
leaves along foreign shores is anything but. From plastic bottles and
steaming piles of poop to greedy land grabs and unintentional culture
bashing, the ugly blowback of selfish surf travel can be seen firsthand
from Mexico to Micronesia. Luckily, like modern-day Johnny Appleseeds of
environmentalism leaving composting toilets, worm castings, and water
bottle recycling programs in their wake, two born-and-raised Santa
Barbara surfers are on a mission to change that legacy.
The story of Surfers Without Borders (SWoB) began nearly two years ago
when Loren Luyendyk, acting “on a whim,” entered an essay contest
sponsored by Keen Footwear, which wanted to know: “How does your passion
support sustainability?” A certified permaculture designer and consulting
arborist, the 35-year-old Luyendyk was in a unique spot to answer the
question and, as a result, made a winning case for the intersection of
his surfing addiction and sustainable pursuits. In short, he pitched the
idea of SWoB as a nonprofit organization that would travel to developing
world surf spots to spend some time, assess the conditions, and introduce
the Earth-minded tenants of permaculture to the communities. “It was
always my wildest dream to travel, surf, and teach sustainability,” said
Luyendyk, adding with a laugh, “And then I actually won that contest and
it was a real possibility.”
KaleGray.com
Luyendyk throws shakas over one of his flushless toilet
creations
Shortly after getting a check from Keen, Luyendyk and his girlfriend
Aubrey Falk (the couple is now engaged) put the wheels in motion to get
SWoB’s first mission underway. An accomplished artist and professional
surfer, Falk had just wrapped up her first year of being a fully
sponsored pro, an experience she enjoyed but was far from satisfied with,
often finding herself on foreign beaches with other pros just wanting to
get photos and go home. “It was so unfulfilling to me,” said the
25-year-old regular foot. “We come from one of the wealthiest and
luckiest countries in the world. It’s our duty to do something more. We
owe it. … With SWoB, we have a chance to do more than your average surf
trip and actually give back a little.”
So with a little extra help from Falk’s sponsors Volcom and Channel
Islands Surfboards, the duo outfitted a late-model diesel Dodge Ram named
Ellie and stuffed it to the gills with surfboards, art supplies, tools,
and dozens of Spanish-translated copies of Bill Mollison’s legendary
Introduction to Permaculture. More importantly, they intended to
bring something often left behind on surf trips: open minds.
On July 27, 2008, the SWoB team finally rolled out of town and headed
south to Baja at a time when stories of carjackings, kidnappings, brutal
murders, and other drug-fueled violence along the dusty roads of Baja
Norte were making international headlines. Throughout the course of the
summer, Ellie rumbled slowly and safely down toward the tip of Baja,
through places such as Scorpion Bay and Todos Santos, into the
American-flavored urban sprawl of Cabo San Lucas, and up the east cape to
La Paz. Along the way were unending amounts of trash, huge piles of
plastic, and community planning that seldom considers the health of the
environment.
Surfers Without Borders Community Event
- When:
Saturday, Feb.
21, 2009, 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.
- Where: Faulkner Gallery, 40 E. Anapamu St. , Santa Barbara
- Cost: $10
- Age limit: Not available
Full event
details
“Traveling along the coast,” said Luyendyk, “it was just so apparent the
ways that permaculture could help.” Unfortunately, besides meeting some
like-minded organic farmers and sharing their translated copies of
Mollison’s book with them, it wasn’t until they hit the more rural and
remote coastline of mainland Mexico that the SWoB crew were able to get
their hands dirty.
In the surf-rich town of Rio Nexpa, Luyendyk went out to a popular
campground on the point and built a composting toilet out of a 50-gallon
plastic drum, worm castings, and entirely salvaged materials. The
waterless, flush-less toilet can support two adults for six months before
it needs to be set aside to decompose; six months later, it’s perfect
food for plants and trees. In small coastal villages where waste and
water sources all too often come together in a nasty and potentially
deadly swirl, such a simple solution not only saves money and water
quality, but it is also a heck of a lot more practical than the
traditional, flushing alternative. The camp hosts were, of course,
stoked, and neighbors quickly took notice. “All they need are the big
blue buckets, some worms, sawdust, and a little bit of knowledge,” said
Luyendyk.
From Nexpa, SWoB continued onto Barra de la Cruz, a modest fishing
village that has gained international fame for its sandy-bottomed,
practically perfect right-hand point break. With a forward-thinking
community mindset and a refreshing commitment to protect their natural
resourcesnot to mention the bevy of good waves peeling nearbyBarra was
an ideal match for the mission. In fact, they were able to make so much
headway that they stayed for two months. Once again, they built a
composting toilet to much fanfare at Pepe’s Cabanas, a popular resting
spot for gringos owned by the town’s vice president. Luyendyk also used
the “ubiquitous” 50-gallon plastic drum to construct a slow sand water
filter that helped make the town’s water supply potable. Filling the drum
with rocks, charcoal, and sand, the easily made contraption removes 99
percent of the disease-causing pathogens. Costing less than $50 to make,
the filter is big enough to serve two families for an entire year.
KaleGray.com
Aubrey Falk creates with children from Barra.
Looking to solve the plastic water bottle problem that plagues all of
Central America, Luyendyk and Falk convinced a restaurant in Barra to set
up a clean drinking water station, where patrons now pay five pesos to
refill their own water bottles. It made sense economically, too, because
the water was cheaper than bottled water for the customers, but allowed
the restaurant to turn a profit on water sales. “No matter where you are,
the bottom line is everyone wants the best deal as far as money goes,”
said Falk. “And the refill idea not only saves people money and makes
people money, but it also uses way less plastic. … And everyone is stoked
with that.” Taking the refill program one step further, Falk rounded up
dozens of the metal Jumex bottles littering the town, sanitized them,
painted them basic colors, and then gave them to schoolchildren to
decorate as their own water bottles, thereby jumpstarting the refill
program for the villagers themselves. With toilets, filters, and water
refill stations, Barra proved to be SWoB’s first truly successful story
and, if you travel there today, you’ll see the sustainable seeds they
planted beginning to bear fruit.
After more than three months on the road, SWoB returned to Santa Barbara
in early November. Inspired, broke, and buoyed by their success in Barra,
Luyendyk and Falk currently are preparing for their second trip later
this year. Funds permitting, they are aiming to take their grassroots
environmental act to the coasts of Nicaragua and El Salvador before
retracing their tracks back into Mexico and visiting the sites they
established last year. The latter will be a key component to helping SWoB
grow because, as Luyendyk put it, “If people don’t continue to use the
stuff we helped put in place after we leave, we need to find out
why.”
Besides continuing to spread the permaculture gospel, the couple hopes to
add water quality testing to their quiver of projects and, eventually,
create a network that will allow similarly inclined surfers to lend a
helping hand in outposts the world over. They know their plans are
ambitious, but they remain undeterred. “I thought I wanted to do a lot
before [the first trip],” said Luyendyk recently, “but now I have seen
how much more there is to be done and I feel like we have to do even
more.” It sounds, in fact, like they’re more inspired than ever.
4•1•1
Learn more about Surfers Without
Borders during a night of education and fun on February 21, in Santa
Barbara Public Library’s Faulkner Gallery. Expect food, drinks, a film on
their first trip, and an auction to raise money for the the second trip.
Santa Barbara Permaculture Network
an educational
non-profit since 2000
(805) 962-2571
P.O. Box 92156, Santa Barbara, CA 93190
margie@sbpermaculture.org
www.sbpermaculture.org
"We are like trees,
we must create new leaves, in new directions, in order to grow." -
Anonymous