Im really ashamed when i see those pictures.
what is your opinion in this situation????????????
haiti is one of those examples.

and meanwhile we are enjoying the surf and bikinis
this makes me puke damnit

by DreamSurf » Fri Sep 09, 2016 4:45 pm
by barber87 » Fri Sep 09, 2016 4:57 pm
by BoMan » Fri Sep 09, 2016 5:45 pm
by oldmansurfer » Fri Sep 09, 2016 5:57 pm
by Oldie » Fri Sep 09, 2016 7:01 pm
But honestly i see all these surfspots being leased or bought so that you cant surf there except the one who is priviliged to.
by saltydog » Fri Sep 09, 2016 9:11 pm
by DreamSurf » Fri Sep 09, 2016 9:34 pm
saltydog wrote:This is rather the about the access to the coast line or a lack thereof for recreational purposes including but not limited to surfing. I can't think of any particular places that drastic but this reminds of some of the private beach resorts in less developed countries. The local infrastructure needs the tourists for income yet that is possibly making the coastline unaccessible to the locals. This seems largely due to the local government allowing this to happen.
Meanwhile, there are enough privately owned beaches even in southern California. Some have guards posted on the beach to make sure general public would dare not step foot on their precious multimillion dollar beach community properties. General public here doesn't look as desolate as those in the photo above, but I find it quite unfair. In order for that to change, either the local government or the residents of exclusive beach communities or both need to take initiative. In the global sense, that is with local governments and the wealthy beachgoers. The problem is the local governments are often corrupted and majority of beachgoers are casual visitors without deep physical or emotional association with the ocean; i.e. non surfers. We surfers are already blamed for consuming excess amount of petroleum products and polluting air with VOC as well as forever immature and irresponsible (yet people want to imitate us by purchasing surfing lifestyle clothing etc. go figure.) I refuse to take other blames that are uncalled for.
by DreamSurf » Fri Sep 09, 2016 9:38 pm
Oldie wrote:The issue of distribution of wealth is a big one, and increasingly so. Countries where this leads to poverty as in the shown example typically have highly corrupt governments, a lack of attention to human rights and a lack of democracy. Tourist staying away will not make that better.
But honestly i see all these surfspots being leased or bought so that you cant surf there except the one who is priviliged to.
Can you share a few examples of "all these surfspots being leased or bought "? I ask as I don't know any.
by DreamSurf » Fri Sep 09, 2016 9:51 pm
saltydog wrote:This is rather the about the access to the coast line or a lack thereof for recreational purposes including but not limited to surfing. I can't think of any particular places that drastic but this reminds of some of the private beach resorts in less developed countries. The local infrastructure needs the tourists for income yet that is possibly making the coastline unaccessible to the locals. This seems largely due to the local government allowing this to happen.
Meanwhile, there are enough privately owned beaches even in southern California. Some have guards posted on the beach to make sure general public would dare not step foot on their precious multimillion dollar beach community properties. General public here doesn't look as desolate as those in the photo above, but I find it quite unfair. In order for that to change, either the local government or the residents of exclusive beach communities or both need to take initiative. In the global sense, that is with local governments and the wealthy beachgoers. The problem is the local governments are often corrupted and majority of beachgoers are casual visitors without deep physical or emotional association with the ocean; i.e. non surfers. We surfers are already blamed for consuming excess amount of petroleum products and polluting air with VOC as well as forever immature and irresponsible (yet people want to imitate us by purchasing surfing lifestyle clothing etc. go figure.) I refuse to take other blames that are uncalled for.
by waikikikichan » Sat Sep 10, 2016 12:32 am
fromsk82surf wrote:surfing is great and non violent. it is good and it does not polute the sea
by DreamSurf » Sat Sep 10, 2016 6:32 am
waikikikichan wrote:fromsk82surf wrote:surfing is great and non violent. it is good and it does not polute the sea
You have not even stood up on a surfboard, and are telling everyone about a sport/lifestyle you have not done yet ? Yes, surfing IS great. But trust me, it can get very violent. There isn't much hassling for waves and dropping in on during Kelly Slater Pro surfer PS4 games. The real world is quite different. It always was violent, especially when kooks/half goods think they "deserve" to be surfing this certain wave.
You still haven't learned much in the way of actual surfing, but you seem to have studied/research about surfboards. Then if you did, you would have found out surfboards/surfboard making produces a lot of bad chemicals and waste. Surfboards are primarily made from petroleum based products. Surfboards are not easy to recycle, what do you do with them after they snap/break in two ?
by jaffa1949 » Sat Sep 10, 2016 7:24 am
by waikikikichan » Sat Sep 10, 2016 10:13 am
fromsk82surf wrote:i do not know why you have to bring that up again (the you are noob thing).
by DreamSurf » Sat Sep 10, 2016 10:57 am
waikikikichan wrote:fromsk82surf wrote:i do not know why you have to bring that up again (the you are noob thing).
I never said you are a "noob". I would not even consider you a Noob/Newbie, since you are not even at that level yet.
My comment was how can you make statements like "surfing is non-violent" and "does not pollute the ocean", when you have not surfed yet. If you said "I read that" or "my surfer friend told me" and ask if we think that statement is valid, then thats great to discuss and share our thoughts on the subject. But to make outright finite statement like that, you need to be coming from your own personal experience, not feeling.
by DreamSurf » Sat Sep 10, 2016 11:00 am
jaffa1949 wrote:I've surfed many spots around the world,a lot in third or developing world countries.
Early days of surf travel meant just getting there and negotiating with a local family to stay with them often in a shack in the family plot. Brown rice local food and basic water,
this also applied traveling up the east coast of Australia renting a farm house for $30 a week even the Hawaiian north shore had cheap shacks.
First price hike , popularity pushes prices up.
some body buys several properties to make money.
Government and official see money trail, figure out how to push local owners aside and build shonky accommodation. Native land systems broken down.
Overseas interest, "buy or lease" land, bribe officials to "protect" investment.
Indonesian government Prime Ministers son tries to build chain of hotels throughout islands, pulls in overseas money and rips them off.
The supreme example is the burying of former rice paddies at Kuta beach Bali under under almost as many hotels as there was rice grains.
American interests get lease on Tavarua , gates Cloud break and Restaurants surf breaks as exclusive use (since overturned by Fiji government) because in Fiji reefs were considered Tribal farms so exclusive to that tribe.
Often former European colonies had land laws unextinguished from those times or the the land was held by Newly Independent country leader.
In the former joint Condominium of French / English Vanuatu touring French surfers thought they could walk across tribal land to access surf, they were badly beaten up!
So without rolling out more examples of how it may be different.
My solution, review your travel plans, choose to stay where the majority of local people are gainfully and non exploitively employed, be aware that your European standards may not be fully appropriate and that the inbound wealth if it gets to the bottom levels can do much good.
Ethical resorts and tours often set school and health programs and sponsor NGOs like SurfAid.
Behind the scenes if the government is corrupt then there is a hand to pocket system of graft.
It can be found and the visiting surf can do much to aid families without being patronising or setting up a begging situation.
Be a world human!! See with your heart , give with your brains, be kind sincere and respectful.
Be safe, often in some places a life is cheap and you are only the cash in your pocket.
IT is dark on both sides, one candle can disperse the darkness.
Footnote;
I have been surf traveling since 1979 and really out of the way places since 1970.
Arrogance or dumb jingoism about the greatness of your country compared to others, really sets you up for a major takedown.
Be firm and humble about things.
by dtc » Sat Sep 10, 2016 11:30 am
by Big H » Sat Sep 10, 2016 12:37 pm
dtc wrote:One of the recent 'surf simply' podcasts looked at the economics of surfing (surf tourism essentially). Sure to a westerner the loss of natural habitat and built up environment and, yes, corruption looks terrible. But for the local residents the money can bring education, infrastructure and health. And with increased knowledge by the residents can come power and pressure to have ethical development and equal access.
It's not surf unique; it's an issue that has always existed with any tourism since time began.
by Oldie » Sat Sep 10, 2016 3:32 pm
waikikikichan wrote:fromsk82surf wrote:s The real world is quite different. It always was violent, especially when kooks/half goods think they "deserve" to be surfing this certain wave.
by DreamSurf » Sat Sep 10, 2016 6:06 pm
Oldie wrote:waikikikichan wrote:fromsk82surf wrote:s The real world is quite different. It always was violent, especially when kooks/half goods think they "deserve" to be surfing this certain wave.
Or better surfers claiming every wave for themselves, independent of right of way or surfing etiquette. At least in France at least as big an issue as what you state, and I assume not just there. I never tried a sport where beginners are treated as unwelcoming as in surfing.
by BoMan » Sat Sep 10, 2016 7:38 pm
dtc wrote:But for the local residents the money can bring education, infrastructure and health. And with increased knowledge by the residents can come power and pressure to have ethical development and equal access.
The natural beauty of Bali..... is quickly disappearing … with rampant development in every corner of the island and even more rampant polluting which has already taken it's toll on local fisheries.
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