1º Workshop SUSTAINAMICS

A semana passada (dia 16 de Dezembro 2009) participei no 1º workshop do projecto SUSTAINAMICS.

O projecto SUSTAINAMICS – Modelação Participada para a Avaliação Integrada da Sustentabilidade, que aborda o desafio “Como criar uma visão holística dos problemas que afectam a sustentabilidade dos ambientes marinhos e costeiros em Portugal?”.

Sustainability

Foi organizado pelos Centro de Investigação em Ambiente e Sustentabilidade (CENSE) da FCT/UNL e Centro de Investigação e Estudos de Sociologia (CIES) do ISCTE; e teve lugar no Auditório António Silva Leal na Ala Autónoma do ISCTE (Instituto Universitário de Lisboa).

Foi um exercício interessante. Presentes estavam pessoas de vários sectores da sociedade (relacionados com a pesca, transportes marítimos, almirantes, gente do governo, gente de ONGs, académicos, entre outros), divididos por 4 mesas temáticas distintas. Governança, sobre-exploração de recursos, problemas das zonas costeiras, e ordenamento do território marítimo.

Foi-nos pedido então para relacionarmos causas e consequências que intervinham nas temáticas apresentadas, com repercussões positivas ou negativas. Ou seja, a falta de fiscalização levava a uma maior sobre-exploração de recursos, e assim por diante. No final foram feitas apresentações sobre cada uma das temáticas e foram dados 5 votos, para que cada um dos envolvidos pudesse assinalar nos esquemas as causas e/ou consequências que achava mais pertinentes.

O segundo workshop irá ter lugar no final Janeiro ou inicio de Fevereiro de 2010.

Para saber mais: aqui e aqui

Informação em http://www.dcea.fct.unl.pt/cense/

Surf’s UP! (day 6 and 7)

Friday 4th of September
Here we rise with the Sun, drink pipa (coconut water), eat sandwiches and fresh fruit, and drive off to find waves. As the forecast was showing the swell was rising and it was supposed to be some good waves today, we expected to surf Pavones for the first time today, and we were bummed because there was a championship scheduled for today right on the main peak of the famous left-hander Pavones.

We drove off to find the judges tent built on the left corner of the Cantina (the bar overseeing the beach of Pavones), and very little waves. Gero (Fatum Surfboards Shaper) had told me that the bay was very deep and it was needed pretty decent and consistent swell for the waves to break and the sections connect around the bay, and he was very right. We watched 1 or 2 heats before we drove off to Punta Banco to find better waves and surf conditions.

Judges Tent

Noe Mar McGonagle

We spent all day surfing at Punta Banco stopping only to eat and rest a little, getting the best of both tides. The afternoon session the waves got overhead and I was still using my 5’5’’ “Joker” (the name I gave to the model, because it is so fun on small to medium waves), and it was still performing and responding very well, I was impressed, happy, and able to turn on critics section and I thought I couldn’t with this type of boards … stoked!

Quiver - Costa Rica

This day there was also a local festivity (the championship at Pavones was part of it), I had a look at it while seeping a fruit juice at Café de la Suerte and browsing the web for surf forecasts, e-mails and facebook.

Local Fest

Later on at the supermarket we met Henry, we told us he won the open category of the championship today, good on him!

We tried to eat at La Manta today, supposed to be a very good restaurant in the area, but it was raining so much that everything seemed to be flooded!

As usual we had an early night. Reading more of Civil Disobedience, Henry Thoreau’s book, I start to perceive how it inspired so many history changing figures like Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr. Moreover I admire John Brown the anti-slavery hero condemn to death for freeing slaves and make them cross the state of Massachusetts towards freedom.

He defends something I find remarkable; “Under a government which imprisons any unjustly, the true place for a just man is also a prison.”

Tomorrow is our last day in Pavones before heading up towards Playa Hermosa, forecast looks good and tonight I dream and wish of long lefts for tomorrow!

Saturday 5th of September
I woke up with Filipe running around saying “Pavones is PUMPING!!”
He is normally the first to get down to the beach for the morning check in.
Got up and had something quick to eat and headed off! I took the 5’5’’ and I wanted to try it even in more demanding conditions, if it was not working I would come back and take my 6’0’’.

When we got down to the river mouth it seemed nothing special. Pavones requires some ocean breathe to work, and after some minute some set waves rolled down and around the bay, and yes it was on! Because there was not enough swell for the wave to be running in all its glory we had to place ourselves on side of the river mouth since the set waves were not breaking out enough for all the section to connect.

When we got to the lineup I saw Sean, his wife Jamie, and both his children, Noe Mar and Leilani. Sean has one of the smoothest; most polished; and yet super powerful backside hand attack I’ve ever witnessed! And right after seeing him on a good one I saw his son and seen the generation step-up to be taken place in not too long! No wonder the Costa Rican Surfing federation is taking his to the Juniors World Championships in New Zealand this year.

The first waves I got were intermediate ones, just to have a go. This wave had no flat sections, I had to be pumping my board all the way and it would finish normally in a big mushy close-out.

Then I paddled to where Sean was and talking to him about this wave I could see he has his bearings sharp, he could describe the behavior of each waves coming up and position wise where to be. It was a bit hectic on the main peak and I could see Sean was a little more to the side, with none of the local arrogance we find in many places we surf around the globe.

I manage to score some decent size set waves shoulder to head-high and man they were long, the wall of the wave has so much power you don’t lose any speed on the turns, the only thing is that if you make the turns too tight the section is gone and you are left riding foam. Great wave, one of the bigger ones I got today was the longest thing I’ve ever ride, I reckon!

For Tourita this wave wasn’t so goo as for bodyboarders it doesn’t offer the hollow barrels, he was looking for but I reckon he also had fun.

With the tide coming in the surf conditions got poorer and I decided to take the afternoon to relax walk around a little, taking some shots, and read. Also, because we get up so early I’m taking some nice siestas in the outside hammock.

Owls

Also during the afternoon we met Alex Outerbridge, the owner of Sea Kings Surf Shop, a nice surf shop right across the road from Cantina, and I believe the only one in Pavones. Great guy, we find a connection via Thomas Lange (from Fatum Travel) and Future Fins, he talked to us about his experience in the area, we also met Fred, the owner of the restaurant La Manta, where we wanted to have dinner yesterday, and the artist Alex Lanau, from San Diego who is also living in Pavones. I loved his artwork and bought a print from a painting made by him called Tiki-Takeover, superbly nice!

You can visit his website at http://www.myspace.com/alexlanau

Our last night was spent at La Manta, Fred’s Restaurant, the best we had so far in Pavones, great ambience, and very good food.

La Manta

We watched the documentary about Pavones and the man who discovered it, Dan Fowlie (aka King of Pavones) (trailer below).

Now is bed time and tomorrow we hope to surf Pavones in the morning and then head towards Playa Hermosa…

PURA VIDA to you all!
:-)

Head stitched up! (day 4)

The morning was spent laying low, not much happening, we knew that there would be no waves, so we stayed near the house, putting our stuff together, chatting, listening to music, reading, and drinking pipa. The only high troubled episode during the morning was when Henry told us that Friday there would be a championship at Pavones, when it is supposed to be some good waves coming in this direction. So we were a bit bumped by that, still he assured us that there would be plenty o waves to be surfed and that the championship was to be short lived.

Sean had told us about something we could do when there would be no waves that was to come down the Claro River with a buoy, 2 and a half hours trekking upland and then about an hour and a half coming down the river. That was what we decided to do today, for that we had to go about the Guaymí Indigenous of Conte Burica.

Before we headed there I had a nice chat with him, about the surroundings and the indigenous around here, these make up 60% of the population on the south of the Osa Peninsula. Still living among them and relatively into the wild they still manage to keep some of their culture and ways, that space and momentum I call the “Lost Costa Rica”, because I’m afraid we are losing our ways, and they are losing theirs, our influence if not lead and oriented in a good way will engulf them and this troubled and viscous process of globalization will turn us into clones of each one of us. So if you ask me, the connection the Guaymí manage to still keep with nature is priceless. But finding and meeting new cultures is what drives most of us to travel and I do not defend they are to be left alone and we should to keep our cultures isolated, none of that, what I mean is that we need to keep being ourselves, giving and receiving from others and not changing them… I guess I would be here forever trying to get this point across. The following might help!

(While we were chatting with Sean the new car arrived, the Pandereta II)

Pandereta II

The coastlines and rainforest of Central America have been inhabited by humans for at least 10,000 years. On the eve of European discovery some 500 years ago, an estimated 400,000 people were living in today’s Costa Rica, though sadly our knowledge about pre-Columbian culture is scant. The remains of lost civilizations were washed away by torrential rains, and Spanish conquerors were more intent on subjugating rather than describing native lifestyles.

Unlike massive pyramid complexes found throughout much of Latin America, the ancient towns and cities of Costa Rica (with the exception of Guayabo), vanished in the jungles, never to be seen again by the eyes of the modern world. However, tales of lost cities still survive in the oral histories of Costa Rica’s indigenous community and there is hope among archaeologists that a great discovery lies in waiting. Considering that much of the country consists in inaccessible mountains and rainforests, perhaps these dreams aren’t so fanciful.

The invasion of Central America by the Spanish conquistadores (conquerors) brought about incalculable human suffering and loss; entire cultures and histories were erased by sword and disease alike.

What is known about pre-Columbian Costa Rica is that early inhabitants were part of an extensive trading zone that extended as far south as Peru and as far North as Mexico. The region hosted roughly 20 small tribes, organized into chiefdoms, indicating a permanent leader, or cacique, who sat atop a hierarchical society that included shamans, warriors, toilers and slaves.

Adept at seafaring, the Carib dominated the Atlantic coastal lowlands, and served as a conduit of trade with the South America mainland. In the northwest, several tribes were connected to the great Mesoamerican cultures. Aztec religious practices and Maya jade and craftsmanship are in evidence in the Peninsula de Nicoya, while Costa Rican quetzal feathers and golden trinkets have turned up in Mexico. In the southwest, three chiefdoms showed the influence of Andean Indian Cultures, including coca leaves, yucca and sweet popatoes.

There is also evidence that the language of Central Valley Huetar was known by all of Costa Rica indigenous groups, which may be an indication of their power and influence. The Central Valley is home to the only major archaeological site uncovered in Costa Rica, namely Guayabo.

Thought to be an ancient ceremonial center, Guayabo once featured paved streets, an aqueduct and decorative gold. Here, archaeologists uncovered exquisite gold ornaments and unusual life-size stone statues of human figures, as well as distinctive types of pottery and metates, stone platforms that were used to grinding corn. Today, the site consists of little more than ancient hewed rock and stone, though Guayabo continues to stand as a testament to a once-great civilization of the New World.

Still a puzzle, however, are the hundreds of hand-sculpted, monolithic stone spheres that dot the landscape of the Diquis valley in Palmar and the Isla del Caño. Weighing up to 16 tons and ranging in size from a baseball to a Volkswagen, the spheres have inspired many theories: an ancient calendar, extraterrestrial meddling, or a game of bocce gone terribly awry.

According to some sources; in recent years, it seems that Costa Ricans of all backgrounds have taken as increased interest in the pre-Columbian history of their country.

El Mighty Pelado (PP) and I took the buoys (tractor pneumatics) that Sean kindly provided us and took the 2 and a half hour trekking to the river, since we took off from Pavones we were in fact the only two white faces to be seen during the entire journey! The 2 or 3 people we passed by laughed at the fact of 2 white guys carrying buoys upland, sweating and tired like pigs, trying to reach the river. And we did!!

I thought the river to be much deeper that what it actually was, so we had to lift our bottoms very often not to drag them around in the gravel. There were some rapids. On the way down, one of them with the infamous name of “death rock” was passed with no harm, a couple of minutes later, El Mighty Pelado suffers a fall and almost knocks himself out, opened his head and blood started to pour out. I was a little scared at the beginning but he assured me he was ok and so we continued. I also got a nasty fall and hit my head harm, trying not to let my buoy go I injured my arm, but nothing major.

Coming down the river is an excellent way of overseeing the nature surrounding the peninsula, many species of birds and reptiles can be seen, and on the calmer parts of the river you feel really hooked up by all the nature surrounding you. The tall trees and the wildlife that doesn’t seem so affected by our presence; the water carrying you effortless and suddenly you feel you become part or her.

By the end I was getting a little cold (believe it or not) and with all the bumps and falls I was ready to get out. I recognized the place near the Villas Riviera and hooped off with PP.

Back at the house I had to shave and stitch PP’s head with some straps he brought from home, and it seemed fine.

PP Head

PP Head

PP Head

PP Head

Later on, I was reading part of the book I brought with me from Thoreau, and I read something that I can relate completely. “If a plant cannot live accord its nature it will die. The same would happen to a man.”