https://www.conciliacionconstrupaz.com/blogs/seeababes.atom Seea - Seeababes 2024-10-09T17:46:37-07:00 Seea https://www.conciliacionconstrupaz.com/blogs/seeababes/catching-up-with-women-the-wind-patience-is-part-of-the-process 2022-06-19T09:53:02-07:00 2023-12-19T07:58:13-08:00 Catching Up With Women & the Wind : Patience is Part of the Process Stephanie Villano Lærke Heilmann and Kiana Weltzien of non-profit  Women and the Wind are finally ready to embark on their long awaited journey to the Azores aboard their newly restored catamaran Mara Noka.


They are sailing from Wilmington, North Carolina to the Azores and throughout their journey they will be collecting data on plastic pollution all the while filming a documentary with their filmer and photographer Alizé Jireh. 


From this voyage they hope to show "the salty rawness of the sea, make people fall in love and encourage them to join the fight in protecting it."


We're excited to share updates and stories throughout their trip, and you can follow along via their GPS tracker, which they'll share to their Instagram.


But, first, wanted to catch up with them to see what they've been up to since we last spoke, and to wish them luck, which we're excited to share with you all, so be sure to follow along.  

 We subscribe to the idea that adventure is when nothing goes as planned.. 

One year ago we naively thought that we would be able to restore a 50-year-old wooden boat in a few weeks and go sailing. A naivety that threw us into an overwhelming project that any experienced boat builder would have thought twice about. A naivety we are now grateful for, and which has led us to where we are today.


Sitting on the deck of Mara Noka, feeling the salty sea breeze, and looking back at the past year of hard work makes it feel like it was all a dream — like all the months of sanding, painting, glassing, and more sanding didn’t really happen. 


One year ago Mara Noka was two canoes peeled down to the wood.

Now we are sitting on a beautiful black catamaran, gently swaying in the wake of the bypassing boats. Throughout this whole experience we kept believing we would sail in a few weeks — something that might seem stupid thinking back — but this was the carrot that kept us going. This approach attracted some unsolicited advice, much skepticism at times, but most of all: SO MUCH support and SO MANY helping hands which we are beyond grateful for.


Back then we imagined we would quickly patch up a few things and that the boatyard was just a pit stop before the big adventure. Now we know that things tend to take a lot longer than expected and that the adventure really started right there in the boat yard.

What did we cross off the to-do list?
  • Replacing port bulkhead
  • Replacing cross beams
  • Replacing rotten wood with new
  • Fiberglassing hulls 
  • Painting hulls 
  • Painting bottom 
  • Painting cabin tops 
  • Fiberglassing and painting decks
  • Installing chocks to tie in beams
  • Tying boat together 
  • Building a new wooden deck
  • Replacing bulwarks 
  • New engine (holder) for outboard 
  • New boom and wishbones 
  • Painting and varnishing insides 

….and much more


Check out the Captain's log for the full experience — close-up snippets of all the challenges we faced, and blood, sweat, and tears we shed.


With a floating boat and winds pushing from the south we are almost ready to follow the dream and cross the north Atlantic. After over a year in St. Augustine, this place has become home and we will  leave with our hearts filled with good memories of lovely people, southern hospitality and the friendly Florida waves. 


Our first sail will be about 3 days going up the coast to North Carolina. This will leave us 300 miles closer to the next destination, the Azores…


Follow the journey  Women & the Wind


Photo Credit: Alizé Jireh

 

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https://www.conciliacionconstrupaz.com/blogs/seeababes/one-ocean-diving-what-its-like-to-swim-with-sharks-in-hawaii 2016-08-22T10:30:00-07:00 2021-04-01T08:54:03-07:00 One Ocean Diving: What its like to Swim with Sharks in Hawaii Rhea Cortado A surfer’s first reaction to seeing a shark is to paddle as fast as you can away from it. But Mollie Mathiesen from Carlsbad, CA wanted to swim closer to these fascinating, terrifying and misunderstood creatures in the sea.

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Molly Mathiesen wears the Hermosa Surf Suit to dive with sharks and One Ocean Diving in Hawaii. Photo courtesy of Juan Oliphant, One Ocean Diving.

A surfer’s first reaction to seeing a shark is to paddle as fast as you can away from it. But Mollie Mathiesen from Carlsbad, CA wanted to swim closer to these fascinating, terrifying and misunderstood creatures in the sea. That curiosity led her to discover One Ocean Diving's co-owner Ocean Ramsey (yes, that is her birth name) aka "the shark whisperer," who leads shark encounter tours off the coast of Oahu.

With aspirations to study marine biology and marine conservation in college, Mollie became fast friends with Ocean after her first dive while visiting Hawaii on vacation. Since then, she has hopped on their boat for countless dives and plans to make the underwater world her second home as an intern next summer.

The sharks that Mollie typically encountered in Hawaii were Galápagos sharks and Sand Bar sharks (not the Great Whites from Jaws), and her experience helped unravel common misconceptions about sharks as dangerous villains hunting us for food. We caught up with her to gain more insight into these mysterious ancient beings.

What is One Ocean Diving’s mission?

Mollie Mathiesen: Society has talked so low on sharks for years and made people so afraid of them just from a couple shark attacks. One Ocean Diving's mission is to change that perspective that people have and for them to understand the importance that sharks have in our ecosystem.

Sharks don't attack because they want to hurt people, it's all a huge misunderstanding. Every time we step into the ocean we are in marine life's territory, it's home to thousands of animals and we should respect that. Everyone working with One Ocean Diving wants society to look at sharks the way we do: as magnificent, beautiful creatures that have every right to swim freely as we do. Millions of sharks are being killed every day either for shark fin soup or just for sport so they need our help to speak up and help them.

Molly Mathiesen wears the Hermosa Surf Suit to dive with sharks and One Ocean Diving in Hawaii. Photo courtesy of Juan Oliphant, One Ocean Diving.

While working with Ocean and Juan to take guests out on tours, what were some myths and misunderstandings that you learned that guests have about sharks?

Mollie Mathiesen: Not only among the guests but most everyone I talk to know little to nothing about sharks other than they are "monsters" and "attack people" when in fact they one of the most important contributors in our ecosystem. What most people don't know is that most of the food we eat, the goods we get, and the oxygen we breathe comes from the ocean, so the more sharks we have the healthier the reefs are that give us most of the things we need to survive. As most everyone knows in nature there are food chains and if you take out one of those living things then the whole chain comes crashing down, well that doesn’t change for marine life.

Sharks have stronger and more senses than humans do. One average human has five senses but sharks have two more incredible senses. Sharks feel all vibrations within every living thing to be able to detect where prey is, this is called Lateral Line symmetry. When swimmers or surfers are splashing or causing a lot of motion in the water this triggers a shark’s sensitivity to vibrations, making it think that it is "injured prey." This is the main reason why sharks attack, not because they want to on bite a human on purpose.

Most people have heard punch a shark in the nose if it gets too close. That’s because it’s the center of all their nerves called ampullae. They have thousands of small little pores to sense prey and detect a way to migrate. Out of thousands of fish traveling in a school, a shark can detect that one fish that is injured or carrying a disease. They sense that as easy prey and go after that one fish preventing the spread of diseases to coral reefs and other marine life. The decrease of sharks leads to the increase of diseases which causes other marine life to die, as well as coral reefs and other marine plants.

What types of sharks do you encounter?

Mollie Mathiesen: While diving we encounter mainly Galápagos sharks and Sand Bar sharks. Every once in a while a lucky tiger will come around and that's so special. At One Ocean Diving it's so important to have a relationship with the sharks so Juan and Ocean will do some tagging and tracking especially on the hurt or wounded ones just to see how they are doing. They also like to name the sharks they tag. For example, Roxy the tiger shark has a damaged jaw and Miss Aloha is a Galapagos shark they rescued from a fishing line wrapped around her gills.

Molly Mathiesen wears the Hermosa Surf Suit to dive with sharks and One Ocean Diving in Hawaii. Photo courtesy of Juan Oliphant, One Ocean Diving.
How is this experience different from the shark cage experience?

Mollie Mathiesen: I have done both cage diving and free diving with these kinds of sharks and the experience is so eye-opening. This past summer we took some of my family out diving and my brother, Taylor Mathiesen, made a memorable comment that he thought the sharks were more aggressive while diving in the cage, almost like they didn't like it.

Being eye to eye within touching distance changes your perspective on these incredible creatures. Their actions are so predictable that I feel safer diving with them then I do walking by myself in an unfamiliar area. Being out in the warm ocean seeing nothing but clear blue for miles and having sharks swimming all around has no words to describe the feeling.

Has there ever been a negative experience on the boat?


Mollie Mathiesen: Juan and Ocean really make sure that everyone is 100% safe while diving. If anything bad were to happen between a shark and human One Ocean Diving would not be a company anymore. Ocean has spent years and years studying the beauty of these creatures and each of their behaviors so each time her or Juan puts anyone in the ocean with up to 15 sharks they know that everyone will be completely safe and nothing with happen.

How has this experience changed your perception, education and feelings towards sharks? How have you seen it change other people’s feelings about sharks?

Mollie Mathiesen: The experience to dive with sharks and work with One Ocean Diving to make a difference is what I've always wanted since I could swim. I wake up every day wanting to go dive and go to bed planning on how to spread more word of their importance. I have learned more than I could ever imagine from Juan and Ocean. The more you know about sharks and even anything in the ocean, the less scary they appear.

I got the amazing experience to take my four best friends out diving while vacationing in Oahu this summer. They have constantly heard me going on and on about how important sharks are and how amazing it is to be swimming freely in their ocean with them so they were excited to see for themselves what I was really talking about. Being with them they said changed their perspective. Yeah, hearing facts about them made it less scary, but being underwater seeing it in person made the fear go away. At One Ocean Diving that is just how we want everyone to feel.

Thank you Mollie! Go to One Ocean Diving's website to book a dive, or visit their Instagram.

MORE ENVIRONMENTAL STORIES:




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https://www.conciliacionconstrupaz.com/blogs/seeababes/seea-kin-interview-with-lauren-hill 2013-02-22T15:14:00-08:00 2024-01-10T08:06:43-08:00 Seea Kin: Interview with Lauren Hill Seea
Photo of Lauren Hill by Swilly
We are continually inspired by intelligent lady gliders whose extracurricular passions include making art and doing good. Environmental activist Lauren L. Hill is wholeheartedly all of the above and more.

We were pen pals with Lauren before meeting her in person in Pisa, Italy after we came back from the girls surf trip in Sardegna.

Lauren currently lives between...

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Photo of Lauren Hill by Swilly

We are continually inspired by intelligent lady gliders whose extracurricular passions include making art and doing good. Environmental activist Lauren L. Hill is wholeheartedly all of the above and more.

We were pen pals with Lauren before meeting her in person in Pisa, Italy after we came back from the girls surf trip in Sardegna.

Lauren currently lives between Florida (she was born in St. Augustine and grew up on Anastasia Island) and Byron Bay, Australia where her schedule is dictated by when’s the best time to surf. We caught up with Lauren to learn more about her many irons in the fire: a documentary surf filming trip to India; educating about gas drilling in Australia and her zine Sea Kin. The zine and website is a dense collection of stories and images compiled by famous surfers and relative unknowns that’s captivating from page to page. It swallowed up our afternoon in escapism like a good book while on vacation.

Read on to hear Lauren’s insight on the male/female dynamic in surfing cultures across the globe and what it means to label yourself as a feminist today.


Portrait of Lauren Hill by Takanami
Interview by Rhea Cortado 

You call both Florida and Australia your home. Besides the surf, what about the culture of those two places makes them home? 

I love the slow pace of Florida and, maybe more than anything else, I love the food: datil pepper sauces, lemony sweet tea, boiled peanuts and black bean burritos are basically a recipe for home.

 

Floridian surfers have exceptionally low standards for surf, and I take a bit of pride in that. Haha. We are born and bred with an appreciation for anything rideable, because the surf doesn’t get amazing all that often. 

 

In my experience, Australians are comparatively quite snobby when it comes to judging the surf. But they have every right to be. You have to be picky as a surfer in Australia, because you could spend every waking hour getting good surf, by Floridian standards. 

 

I love the beach culture of Australia. I guess it makes me feel less like a beach bum odd-ball when I’m surrounded by lots of others who really just want to be playing in the ocean all of the time. And they actually make it a priority. I also love Australian humor. They have a way of not taking things so seriously that is so very different from American culture. 


What does the day-to-day of Lauren Hill look like?


For the past few years I’ve had distinct 6-month spells that are starkly different. I try to spend the first half of the year in Australia and then the [second] half of the year traveling with Florida as a home base.

I’m a bit of a homebody, so I really love staying still for the first half of the year. If there is surf (and there usually is), a typical day revolves around swell, wind and tides. My favorite days are when I get to ride a shortboard at one of the punchier points in the morning, followed by a big lunch of veggies from our garden, a sunset longboard slide in Byron, and then just collapsing in bed from surf exhaustion afterward. In between surfs are for writing, reading, gardening, nap taking, or researching.



As a female, how do you find the surf culture different from the US versus Australia? Is the male/female surfing culture dynamic different in Aus? 


Surfing is taken much more seriously in Australia. It’s considered a “real” sport that garners the attention of the nightly news and the headlines of newspapers. 
I definitely feel the gender divide more strongly in Australia, especially in the water. The history of Australia is a very rough, rugged and masculine one, and those characteristics still define a lot of Australian life. I know a number of well-traveled women who find Australian men to be some of the most generally chauvinistic of any they’ve met. I’m not sure whether or not I agree, but I definitely witness a good bit of macho-aggression in the water here. 

With that said, there are probably more women surfing in Byron (where I live) than anywhere I’ve traveled to in the world. It’s awesome! It feels much more natural and inviting to have both women and men in the line-up. So, it’s a bit of an empowered feminine bubble that I live in, getting to be around so many women surfers, but I prefer it that way. Most of the men in the line-up aren’t complaining, either.
Photo of Lauren Hill by Swilly

Tell us more about your environmental activism work. What are your current projects and how can we get involved?


I’m working on a few projects at the moment:

1. The threat of Coal Seam Gas in our backyards here in Australia is really disconcerting, especially the inevitable poisoning of water that occurs as a causality of the process. Last weekend I visited another one of the exploratory drill sites in our area. It was perturbing to see drills already in the ground, hunting for gas so near to home, and so close to world class surf breaks. The local community there has been demonstrating for weeks, trying to ward off Met Gas Co. from carrying on, but to no avail. The amount of shortsighted greed and destruction involved in CSG in unthinkable. We must prevent these corporations from pillaging our homelands and waters. To get educated and involved read here. And watch: 101 East: Risky Business on Youtube.

2. I’m helping with The Economics of Happiness Conference here in Byron, held at the community centre March 15th-17th. It’s an amazing gathering of thinkers and activists from around the world who will speak and hold workshops about localization. All kinds of topics will be covered, including education, economics, art, surfing, health, community, and ecology, for example.

3. In April I’ll be traveling to India with a crew of four other lady sliders for the first all-female surfing/humanitarian documentary trip:

"With unshakable determination for a better world, we—Crystal Thornburg-Homcy, Liz Clark, Emi Koch, Ishita Malaviya and Kate Baldwin and myself—will travel through Southern India. Our goal is to document the ways that surfing, yoga, and ecological creativity are bringing hope and fueling change for local people and the Planet. We’ll be making a film of the journey. Help us fund the trip

The Kovalam Surf Club in India



What do you find are the biggest challenges when you are educating people about environmentalism? What is your approach to overcoming those?


I don’t really aspire to educate people, I just like to share what I’ve learned and experienced. Most people are more receptive to hearing first hand accounts instead of abstract facts and figures. And that’s the real strength and importance of surfers being environmental custodians—we’re canaries in the coalmine. We’re not in labs studying the slow decay of marine ecosystems, we get sick from ocean water filled with runoff and we are on the beaches that are littered with plastics. I appreciate book learning, but experiential knowledge helps bring environmental issues to life.

I tend to find trying to share ideas about gender much more challenging than talking about environmental issues. Most people can see the ways that we are altering our planet now, but it’s much more difficult for most to clearly see something as deeply ingrained as gender and how destructive rigid conceptions of gender can be for men and for women.

Photo of Lauren Hill by Swilly


You've said that you support feminist and ecofeminist issues--what does it mean to be a feminist today? Why is it important, especially as a surfer?


Feminism means standing up for equality and recognizing that the feminine has traditionally been overlooked and undervalued.

For example, women and men tend to surf differently. Instead of celebrating this, most people (women included) tend to judge women as inferior surfers. The way men surf has been accepted as the best way. In reality, women’s surfing tends to emphasize characteristics that are just different to the way men ride waves.

Feminism means that all people should have the right to choose how they want to be, unfettered by social impositions of how they “should” be.

Feminism is about supporting men AND women. Men have just as many crazy expectations placed on them as women—to look and act in certain ways—and men suffer from those pressures just like we do. Most men in western cultures have essentially been taught to deny any semblance of femininity. And that’s not fair, or possible, for any holistically healthy human, in the same way that it’s crazy to deny that all women also possess what we call “masculine” traits.

So many women of my generation and younger are terrified of the word feminist. They associate it with being angry, man bashing or think that it’s no longer relevant. It’s such a shame.

We need look no further than our own surfing culture to see gender imbalances at work. One of the founding missions of second wave feminism was to attain equal pay for equal work for women and men. Today in the US women still only earn .76 cents on the dollar for what a man earns for doing the same job. And if you want to see extreme inequality, look at the pay gap between women and men on the ASP world tour. Women are able to earn only a fraction of what men earn for winning contests. I don’t really follow contests or care much for them, but it’s still not fair, and it’s undeniable proof of the devaluation of women’s work and unique talents.


 

Sea Kin is a really impressive collection with a variety of stories and diverse contributors. How did you compile submissions? How did you choose what made it in the magazine?

Thank you. The Sea Kin ‘Zine is basically a compilation of surf culture the way that I see it. The articles and imagery are all by and about my friends, really. It’s filled with the musings of creative, passionate, and open-hearted sea kin, united by our love of the ocean and envisioning different paths for what it means to be a surfer.

Images from Sea Kin zine

What is your vision for the Sea Kin blog and website?


I’d love for it to be a hub for creative thinkers, sliders, and do-ers; a place to share the stories that are so often overlooked by mainstream surf media.


We know picking a favorite board is like picking a favorite child. But which boards in your quiver do you find yourself reaching for most often lately?


My go to log is a Bing Silver Spoon; I basically never travel without it (which can be incredibly frustrating at times, due to its size and weight). I love the subtlety of small waves and there’s nothing like the glide of a heavy single fin log. Lately, I’ve also been loving my 7’3 Bing Raven single fin. It’s so playful.

I see so many cute surf wetsuits, swimwear and lifestyle women’s brands come out of Australia! What is it about the culture and people there that is conducive to creativity and those products?

I think that the average Australian woman tends to be more fashion-forward than the average American gal. When you combine that passion for fashion with the outdoorsy nature of Australian life, it seems like we end up with some pretty innovative takes on surf wear.

Sometimes the more popular line-ups around here look like fashion parades—filled with women and men getting really into what they wear in the water. As long as people are having fun, it’s awesome.


What are some of the most valuable lessons that surfing taught you?


To be still and listen.

Photo of Lauren Hill by Dawe

 

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