Episode 0
A fictional story by Christian Beamish about a young man who is delighted by the sight of surfers in the cove near his family's farm.
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Ep. 0
Animator and surfer Stephen Hillenburg’s brainchild made its debut around a Baja campfire. Knowing the artist’s background, that should come as no surprise.
Ep. 42
On the parallels between surfing and musical composition, collaborating with her heroes, authenticity, self-expression, the power of simplicity, piano, the value of improvisation, and taking a year off to chase surf.
Jess Ponting travels to Papua New Guinea and discovers the indigenous people evolved from surfing on wooden "splinter" boards to making their own boards after the introduction of modern surf technology by a traveling Australian pilot. They discover another community of surfers off the surfing map using no commercial surf products. All the boards were handmade from wood. Fin attachments and shape enhancements followed with the introduction in the 1980s of a surf magazine helped propel surfboard design.
"In the wake of the Tsunami, Kevin Lovett envisions a future for Lagundi Bay that entails a more sustainable approach to surfing tourism, with a ""community-owned project managing the area's natural assets"" as the new order of the surf colony."