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The World's Best Big Wave Pointbreak Under the Gun

CD: Did the protest have an effect?
WH: Yeah, they basically told us they were going to redesign the project, which they never did. Or if they did, they just made it a little bit smaller, but they still are having quite a bit of riprap going into the water. Actually, we don't' really know what they're going to do -- they're keeping us in the dark and that's really their best strategy because we can't really act until they do something. Then, at that point, it's almost too late.

CD: It looks like they've already started judging by the pictures you sent us.
WH: Well they've gone right to the water's edge. They're going to have to put in rip-rap, otherwise the whole thing will wash away, and it's going to really affect the wave.

CD: So this is at an absolute critical juncture right now.
WH: Yeah, absolutely.

CD: How many other surf spots are there on this stretch of coast. Is this a surf-heavy zone?
WH: We've identified 13 or 14 legitimate surf spots on the island. I'd say that six of those spots are absolute A+world class waves.

CD: Six or so world class spots on a little-known island. It's unfortunate in a way, but you have to let the cat out of the bag about this place in a way to save it. I mean it's going to make more people aware of it, and potentially increase the crowds. But surfer awareness is the only thing that might work this at this point.
WH: Unfortunately so. When I was there a couple of years ago when this thing with Lugar de Baixo was going down, I was talking with a lot of the guys who go to Madeira every year and for whom this place has just become hugely important. We've always had a bit of a pact -- that we weren't going to tell the world about it. I've always wanted to write an article identifying it but never did. But we all came to the realization that if we didn't identify it, there would be no reason to come back. So I did actually get the support of almost all these guys in taking these steps to get the word out. Really it was a way of giving something back to the surfers of Madeira.

CD: Describe the wave.
WH: Jardim do Mar is a big wave spot in almost every sense of the word. It doesn't really start to break until it's about eight feet on the face, and even at that size it's pretty close to the rocks. The guys I've been surfing with who've known it for years came up with a description as a "surf spot designed by the Gods, for the Gods" and it really is. It's on a bigger scale than anything I've ever seen. It's kind of like a cobblestone pointbreak but the cobblestones are huge -- like half the size of a Volkswagen. And the wave is amazing. It's a really user-friendly big-wave spot. Double to triple overhead is where it works its magic. To be out there on a triple overhead day and these lines are just marching in is amazing. You have a fair amount of time to paddle into this thing and get to your feet before it starts to chuck over. So it's not like a Mavericks drop. It's an easier place to surf than Mav's but then on the flipside, the danger of the rocks there is pretty huge. Getting out of the water is scary -- the bigger it gets, the heavier it gets. So we're a little worried about that too because they're changing the coastline so much that they're probably going to make it that much more dangerous. Even if by some miracle the wave is spared, it's going to get even worse getting in and out of the water.

CD: What have other environmental organizations done on this?
WH: Surfrider Europe hasn't done much besides help publicize it -- Surfrider Europe is pretty small. We've really gotten more help from Surfrider here in the U.S. Chad Nelson and Chris Evans. They've really done a lot. But the problem is that Surfrider is mostly a chapter based organization and they don't have a Madeira chapter. That's why Save the Waves sort of exists.

CD: What about a petition, or letter campaign or more rallies down there?
WH: Well I think we've sort of hit a wall with petitions and letter writing. We've certainly been heard and it's been somewhat effective, but I don't have a lot of faith that a continuing campaign with that will work. What seems to work the best in Madeira is public protest. Madeirans don't do a lot of protest to start with. But it is technically a democratic government, so you can get away with it. What you can do with the government is to get in their faces, go over to the island and get as much international support on this as possible. Madeira's only got maybe 30 surfers, and I'd say 90 percent are under the age of 25. They don't have a lot of clout and they get intimidated away from these issues. So our plan is to put on another protest, and we want to do it in a much grander scale than the last time. We have a lot of support from the surfers of Madeira, but also from the one environmental organization that is influential there, it's called Cosmos. So we're working with them and with the other major players on the island to put something together in the fall. So we've been wanting to have as much coverage and support as possible and to do it when the waves are good.

CD: Will you put on a contest or some event like that?
WH: That's something we've looked into. The last international surf contest that they've done there was a Red Bull Big Wave Challenge. Red Bull is willing to do another contest there, but the problem is, we don't actually know if Jardim do Mar the surf spot will be there to have a big-wave competition -- everyone's unwilling to commit. But there are plenty of other waves there that we can surf. The main thing I'm trying to get is a commitment from Sam George and Gibus de Soultrait. To get both of them there for the protest. Because that would be a hugely symbolic gesture. You've got basically the first few guys who went there. Gibus went before anyone else, but Sam was the first person to write about it and expose it to the world in a sense.

CD: Have you talked to Sam?
WH: Well, I talked to him last week, and he didn't say "no". There's nothing I could do that would make it any better than that.

CD: If people want to plan on going or be kept in the loop...
WH: Visit our website. We'll have stuff posted on it. www.savethewaves.org. The only way this is going to happen from our end is if we get some help from the member level and even if we get corporate sponsors. Our organization is entirely volunteer. No one here is making any money off this at all. It's all about saving the wave.

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