Surf rescue
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Elia Powers
As project director of the Billabong Odyssey surf expedition, Newport
Beach resident Bill Sharp keeps an eye out for the world’s largest
waves.
This month, he is responding to one of the world’s deadliest
water-related disasters in history.
In the days following the Dec. 26 South Asia tsunami, Sharp said
he became unsettled watching relief efforts and news coverage from
afar.
The same islands that had provided surf magazines with centerfold
spreads now were appearing in newsweeklies in disaster photos.
“As people who choose to live our lives off the coast, seeing
damage there resonates with us,” said Sharp, a former editor of
Surfing and Surf News magazines.
Sharp said he wanted to provide help on behalf of the surfing
industry. So he rounded up friends Matt George, Dustin Humphrey,
Timmy Turner and David Sparkes for a Jan. 6 trip to Sumatra.
Sharp brought professional photography equipment, with the
intention of documenting the entire trip. But when he arrived, he
decided to take a more proactive role.
Along with the other travelers, Sharp offered his services to
major relief organizations.
The group prepared itself for any task -- clearing out warehouses,
loading trucks with supplies, delivering goods directly to those in
need.
But none of that happened, and Sharp and his friends quickly grew
impatient, he said.
With no assured financial backing, the travelers formed the
“Sumatra Surfzone Relief Operation” as a short-term alternative.
“People are making pledges, but unless you are walking through the
streets with sacks of money, it doesn’t mean anything,” said Sharp,
who serves as the operation’s acting director.
“I have a home-equity line,” he said. “What better way to use it
than on people who don’t have homes.”
Sharp said in the first 10 days of the mission, members spent
almost $50,000 of out-of-pocket money. One couple scraped together
$25,000 in savings and credit card advances to get relief supplies
and access to a cargo vessel. Sharp paid $12,000 for the short-term
rental of another yacht.
Basing themselves out of Padang, a coastal Sumatran town that
escaped the brunt of the disaster, operation members bought 37 tons
of food -- including mass amounts of fish and rice -- from local
merchants.
They worked directly with the Indonesian Development of Education
and Permaculture, evaluating what goods were most needed. Operation
members loaded an assortment of items onto the two vessels, including
500 disaster aid kids, 135,000 liters of water, 500 blankets and 150
shovels.
Sharp said a large portion of the goods went to Simeulue, an
island less than 15 miles from the earthquake’s epicenter that
received scant attention from relief organizations.
He said their two ships were the first to reach the island after
the tsunami.
With the rest of his friends continuing the ship deployments
overseas, Sharp returned to Southern California on Sunday. He spent
the past week coordinating the second part of the operation and
communicating with local surf industry leaders.
Sharp said he is confident the operation will receive major
donations from industry representatives by the time group members
return home. And he is prepared for a return to Sumatra on Monday.
He asks that donations to go toward SurfAid International, an
organization that, for years, has worked to immunize South Asia
citizens.
Sharp said phase two of the mission will include transporting
fishing apparatus such as canoes and nets from the southern region of
Sumatra to the offshore islands.
“Our goal is to provide [survivors] with the infrastructure they
need to be self-sufficient again,” he said.
Though operation members are spending the majority of their time
on the vessels, they continue to keep friends and family in the loop.
Sharp is sending out regular trip updates through e-mail.
Huntington Beach resident Timmy Turner is writing a blog that
appears on his sponsor Quiksilver’s website
“They’re doing a great job,” said Tim Turner, Timmy’s father.
“Some people might have tried to talk them out of going, but they
weren’t going to be stopped.”
* ELIA POWERS is the enterprise and general assignment reporter.
He may be reached at (714) 966-4623 or by e-mail at
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