Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Costa Rica Preparations for ISA World Surfing Games






Tourism makes up some 40% of Costa Rica gross income and they say surf-related tourism is 25% of that again. I can't think of many nations that say surfing makes up 10% of their GDP? Of course Americans are the majority of this, and with the waves they surf in Florida, any wonder this is an East Coaster's home away from home? (My apologies to my East Coast friends, but you have more world titles from Floridians than any other stretch of coast!)

It was great to be back at Cal and Coral's place. I am so impressed with a 62-year-old man who is willing to step out into the world of faith-financed mission at an age most are playing it safe and comfortable, Cal is such a man, and he drives a cool orange kombi!

We got to check out the ISA World Surfing Games site at Hermosa and meet with Coky about his upcoming role in hospitality and chaplain to the CR surfing team. They went from 28th to 9th to 5th
over the past 3 games and the boys accredit the fact to "our chaplain is praying for us." Don't know what it will mean when many teams have chaplains and all are praying, God has a very busy winner
schedule.

The CS property is looking really good with great gardens and teams passing through, still a need for a national family to live in and manage it.

Dennis Leon is a warm gentle surfer in a sleepy surf town, living in a house with a new baby overlooking the waves. A surfboard titled 'Pura Vida' is erected at his driveway, the name of a church he is planting. He was supposed to start next year after the birth of the baby, but first week back he had 25 turn up saying "We heard you starting a church Dennis, we are here to begin." The amazing thing about Dennis though, is that he was a loose Latino grommet hanging out scamming stuff off tourists when he first met a short-term mission team from CS Santa Barbara way back in 1988. He connected with the surfing gringos, came to Christ, was encouraged and supported to be schooled in the States, went onto college and became a pastor. Now he is back in his home town, planting a surfer-friendly church for kids just like what he once was.

Monday, July 27, 2009

El Salvador Leadership Conference







You know when you are gathering 70 Latin Americans together for surfing and meeting it is going to be lots of energy and fun. This is exactly what happened for our first America's Conference organised by Cal Fisher and so well hosted by our El Salvadorian mission led by Salvador Castallanos.

We worshiped with passion, strategised with passion, surfed with passion, talked with passion, and it didn't matter if the program started or ended late. It is with a sense of family reunion that we meet and whether joking with the Peruvians, exchanging waves with the Panama boys, listening to the new Ecuador contacts, eating with the Brazilian's or laughing with them all - it is a global family.

The conference site was incredible, right on the ocean with a long right-hand point break Sunzal as the back drop. At high tide we got splashed in our seats. There was the first big swell of the winter that hit with sets double overhead and Punta Roca is well deserving of the J-Bay similarity claim. Sergio and Cesar even dragged out a guy out who broke his femur in a collision.

Amazing stories of God at work in women's surf camps in Barbados by Melanie, Costa Rican chaplaincy by Coky, Venezuelan surf games by Luis, surf hostel outreach by George in Panama, Jesus Aloha contest in Peru and so it goes on and on.

I am in awe of how creative and courageous our guys are. I am also convicted at how apathetic and compromised my 'Christianity' feels like back at home. Such a difficult thing to rise up above one's culture. Our final day also engaged us with a local orphanage with over 100 kids. They so love the CS local guys and it is great to see how surfers have been engaged to serve the widows and orphans.

We finally split paths, Aaron headed off to Punta Mango and I left with Cal, Coral and Aldo to Guatemala ready to fly to Costa Rica.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Santa Barbara Connections



After a long 14 hour flight with Aaron to LAX we blearily met up with CSUS director Dean Plumlee and North America ASP Chaplain Lyle Castallow for breakfast...dinner time at home. I can't work out why some clever American hasn't got onto the fact that in Australia we are always a day ahead of the USA and they can simply ask us what is going to happen that upcoming day? Dean and Lyle are doing great work with CSUS and I am impressed with their diligence and godliness.

Onto Santa Barbara the home of our ASP Women's Chaplain, Liselle Wilsnaugh and met with her pastor and host family. It was so good to hang out with David and Jane Brown, whom I met on their first CS trip to Australia back in 1991. The godly grow more godly with age and these two are fine examples of that...and I swear David makes the best sourdough waffles in the world.

Really good to see see divine appointments. Do you believe in them? We went to the Channel Islands surfboard factory to meet up with Davey Smith and made our request to the receptionist. She brought back a guy I had never seen in my life, and he was equally suprised asking, "Do I know you?" We both instantly recognised our shared Aussie accents and then he says, "I do know you from somewhere?"

Now I know you American's think Australia is a small place, but it works out this guy was from my local beach and used to be in our Christian Surfers club back in the 80's when he was 13 and "just so happened to be thinking about whether I should start going to church for my kids." When the receptionist apologised that Davey Smith was not available, we could say, "Don't worry, we were really meant to meet Mike!"

Be available for God's divine appointments. I mailed Mike a Surfers Bible and old photo from the CS archives today.