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Laird Hamilton

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Saving the Ocean From a Wipeout

Posted: 06/10/2012 4:21 pm

Surfers know the importance of balance. It's the difference between a great ride and a wipeout.

It's a simple principle, but we could learn a lot from it when it comes to how we treat the oceans we love so much. Our over consumption of natural resources, like fossil fuels, is knocking natural systems out of balance. By making better, sustainable choices and managing our resources with an eye on ecosystem health, we can strike a better balance between our own needs and the wellness of our oceans and planet.

In other words, finding this sustainable balance can keep the oceans from an irreversible wipe out.

Sadly, we have changed the face of the world's oceans -- fishing species to near collapse, choking marine life with plastics, and acidifying the very waters we rely on for food and life itself. We have drastically changed the ocean in an evolutionary instant, and the magnitude of that impact is visible around the world. On my journeys around the globe I have witnessed many of the impacts that humans have had on the oceans. From oil-coated dolphins in the Gulf, to beaches covered with plastic garbage in the Pacific, I have indeed seen far too many ocean tragedies. Perhaps more alarming, is the fact that many of the greatest impacts are not visible to the naked eye. Out of sight cannot mean out of mind if we want to secure a future of healthy seas.

But I also see room for hope. I have met so many people who are working toward a better, healthier and more resilient ocean future.

There's an army of ocean lovers out there who will stand up for healthy seas. I spent a very memorable afternoon in Malibu creating an incredible symbol of ocean solidarity with many of them, including good friends like surf legend Dave Kalama, ocean advocate Kelly Meyer, and my wife, Gaby Reece. We were joined by more than 250 surfers and stand-up-paddlers who came to show their support for the oceans, who braved the cold water to form a giant floating human peace sign, an image of which we were lucky to capture by helicopter. Please share this image with others to remind us all of the connection we share with our ocean.

2012-06-09-peace_paddle.jpg

Photo: Craig Schmitman


Fittingly, the Peace Paddle took place just miles from a new marine protected area. Like underwater national parks, these places provide safe havens for marine life to thrive, away from human harm. They are signs that we are making progress in the right direction. And yet, much more remains to be done for our oceans to be returned to a place of health.

Fortunately, we will have an opportunity to do more to save our seas on a global scale later this month. The United Nations is gathering for its Rio+20 Earth Summit in Brazil, and ocean protection is a top priority on the agenda. The summit offers us all a chance to make our voices heard on these issues, and an opportunity to transform the way we interact with our planet. Join me and tell our world leaders to take action on critical ocean issues like plastic pollution in the waters and the conservation of marine life on the High Seas.

More than anything, humans are innovators and we have a chance here to make a change for the better. We simply cannot afford to lose life in the oceans and we don't have to. You have the power to return our seas to balance -- all you have to do is take one moment to participate and let our leaders know you demand action.

 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aaron kennedy
05:17 PM on 06/17/2012
Way to go Laird.. Your voice carries weight in the Media, thanks for putting yourself "out There" like you do....
08:45 AM on 06/13/2012
Very Good article, thank you
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Soc3947
Repeal Obama care because the IRS is corrupt
04:50 PM on 06/12/2012
he got famous and them left his wife and kids for some mtv girl..
09:42 PM on 06/12/2012
Lousy guess, Soc3947. He costarred in NORTH SHORE in 1987. He was famous, especially in surfing circles, before he met his first wife and many years before he met his present wife Gabrielle Reece, a professional volleyball player and model, in 1997. Do a little research before posting, will you?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
thrugreeneyez
08:49 PM on 06/11/2012
Laird thanks for speaking out for our oceans,but why don't you walk the walk and go vegan?
01:48 PM on 06/11/2012
This is a very beautiful and interesting picture, i enjoyed your article it has great detail in it, thanks for sharing the artistic work, i appreciate your work!
01:35 PM on 06/11/2012
greatest non competitive athlete ever? certainly a wise man and a great effort hes getting behind here
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ekim gnitlon
01:12 PM on 06/11/2012
I have surfed almost all my life. all over the world. not so much anymore. I was in the Philippines a few years back and spent one entire day picking up plastic trash, like quarts of oil for outboard engines probably discarded by the local fisherman, and plastic cups and wrappers and shoes and everything else for collection. I know where it came from, I just wonder where it went from there?

The Philippines are very poor and there is a lack of understanding concerning their environment. I wish it were not so for they are an island nation and need to protect their seas and its marine life.
I appreciate this effort by Laird and count me in.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chaotician1
11:45 AM on 06/11/2012
I wish you the best...but realistically mankind will not end its destruction of the oceans any more than it will stop the destruction of our very planet's ability to sustain life. The world of man is a zero sum game where what I get you don't and vice-versa! Look at the world's richest men and women still grabbing everything they can when they are clueless on what to do with what they already have.. worshipping the empty zeros in their bank accounts manipulating markets and people for symbols of power, disgusting and depraved, worthless to themselves and the species! There are over 7 Billion of us creatures and we are millions more every day; like mindless plague of viruses...we are eating our host and destroying our right to exist... and there is no evidence that we can change!
09:32 AM on 06/11/2012
"Humans are innovators and we have a chance here to make a change for the better." Nicely said, Laird. And I couldn't agree more. I really enjoyed this, and I applaud your commitment to the cause.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
StephenJK
All your consciousness are belong to us
07:42 AM on 06/11/2012
Really enjoy your attitude and passion, Laird. Not to mention those gnarly fat swells you love riding so much. :)
03:13 AM on 06/11/2012
Laird?
ubrew12
that crazy uncle from Amarcord
01:24 AM on 06/11/2012
Went to High School with you're old buddy Buzzy Kerbox. Kailua High ('The Surfriders') had such a wellspring of surfing Greats in those days (Kerbox, Ho, Cravalho, and windsurfing pioneer Naish) .

I'm worried about the state of Hawaii's coastlines and beaches. Anyone who knows the lineup, anywhere, should be concerned, cuz:
'Surfin' is my thing, it's the only way for me, yah SURF! SURF!'
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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Toogee
2G or not 2G?
11:50 PM on 06/10/2012
Hopefully human kind will become more enlightened to the fact that our very existence is intertwined with the health of not only the earth's oceans, but ALL of our planets fresh and salt water sources! Drinking water and all the other commodities we are able to harvest from the planet's aquatic habitats are at a precarious tipping point and we as a species would be well advised to start paying closer attention to how our everyday activities and consumption can have a negative effect on these fragile ecosystems.
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Vballboy60
The Dudes abides...with the moderation
05:59 AM on 06/11/2012
“We have lived our lives by the assumption that what was good for us would be good for the world. We have been wrong. We must change our lives so that it will be possible to live by the contrary assumption, that what is good for the world will be good for us. And that requires that we make the effort to know the world and learn what is good for it.”

- Wendell Berry
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FZliveson
Beating the Conundrum
11:45 PM on 06/10/2012
Thank you, Laird. I surfed Santa Cruz in the '60's and have loved the oceans all my life. Keep up the good work. Mahalo and Kowabunga, FZLO
11:12 PM on 06/10/2012
There would be no "unemployment" anywhere in the world if this was what mattered most.
08:29 AM on 06/11/2012
No unemployment because there would be no employment.