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FLOW Ventura 2012 Begins Tomorrow

Categories: All, connectedness, life, marketing, ocean, philantrophy, small business, transparency and ethicsTags: , , , , , , , , , , , Author:

I’ve been too busy organizing this awesome event to write about it yet!

But today is the last day to sign up for the conference. We have a few spots open still if you want to come.

http://www.flowventura.com/

Saturday is the last day to sign up for FLOW Jam, the Sunday Fundraiser for Blue Ocean Sciences.

FLOW: triiibes 2012 Retreat is a meeting of entrepreneurs, linchpins, artists and community inspired by the example set by Seth Godin, an author and blogger who driving new marketing ideas in the digital age.

At this 3rd Annual Global triiibes Retreat, we have assembled an impressive group of thought leaders from multiple disciplines to speak on the topic of FLOW, and how this concept of mindfullness and presence can effect great change in both business & our personal lives.

We invite you to bathe in the beauty of the Pacific ocean while we open your minds to science, communication, technology, spirituality, innovation and just plain fun!

Speakers include Blue Ocean Sciences, Ocean Futures at Patagonia, Opus Novum, David Pu’u, Dr. Ed Brenegar, Bragg Health Insititute and many more!

As Seth himself has said: “I’m delighted that so many people are realizing how easy and powerful it is to surround oneself with people who will egg you on. Projects large and small are being spawned, but far more powerful, I think, is the psychic energy and encouragement you find when you discover that others are doing what you’re doing, that they’re walking the same road.”

Live in the sunshine, swim the sea, drink the wild air. – Emerson

The ocean is our sanctuary. We hope that through this gathering of great minds, with the flow of the sea as our soundtrack, we can set our collective neurons firing to invent new solutions for her preservation and new paths for our own creative futures.

Register Today

On Sunday night, get yourself ready for an amazing evening of food, friends and great music as tribes Ventura welcome you to FLOW Jam, an interactive experience of art, learning and laughter as we wrap up the conference sessions with local musicians and some very special guests!

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Team Betty in Bali: Green Essence

Categories: All, connectedness, conscious consumerism, Environmental, ocean, philantrophy, photography, surfing, transparency and ethics, travel, women's surfingAuthor:

Bali: Green Essence (from DEEP Magazine)

Words and Photos by David Pu’u

Mary Osborne heads for the inside bowl section on a semi deserted day.

In the past few years, it seems that everyone has turned toward green. In fact, the color has become a necessary branding indicator for everything from chain stores to politicians, and sometimes one with little significance. It is certainly a pity that the green movement has come to this, but here is why. In the hard light of day, people are what matter. We are one of the few entities on this spinning ball with the power to mitigate our effect. But where does one begin?

Bali Sunrise

Look in the mirror. It must begin with the individual. The Laws of Exponentiality and the tenet of Ephemeralization, which was expounded on by Buckminster Fuller in 1938, basically say that we ought to be able to do more with less. This really is the key to going green. Unfortunately, it is the polar opposite of capitalist commerce and most political systems of governance.

That is what made the trip to Bali by Donna Von Hoesslin, owner of Betty Belts in Ventura and my girlfriend, and some of the women on her team a fascinating concept. Here you had a capitalist—a businesswoman—determined to create some positive change by being truly green. She resolved to invest in socially sustainable projects in a developing country that would supply her company with ethically made, yet price-competitive products.

We had met David Booth, a former British civil engineer with the World Bank, a few years back. Booth basically retired to Bali, where he founded and developed an NGO called the East Bali Poverty Project (EBPP).

Mary Osborne of Team Betty with David Booth at the EBPP Independence Day Celebration

The group of us embarked on the trip to Bali in an effort to give back and to explore additional methods of bringing commerce to the people Booth had literally dedicated his remaining years of life to saving and putting on the path to an economically, culturally and ecologically sustainable future.

This particular morning we rolled down the gravel drive of Villa Gayatri (our palatial trip headquarters) in Ubud with Gusti at the wheel. Thanks to planning, hope and circumstance, we were joined by four of Von Hoesslin’s company icons-ambassadors and filmmaker Aaron Marcellino for the two-hour drive into the mountains of East Bali.

We had been invited to attend a festival where most of the children who had been educated through the project would be participating in one great big party of sorts. It was part of a celebration of Balinese Independence Day.
In 1998 Booth set out specifically to find the poorest people on Bali. He figured that he should begin his plan by putting it to the most difficult of tests. He had heard rumors of a lost tribe, a group cut off from Balinese society by a volcano eruption and the ensuing simple fact that no one thought to ever look for them. Hiking deep into the mountainous country of Eastern Bali with a guide, he found them. They were a lost and dying tribe—people who, as Booth observed, never smiled.

Betty Belts owner/designer Donna von Hoesslin sharing with some of the ladies she works with.

Most who travel Bali have experienced the cultural blessing of the Balinese smile. It is a renowned national asset. The people smile—it is how they are set spiritually. But that wasn’t the case for the long-lost tribe. They had lost their smiles and much more. Booth saw them as a test case for world cultural development. He began to develop a plan to restore them one person at a time. He would do it through the children.

No one is exactly sure where the tribe came from originally, but Booth suspected that maybe it had been Lombok, due to a strong resemblance to those who reside on that island.

The eruption, poor diet, a persistent problem with goiter, and a few other environmentally related issues had combined to provide a lack of real history due to memory loss. In effect, these people were the tribe that the world had forgotten and who, literally,  had no real knowledge of their own history. Imagine that, not knowing where your family had come from or your town.

A worker cleaning parts in a small dish of soapy water. When you bring commerce into a community of craftsmen, they begin like this.

In terms of Western understanding, that is true loss and deprivation—not having a history. No connection to anything. They were a people who had lost almost all aspects of everything vital and necessary for human existence. They were failing.

I met and interacted with the children and had a hard time keeping back the tears because I understood that now these children have hope. A future now exists for them, where only death and oblivion had loomed prior.
The short of it is that the tribe is back. And in their return, Booth has shown us a way that we can transform our own society potentially. It is a great story that will make the world smile. We all need hope. No matter what our lot in life.

Hate, division and separation are odd and common bedfellows. Love is a better way, and it is much stronger. We saw the effects of it our entire trip.

It was a great gift, and we learned in the process of surfing, communicating, planning and working with Betty B’s affiliates in Bali (yes, this is somewhat ironic) what “green” and “sustainability” ought to look like: health and happiness. Pursue that. We have the world and the oceans to gain.

Bali sunset and boatmen watching the surfer’s ride.

On the back end of all of this, one of my favorite organizations, 1% for the Planet, which was conceived by Patagonia’s Yvonne Chouinard, had at Von Hoesslin’s behest and efforts, put the EBPP on its donor list as an environmental cause. I was impressed by this because it illustrated to me that some people in charge really do understand that the key to a green world is in affecting people. It left me with a dose of hope.
To learn more about the EBPP visit www.eastbalipovertyproject.org/tag/david-booth.

As Donna von Hoesslin and I walked at the waterline at sunset we looked down and saw two identical pieces of seaglass. She did not know I would be asking her to marry me a couple days later.

 

Sierra Patridge of Team Betty cross stepping at a remote Balinese break.

Schoolchildren getting out for the day.

See article and more from DEEP Surf Magazine and David Pu’u  here…

http://www.deepzine.com/site/articles/296

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New David Pu’u Gallery Sneak Peek

Categories: All, beauty, connectedness, life, ocean, photography, surfingAuthor:

David had been working on a new edit of his online gallery for the past week and has been meticulously selecting from 400,000 + images of his immense library from recent and older work. These are some of the gems he unearthed, many of which have rarely or never been seen. Bookmark his website: www.DavidPuu.com

Finally one will be able to order prints of any of them in a variety of cutting edge mediums to add a window of beauty to any wall.  Stay tuned…

Meanwhile enjoy this sneak peek!

Rincon by David Pu'u

Rincon by David Pu'u

PCH by David Pu'u

PCH by David Pu'u

Pacific Common Dolphins, Santa Barbara, by David Pu'u

Pacific Common Dolphins, Santa Barbara, by David Pu'u

Angel by David Pu'u

Angel by David Pu'u

Hannah Mermaid by David Pu'u

California Poppies by David Pu'u

California Poppies by David Pu'u

Underwater by David Pu'u

Underwater by David Pu'u

Surfer in the barrel by David Pu'u

Surfer in the barrel by David Pu'u

Exploding Wave by David Pu'u

Exploding Wave by David Pu'u

Andalusians by David Pu'u

Andreini Hot Curl by David Pu'u

Andreini Hot Curl by David Pu'u

Surfer Larry Ugale in the barrel, by David Pu'u

San Francisco Surfer Samuel Witmer by David Pu'u

San Francisco Surfer Samuel Witmer by David Pu'u

Hula Dancer rainbow by David Pu'u

Hula Dancer Rainbow by David Pu'u

Inside the barrel, by David Pu'u

San Francisco Bay at Night by David Pu'u

Pelican and crashing wave by David Pu'u

Sunset Surfers by David Pu'u

Sunset Surfers by David Pu'u

Sunrise Inside Barrelling Wave by David Pu'u

Watching the Sunset in Seychelles by David Pu'u

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Meeting Icons, a Designer, a Luau and Art: A Day in the Life of Betty

Categories: All, connectedness, events, fashion, Meaningful career, ocean, philantrophy, photography, surfingTags: , , , , , , , , , , Author:

Wow, it’s not every day the founders of Surfaid International walk into your shop.

What an honor it was to meet Dr. Dave and Randall! Surfaid has been one of my favorite orgs to give to over the years for the amazing work they do preventing Malaria and especially after the Tsunami in Indo. David and I, along with Robb Havassy, attended the SA Fundraiser in Malibu last night. I got to meet Donovan Frankenreiter and his beautiful family and hear him perform for the first time in more than 5 years. They sounded just brilliant! What an amazing day to be followed by another amazing day: today. Read about this here on David’s Blog.

Donovan Frankenreiter and his band performing at Surfaid International's Behind the Palms Fundraiser in Malibu

Donovan Frankenreiter and his band performing at Surfaid International's Behind the Palms Fundraiser in Malibu

Robb is in town to do a phenomenal show together with David tonight at a truly amazing location, The Stoneworks Gallery. David wrote about it here. There will be a Luau in the garden tonight, complete with roasted pig, mai tais, tikis and hula. And I will have a Betty Belts table set up to offer my ocean-inspired adornments (including sea glass jewelry and my upcycled Surfboard Resin jewelry and plumeria flower hair clips to add tropical style. You should come! Details below.

But first, I will be at the Stewart+Brown Sample Sale, selling my samples and seconds at my table there. We are truly blessed to have these places and people in Ventura, an international organic fashion designer who makes absolute gorgeousness. I wore a Stewart+Brown dress to the event last night and got stopped twice about it. : ) Want to come? 955 East Front Street, Ventura, 93001 from 12-5.

And tonight, the Luau! At 300 Ventura Avenue, corner Park Row (entrance gate on Park Row). 5-9 Includes Feast and Entertainment in the garden $45 at the door (bring cash). After 9pm free entrance to see the art and gather around the fire. Questions? 805-643-5431

Don’t miss this blog David wrote this morning on this very subject!

Onward!

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Everybody Matters

Categories: All, connectedness, photographyTags: , , , , , Author:

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My Story and How Betty Belts Happened in Skirt Magazine

Categories: All, art, connectedness, Environmental, fashion, Meaningful career, philantrophy, Products, small business, surfing, transparency and ethicsAuthor:

Here’s my story and how Betty Belts came about. It’s a fascinating read, I have to admit, a little strange for me, seeing it here in print. The Skirt reporter, Charlene Ross, did a great job of piecing it all together from a two hour long recording of my ramblings, jumping from one subject to another, going off on interesting tangents. Not an easy task!

Enjoy! – Donna

Donna von Hoesslin: Surfer – Designer – Activist

Author- Charlene Ross for Skirt Magazine

Donna Surfing at Queens, Waikiki. Pure bliss.

Donna Surfing at Queens, Waikiki. Pure bliss. Photo copyright David Pu'u.

Donna von Hoesslin is a California girl who followed a drummer to Europe at the age of 17 and ended up living in Berlin for 17 years. She married into German nobility and was living the fabulous life of the social elite. During her time abroad she held various jobs as a fashion designer, translator and back-up singer for a European two-hit wonder band.

But the very first time Donna stepped on a surfboard at the age of 31 her life changed forever. She was hooked instantly and became passionate about surfing and would travel often to faraway places so she could ride the waves. Unfortunately it was a passion her husband did not share. One day after returning home from a surf trip Donna and her husband Elmar realized that their marriage had turned into a convenient friendship and the word divorce hung in the air between them. They both cried. Today they are separated by 5,000 miles, but truly remain the closest of friends.

Betty Belts

Donna came back the states and moved into a shared beach house in her hometown of Santa Cruz so she could make surfing a part of everyday life. To make a living she became a…

(Click here to read rest of story. Or on the link below.)

http://ventura.skirt.com/shes_so_skirt/donna-von-hoesslin-surfer-designer-activist

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