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Earth Is Now Our Only Shareholder

If we have any hope of a thriving planet鈥攎uch less a business鈥攊t is going to take all of us doing what we can with the resources we have. This is what we can do.

Read Yvon鈥檚 Letter

Anchoring for Change

Morgan Williamson  /  Sep 22, 2021  /  5 Min Read  /  Surfing

How Captain Liz Clark鈥檚 Tahitian residency opened a new chapter in her activist work.

A Ti'a Matairea Island Protectors standing up for their local coral reefs and fishing zones.

All photos courtesy of Liz Clark 聽

After more than a decade at sea, Liz Clark dropped anchor in Tahiti in 2018 to finish her memoir Swell: A Sailing Surfer鈥檚 Voyage of Awakening. But, instead of blowing back to the open ocean after her book tour, Liz entered a new chapter, one that involves a home on land with her partner Tahui, six dogs, two cats, foster animals, occasional injured wildlife and a view of her sailboat, Swell, floating in the lagoon.

鈥淲hen I was a nomadic sea traveler, I was observing different environmental issues in the places that I was sailing,鈥� says Liz. 鈥淚 felt my role at that time was to connect people back on land to the beauty and wonder I was experiencing, along with the troubling realities our oceans are facing, in hopes of motivating them to do better for the planet. But after writing Swell, I felt an urgency to expand my activism work in the face of our global ecological crisis and make an impact by acting locally. I hope that this next phase will also inspire others to take action in their own communities.鈥�

Liz鈥檚 journey into making a difference in the Tahitian island community started when her beloved rescue cat, Amelia, was killed by a dog in 2018. After witnessing the suffering and overpopulation of stray dogs and cats on the island, Liz wanted to do something to help in Amelia鈥檚 honor. She began going door to door with free medicines for dogs and showing the community how to treat animals with advanced mange (one of the main reasons dogs are abandoned in the community). 鈥淚t鈥檚 slow but it鈥檚 effective,鈥� she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 wonderful to see the dogs recover and the happiness and empowerment it brings their owners.鈥�

Anchoring for Change

鈥淏efore COVID-19, we were finding families to adopt strays on the island and bring them back to the US,鈥� says Liz Clark. 鈥淲hich we will resume when tourism gets going again.鈥�

Liz set a meeting with the mayor to propose a mass-sterilization event for the strays on the island. 鈥淭here are just way too many dogs,鈥� she says. 鈥淲hen I first brought this issue to the mayor, he was totally for it, but told me I needed to have a nonprofit organization behind it.鈥�

So, she and Tahui started talking to friends in the local surf community. They started 鈥攎eaning 鈥渟tand up for your island鈥� in Tahitian鈥攚ith a group of young surfers, community Elders and others looking to make a difference and put their focus on environmental protection and animal welfare.聽Their goal is simple鈥攃reate positive change in French Polynesia through staying connected with the local community.

Anchoring for Change

Liz serves as a spokesperson for the nonprofit she helped create, here she is educating a local classroom on plastics: 鈥淎t first I didn鈥檛 feel comfortable taking a leadership role because I鈥檓 not from [Tahiti]. But our team reassured me. I aim to facilitate the needs and desires of the local community in protecting their environment.鈥�

Their first major environmental project began after a young fisherman came to the group and was frustrated with the need to protect the reef and fishing area near his home from irresponsible anchoring practices. So, they discussed the issue at their next community meeting.

鈥淓very year there are more and more boats that come through, and if you don’t know the area, there’s a chance that you might drop your anchor on live coral,鈥� she says. 鈥淭he fishermen were getting angry, and there had even been violence over it.鈥� But before they could turn this initiative into something real, they needed to drum up some good trouble.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a big [annual] canoe event where hundreds of boats come into the bay at once, and it鈥檚 very destructive,鈥� she says. 鈥溑凡┗嵩比肟� organized a protest, painted a big sail and invited the whole community to join us in the water. 欧博会员入口 also made a short video for social media that explained the situation and showed the area we were asking boats to avoid. It got the attention of our local government and the mayor who came to us for help to find a solution.鈥�

Anchoring for Change

鈥溑凡┗嵩比肟� do a lot of beach cleanups and education in the local schools about trash, trash disposal and plastics,鈥� Liz says.

Anchoring for Change

The Island Protectors and their beach-cleaning bounty.

Combining the anglers鈥� local knowledge with the desires of the community and Liz鈥檚 experience as a sailor, they mapped out safe, sand-bottom zones around the island. After two years of working out the details and wading through the bureaucratic waters of French Polynesia, the anchorage zones were signed into law in August 2021 and legally added to the navigational charts. 鈥淭hey will hopefully help protect and reduce the damage done to the coral,鈥� Liz says.

Next on their agenda is establishing a network of Marine Protected Areas (MPA) to prevent overfishing. 鈥淏efore colonization, Tahitians used a system called 搁腻丑耻颈鈥攚hich temporarily prohibited fishing and harvesting in certain areas鈥攖o regulate their marine resources that broke apart over time,鈥� says Liz. 鈥淭o get this going, we wanted to engage the fishermen, first. If the protected areas don鈥檛 come from those who use and depend on the resources, it鈥檚 just not going to work. 欧博会员入口 wanted to know if they even desired to do this.鈥� With the help of the Department of Marine Resources, the nonprofit put together a questionnaire for the island鈥檚 fishermen. They started off going district by district and door to door to gauge the temperature for the MPAs and gather information about which areas should be protected. 鈥淪o far about 90 percent of the fishermen want to do something about overfishing and establish some sort of Marine Protected Area in their region. So, we鈥檙e proposing a combination of that traditional 搁腻丑耻颈 system using modern tools. But it鈥檚 the fishermen and women who will decide.

“It’s exciting, I feel like I’m holding real ocean conservation work in my hands.鈥�

Anchoring for Change

Just a little post-surf mango with Liz and Tahui鈥檚 dog, Sister, for good measure.

For Liz, this is the natural growth seeded from her earlier life of sailing and inspiring change. 鈥淲hen I was at sea, I saw myself as this global ambassador for environmental issues, and I was doing my best to live my values and make the change happen from within. Now, I鈥檓 having fun seeing real positive impacts developing through this nonprofit work at the local level. It鈥檚 hard and less glamorous than sailing, but equally challenging. I know there will be a time when I take to sea life again, but for now, it feels like I鈥檓 where the planet needs me the most.鈥�

Please visit to learn more and support their work.聽

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