The Art of Ocean Conservation VOLUME 1, ISSUE 4 SPRING 2011 $6.95
Aqua Paparazzi Photo Portfolio of Scott Kerrigan
Is Seafood
Safe to Eat? Scientists test the Gulf Coast’s seafood. Read about what they find.
PLASTIKI VOYAGE Sailing the Pacific on Plastic Bottles
PLASTIC PARADISE One man’s trash is another man’s treasure
www.guyharveymagazine.com
1
Guy at work in his George Town Studio in Grand Cayman.
Guy’s Limited Edition Art Only $300 Guy Harvey personally selected the art in this portfolio for Guy Harvey Magazine’s exclusive offer. He also extended an extra-special price for magazine readers — only $300! Finally, he decided to keep the reproduction quantity VERY limited to only 10 copies of each of these seven, never-before-released paintings. Guy not only picked them and priced them but when you purchase one, he will also personalize it with his distinctive signature. Guy’s final word on the subject was to “act fast!”
Only 4 left
Hoo’s Next II 14” x 26” - $300 Only 4 left
Reef Patrol 11” x 14” - $300
Only 4 left
Marlin & Dolphin 11” x 29” - $300
Only 4 left
Only 3 left
Three Bonefish
Golden Prize
16.5” x 20” - $300
16” x 21” - $300
Only 1 left Only 3 left
Underwater Yellowfin Tuna Bunk 16” x 21.5” - $300
Little Green Herons 12” x 24” - $300
Bring Guy’s Art Into Your Home The above art is being released for the FIRST TIME EVER to the public. A maximum of only 10 reproductions will be made AND each one will be personally signed by Guy Harvey himself. This is an exclusive offer from Guy Harvey Magazine. It’s a first-come, first-serve offering, so don’t hesitate. Be one of only 10 people on the entire planet to own the above signed Guy Harvey art!
To order, call 888-275-2856 or email kat@guyharveymagazine.com. www.guyharveymagazine.com
3
cONTENTS
spring 2011
THE AQUA PAPARAZZI
48
\\ PLASTIcS: ONE WOrd/ONE WOrLd
26 SEA OF PLASTIc
40 gyrES
The amount of plastic getting into the marine food chain
Ocean currents swirl to form giant eddies that hold garbage
is alarming. Writer Terry Ward explores ways to fix the
– mostly plastics – in their spinning vortex. Studies are
problem and find alternatives to our excessive use of plastics.
ongoing to determine the effects of these garbage patches
by TeRRY wARD
and what to do about them. by DANNY THORNTON
32 PLASTIKI VOyAgE: ONE MESSAgE, 12,000 BOTTLES
In the spirit of a modern-day Kontiki Expedition, bank heir David de Rothschild built a ship made with 12,000 plastic bottles and sailed from California to Australia to raise awareness about the damage plastics are doing to our planet. by DARYL CARSON
16
ThE grEAT gAThErINg OF MANTAS
One man’s trash is another man’s treasure. Contributor Daryl Carson caught up with British ex-pat Richart Sowa in Isla Mujeras, Mexico, where Sowa has turned plastic trash into his own private floating island castle. by DARYL CARSON
62 IS SEAFOOd SAFE TO EAT?
Contributing Editor Doug Perrine visits Hanifaru Bay in the
The oil spill turned the seafood industry upside down. But
Maldives, where hundreds of manta rays gather like no other
we just want to know if Gulf seafood is safe or not. The
place on the planet. The phenomenon has attracted hordes
answer is not so black and white but GHM staff found some
of tourists. The conundrum is finding a balance between
encouraging signs.
tourism and nature.
by fReD D. GARTH
by DOUG PeRRINe 4
44 PLASTIc PArAdISE
www.guyharveymagazine.com
THE GREAT GATHERING OF MANTAS
16
Departments
8
TACkLEBOX Letters to Guy Harvey
72
guy HArvEy LiFEsTyLE Many Faces of Juli Goldstein
Reader comments via letters, e-mails, texts,
As they say, she’s more than just a pretty face.
Facebook posts, Twitter, and notes written on
Beauty queen, Juli Goldstein is a veterinarian in
wrinkled gum wrappers.
the Florida Keys, specializing in marine mammals such as dolphins.We asked her how she
10
guy TALk In Layman’s Language Guy discussed his recent expedition to dive with thousands of Nassau grouper and two
balances looking good and doing good.
74
MEET THE CHEF Florida’s Chef As the executive chef for the state of Florida,
documentaries his team is working on.
Chef Justin Timieri has cooked seafood for
12
guy’s univErsE News & Updates from Guy’s World
the likes of George and Barbara Bush and many other celebrities.
From Sports Illustrated models wearing GH jewelry to a newly-built GH headquarters in South Florida, all the latest news from inside and outside the
76
guy HArvEy rEsEArCH insTiTuTE Stalking Tigers GHRI is tracking tiger sharks from Bermuda
atmosphere.
to the Bahamas and discovering new species
48
pHOTO pOrTFOLiO The Aqua Paparazzi
of marlin.
Scott Kerrigan’s website is fittingly called Aqua
LAsT CAsT “Hooked” on Apalachicola
Paparazzi because he spends his time chasing aquatic stars around the planet.
80
Editor Fred Garth traveled to Apalachicola to find out if the oil spill had made slurping
68
TOurnAMEnTs & sHOWs Miami Muscle The Miami Boat Show is a display of testosterone pumping internal combustion engines. But there’s a growing stem of greenery beginning to take root at the show.
down oysters an extreme sport.
COnTriBuTOr’s prOFiLE
CReDItS tO:
SCOtt KeRRIGAn Few people on the planet have captured as many stunning images of billfish as Scott Kerrigan. His work has appeared in hundreds of ads and dozens of magazines and he continues to run one of the planet’s most respected marine photo stock agencies. He grew up on, in, and around the waters in South Florida. This perpetual motion into the sea prompted his love for anything fish related. As he matured he worked in local tackle shops, built custom rods, and repaired tackle. In 1983 he took a major step in his oceanic career and began fishing professionally. The journey led him into the Caribbean as a participant in dozens of billfish tournaments and as crew for private charters. After almost 10 years on the pro fishing circuit, his part-time photography hobby became his full-time profession. In 2002, he formed Aqua Paparazzi, a marine stock
Scott Kerrigan
photo agency. While Scott’s work is heavily sought after commercially and editorially, his agency also maintains an ever growing collection of rare, unique, and commercial big game fishing images. In addition to this issue of GHM (pages 48-59), Scott’s images have graced the pages of numerous publications such as Field & Stream, Men’s Fitness, National Geographic, Florida Sportsman, Boating, and Garden & Gun. In between trips, Scott writes for his sport fishing photo blog www.ScottKerrigan.com.
teRRy wARD
Terry Ward
When she was only 10 years old Terry Ward visited Europe with her parents and began taking notes, a journal that began her career as a travel writer. After she left her job in 2000 as a copywriter for an advertising agency, Terry decided to take a year to explore Australia, Asia, and the Middle East and pursue her dream of being a freelance travel writer. More than a decade later, her work has appeared in newspapers and magazines around the planet, from the Los Angeles Times to, ironically, Endless Vacation Magazine. Not that freelance writing is an endless carnival ride, but it tends to make some folks jealous when your office is the entire planet and generally really awesome, far-away places. Terry is a current contributing editor to World Hum, a literary webzine. Before that, she wrote a monthly travel column for the South Florida Sun-Sentinel called,Young and Restless. In 2008, Terry made her broadcast debut for The Travel Channel, speaking as a travel expert for “21 Mind Blowing Escapes” and “21 Sexiest Beaches.” She also writes a blog for VISIT FLORIDA. In this issue of GHM, Terry explores the issue of plastics in our waterways and what we can do to curtail this mounting problem.
PUblISHeR Lost Key Publishing editor-In-Chief Fred D. Garth Marketing Director John Guidroz Circulation Director Kat Dean Director of Sales and Marketing Ashley Bringman Outside Sales Representative Dan Wilson layout and Design Emagination Unlimited | Jenny Lee Internet Gurus Zeekee Interactive Copy editor Kerrie Allen Contributing editors Tanya Burnett Daryl Carson Kat Dean Dr. Guy Harvey Doug Perrine Danny Thornton Contributors Luca Babini Rickie Friend Juli Goldstein Matthew Grey Nicole Haugdahl Tilen Jakopin Scott Kerrigan Jody Lemmon Steve Murray Christina Newberry Andrew Rae Patrick Riviere Dr. Mahmood Shivji Terry Ward Bill Watts John Weller editorial Advisory board Dr. Guy Harvey Chad Henderson Bill Shedd Dr. Mahmood Shivji Steve Stock David Wilkinson Guy Harvey Magazine is published four times per year: winter, spring, summer, and fall, by Lost Key Publishing, P.O. Box 34075, Pensacola, Florida 32507. No part of this magazine can be
we ReCyCle: We’re proud that Guy Harvey Magazine is printed on recycled paper. However, using recycled paper is just the first step. Finding an environmentally-friendly printer is even more important. That’s why this magazine is printed at Publishers Press
from Lost Key Publishing. Occasionally, we may make all or part of our subscriber list available
in Shepherdsville, Kentucky. Publishers Press recycles more than 50 million pounds of paper and paper products each year, which
to carefully screened companies that offer
saves 10 million gallons of oil, 35,000 trees, and 14 million gallons of water. Publishers Press also recycles more than 300,000 pounds
products and/or services that may interest you.
of aluminum printing plates annually and no hazardous wastes are ever sent to a landfill, but are recycled and reused. The company is
To subscribe to Guy Harvey Magazine call our
currently working toward certification by the Sustainable Green Printing (SGP) Partnership. 6
reproduced without express written permission
www.guyharveymagazine.com
toll-free subscription number, 888-275-2856.
Introducing Guy Harvey
®
Welcome to color.
For more information or for a retail location near you, please call 1-888-Maui Jim (1-888-628-4546) or visit us at mauijim.com
TACKLEBOX
R E A D E R F E E D B AC K - E - m A i l S , S N A i l m A i l , T W i T T E R , FAC E B O O K , A N D C O C O N U T T E l E G R A P H
Get in Touch We welcome comments and recommendations from
Keep Up the Good Work
“Hooked on Fishing”
Congratulations to Guy Harvey and the team on
Great read! More!!
the magazine! It masterfully combines awareness of
GyPSyQUeenCAb, via GHM website
our esteemed readers anytime.
conservation issues in a very practical manner with
Thanks and we hope to hear
fantastic underwater imagery. It is not often that a
from you soon!
Fan us on Facebook
Follow us on Twitter
publication can speak to multiple audiences – divers,
Bruno’s Way
fishermen, and ocean lovers in general – but I think you
Excellent article on a terrific chef! Talk about working your
guys nailed it. Best of luck!”
way up the ladder to reach where your heart desires to be
JASOn HelleR,
and gaining a wealth of experience along the way. More
Publisher, DivePhotoGuide.com
ambition & perseverance!
@GuyHarveyMag
@
Send us an e-mail editor@ guyharveymagazine.com
Write us a letter P.O. Box 34075 Pensacola, Florida 32507
people need to adopt Bruno’s work ethic...energy, charm,
lIQUID, via GHM website
Great Photos, Articles I just received Issue 3 of Guy Harvey Magazine and was blown away by the spectacular images and intriguing
Guy’s Art
articles. I haven’t found a magazine in a long time
Beautiful as always. Keep up the good work Guy.
with such great writing and a subject matter that is so
bRUCewGORMAn, via GHM website
important these days. Keep up the good work. CHARleS DUnCAn, via e-mail
Around the World Thank you Guy Harvey Magazine for taking me all over
Red Motorcycle Chef
the world! I have enjoyed the in-depth knowledge of every
Chef Bruno on his red motorcycle is our favorite chef
article and the spectacular photos that keep me coming
in Cayman..and the whole staff is amazing...always so
back. Every issue has offered a variety of topics. The
friendly...great service...We are back in Ohio and we miss
organization of the magazine makes it easy on the eyes
you all...can hardly wait to return.
and pure pleasure to read; it’s hard to put down. Patiently
lInDA GIll, via GHM website
waiting for my next trip (issue)! K. belSeR, Pensacola, Fl
8
www.guyharveymagazine.com
THE BIG
GAME
IS ON.
The Big Game Club, a Guy Harvey Outpost Resort & Marina. Two legends. One legendary experience. Since 1947, the destination for discriminating mariners, water sport enthusiasts and adventure travelers. Now fully renovated and improved throughout, join Guy Harvey and his friends in a new chapter in the history of this famous club that would make Hemingway proud. Located in the heart of Alice Town, steps from Bimini’s powder white beach and mesmerizing blue green waters. • • • • • • •
51 rooms, dockside cottages and one bedroom suites 75 slip full service marina capable of accommodating center consoles to mega yachts The Bimini Big Game Bar and Grill, offering great food and fun overlooking the marina The Outfitter Shop, a retail experience featuring sportswear, supplies and gifts Dive Bimini, with extraordinary diving from our 60’ glass bottom dive boat Bonefish Bimini, offering top of class backcountry fishing opportunities Sportfishing charters with Bahamas legend, Captain Billy Black aboard his 53’ Rybovich “El Viejo”
Come be a part of history, and make some of your own while you’re here!
25º 43.34 N | 79º 17.45 W 800-867-4764 | 242-347-3391 BigGameClubBimini.com
guy TALk
IN LAYMAN’S LANGUAGE During my last TV series released a few years ago, I
Cayman on a documentary about the annual spawning
focused on different billfish species around the world,
aggregation (SPAG) of the only reasonably healthy
and enjoyed a fair amount of success fishing, tagging, and
population of Nassau groupers in the Western Caribbean.
diving with these magnificent animals. Generally, my
The research work is a collaborative effort between the
guest anglers on the shows were scientists who were
Reef Environmental Educational Foundation (visit
currently involved with research work on these species,
www.REEF.org) and the CI Department of Environment,
and they knew far more about the animal than I did.
which has been going on for eight years. The SPAGs
The series was a huge hit, mostly because we were able
have been closed to fishing access for eight years due to
to convey the research, fishing, science, and art into a
historical over-extraction. The numbers of groupers have
language that was acceptable by the viewing public.
grown slowly but overall it is a very positive story not
It was also a great deal of work, involving a huge amount of travel, and long weeks away from home and the drawing board or easel.
only for reef fish management in the Cayman Islands but also for the wider Caribbean. Why is it so important to tell this story?
GUy HARvey is an internationally-acclaimed
Throughout the warm waters of the Western
artist, fisherman, scientist, and
series is not in the same (fishing) genre that has become
Atlantic and Caribbean, one species of fish stands
world traveler, who devotes
so repetitive on Saturday morning TV, where “That’s a
out as the icon of the coral reef environment—the
much of his time and money
nice one Jim!” is the phrase most repeated. Sure, fishing
Nassau grouper. It is the iconic species of the
toward ocean conservation.
is involved in this new series, but as a means to interact
region just as the sailfish is to Florida or the salmon
with the animal for research purposes. In addition, the
is to the Pacific Northwest. All reef fish are subject
longer, one-hour format will give me enough time to
to immense fishing pressure and habitat loss to the
really address the natural history, life cycle and research
point where some are regarded as endangered. It is
efforts, and resource issues affecting the focus species.
time for a change, time for more research followed
Recently I have embarked on another series, but this
A couple of weeks ago I was working in Little 10
www.guyharveymagazine.com
by more conservation.
In becoming “entrenched” with the researchers and their efforts to learn more about the species, along with government organizations, I am able to relate the historical over-extraction, the opinions of different user groups, and the resulting conservation and protective measures in a package that is informative, educational, and entertaining to the reader who may not have access to scientific publications. Another documentary project in the works is about tiger sharks. By now, most of the fans who read our blogs and Facebook updates know that GHOF/GHRI has spent two years working on the migrations of tiger sharks (see page 76). The results we have gotten from these efforts are astounding and are changing our outlook on these over-exploited sharks. In February 2011, Dr. Mahmood Shivji and I went to Nassau at
Thousands of grouper prepare for spawning in Little Cayman. Photo by
the invitation of the Bahamas National Trust and the PEW Environmental
George Schellenger
group to make a presentation to several government ministers about the value of a living shark to the Bahamas economy. Twenty years ago, long line
importance of the Bahamas in the shark life cycle and reasons for regional
fishing was banned in the Bahamas which is why there are still big fish and
conservation efforts for all species of shark that visit the Bahamas.
lots of sharks there compared to anywhere else in the greater Caribbean.
It has taken a couple of years to put this documentary together and
While sharks are relatively abundant, it is time now to upgrade their
it won’t be done for another few months, but it will be worth it. The
protection in the face of annihilation of shark resources everywhere else
GHRI and GHOF are collaborating with several other research entities
to satisfy the Asian demand for sharks and their by-products.
in this effort, and my role is to build the story, generate sympathy for the
Dr. Shivji presented our findings on the migrations of tiger sharks back and forth across the wide Atlantic from Bermuda to the Bahamas, and it was a crucial piece of research that showed these officials the
species, and then present the documentary in layman’s language. It is our collective responsibility to conserve the marine environment and maintain the biodiversity of the planet. www.guyharveymagazine.com
11
By Danny ThornTon
Ship Goes Down in Grand Cayman It was just another January day in paradise for Guy and his family. Sunny skies, a slight breeze, gin-clear waters, and an ex-submarine rescue vessel about to be sunk. After eight years of planning, the USS Kittiwake was making her final trip – to the sandy bottom in 64 feet of water off of Grand Cayman’s West Bay. Of course, Guy wouldn’t miss an event that cool, so he and his kids were there with scuba gear and cameras ready to document the sinking. The 251-foot Kittiwake was launched in 1945 and served in naval operations before being decommissioned in 1994. It was transferred to the U.S. Maritime Administration in March of 2000 then brought to the Cayman Islands in 2009 from Norfolk, Virginia, where numerous old military vessels spend the rest of their lives rusting away in the St. James River. The Kittiwake found a new beginning in Grand Cayman for the sole purpose of making an artificial reef for divers and snorkelers. Fishing on the Kittiwake is not allowed. If the no-fishing rule sounds unfair, you have to understand that Cayman is a scuba diving mecca with dozens of diving operations and some of the clearest water in the world. The entire economy is based around diving and, oh yeah, offshore banking. Fishing for blue water species such as wahoo and marlin is fairly common, but reef fishing is highly regulated. Sinking the Kittiwake was not just a matter of pulling the plugs and letting the sea rush in. The old ship was cleaned and remediated in Norfolk which included removing all hazardous materials like PCB’s, asbestos, mercury, cabling, wires, oils, lubricants, and any other items that might cause harm to the environment. Additionally, all loose materials that might break off were removed. The Kittiwake is possibly the cleanest wreck ever to be sunk as an artificial reef. The diving community had been eagerly anticipating the sinking and more than 10,000 online viewers from around the world watched a live video stream as the ship went down. Project manager, Nancy Easterbrook (see Cayman Conservation article in Issue One of Guy Harvey Magazine), who was a major guiding force on the project was
Jessica and Alex Harvey (yes, Guy’s kids) approve of Grand Cayman’s new wreck.
there with Guy to witness the event.
Photo by Guy Harvey
12
www.guyharveymagazine.com
“I jumped in the water as soon as she was under,” Nancy said, “and sure enough, she was sitting upright exactly where she was supposed to be.” The Kittiwake lies in a marine park and is protected under law in Cayman, with no touching or taking of anything. Snorkelers and divers are not allowed to wear gloves in an effort to keep them from touching the wreck or sensitive marine growth. The only exception is the invasive lionfish, which is being controlled by divers in Cayman who are allowed to take the fish with a specially designed net.
Jessica Harvey cruises the
stern of the Kittiwake.
DistinctivEly UniqUE Ever thought about going into business with your fishing buddy? Depends on which one, right? Well, that’s
daughter in Jamaica. Every tray is hand-
exactly what long-time friends Peter
sanded and meticulously crafted and, of
Stephenson and Richard Matalon did. Their
course, displays Guy’s art.
company, Unique Furnishings, offers some,
The story goes like this: Matalon had
shall we say, “unique” Guy Harvey products
known the craftsman from years earlier
such as placemats, exquisite hand-carved
in Jamaica; then a few years ago they
serving trays, and aluminum furniture.
happened to run into each other while
Both men hail from Guy’s home
traveling. Matalon found out that the man
country of Jamaica. Their business began
had “fallen on hard times” so he decided to
with a line of window films displaying Guy’s
give him work.
art that can be mounted to sliding glass
“It gives me a great sense of pride
doors, cabin windows of your fishing boat,
to know that I have helped someone,”
or any other glass surface for that matter.
Matalon said, referencing the old proverb,
They expanded from that product
“not by giving him a fish, but rather
into some way cool casual furniture that
allowing him to fish.” If you want to see
is cast from solid aluminum. But, probably
all of the “unique furnishings,” check the
the most intriguing pieces in their line are
website: www.buyufi.com.
the serving trays and placemats which are handmade by a local craftsman and his
Jamaican craftsman makes colorful placemats. www.guyharveymagazine.com
13
Bealls Raises Awareness and Money If any good has come from the oil spill, it is that it has refocused attention on the vulnerable Gulf of Mexico ecosystem. It also has prompted folks to donate to worthy causes such as the Guy Harvey Ocean Foundation. And the fine people at Bealls department stores pitched in to raise $202,141 for
Sports illustrated loves Guy’s Jewelry
the GHOF through their “Save Our Gulf” campaign. Bealls’ original goal was $150,000. “As many experts predicted months ago, and as Bealls firmly believes, last year’s oil spill is an ongoing issue that needs serious research and
Last year’s cover of Sports lllustrated’s coveted swimsuit issue featured model
resolve in the immediate short-term,” said Mary Beth Fox, vice president
Brooklyn Decker wearing a Guy Harvey necklace. She must have told the
of marketing for Bealls. “Our partnership with the GHOF will help fund
other models how much she liked it because this year’s issue has more of
efforts to research the long-term effects of the oil on the Gulf’s sea life.”
the signature jewelry on models Damaris Lewis, Genevieve Morton, Izabel
Bealls raised the generous donation through several methods. At
Goulart, and Kenza Fourati.
the launch of the campaign, a two-day savings pass sale allowed Bealls’
For the second year in a row, the gold, diamond, and sterling silver jewelry
customers to donate $3.00 to the GHOF and receive a 15% discount
is sprinkled throughout the hot-to-the-touch pages. While the swimsuit issue
savings pass. Bealls also developed Save Our Gulf-branded campaign
is the most provocative photo spread for a sports magazine, the appeal of
merchandise, including T-shirts, hats, bags, towels, and other items, as well
Guy Harvey Jewelry is not just the attractive design, but also the philanthropic
as campaign-branded T-shirts featuring Guy Harvey’s trademark designs.
ties to marine conservation. A percentage of all profits generated from the
Proceeds from the sale of Save Our Gulf-branded merchandise were
sale of Guy Harvey Jewelry helps to fund the non-profit Guy Harvey Ocean
included in the total donation to the GHOF.
Foundation. And SI likes that concept. Diane Smith, senior editor at SI, said how “wonderful it is to have an effect on such a worthy cause.” With approximately 7,000 different Guy Harvey Jewelry pieces to choose “Being chosen for the second year in a row is not only exciting, but it means we’ve gained respect as a brand,” states MJ, director of operations at Nautora. “We are family owned and operated and have been in business almost 30 years. Three years ago we saw a tremendous opportunity with nautical jewelry and launched our sister company Nautora. When Nautora became the exclusive jewelry designer for Guy Harvey Inc., it gave us a tremendous platform to promote marine conservation, something we are very passionate about. The swimsuit issue gives us a worldwide opportunity to spread the word about marine conservation. Philanthropy is, and always will be, our core element and main focus.” Learn more about Guy Harvey Jewelry at www.guyharveyjewelry.com. www.guyharveymagazine.com
with our customers and our employees, all of whom contributed greatly to the success of this campaign,” said Fox. “We are thrilled with the response
from, it was easy finding the perfect match for the swimsuits.
14
“Bealls is a Florida store, and the Save Our Gulf campaign resonated
and outcome of the campaign throughout last year, and honored to maintain our continued partnership with Guy Harvey and his foundation.”
The new Guy Harvey headquarters is not just office space but also houses a full scale model of a retail shop. Photo by Tanya Burnett
Guy Harvey Upgrades Crib Back in the old days, the Guy Harvey team consisted of a young, long-
a rather cramped space near Ft. Lauderdale. No Dodge van though.
haired Guy and his dog and a 1972 Dodge van with shag carpet on the
That all changed last year when the new Guy Harvey International
ceiling and a screen press in the back. They did the fishing tournament
Headquarters was built in Davie, Florida, not far from the old digs.
circuit selling T-shirts from the back of van and…wait a minute…that
The new place has a showroom as an entryway, a real-life Guy Harvey
wasn’t Guy, it was my cousin Dwayne and his dog Bubba (sorry, but most
store, if you will. The walls are adorned with GH art, the carpet is GH,
of the ‘70s are a blur).
and even the toilet paper…just kidding. With the growing popularity
The truth is, Guy was a college professor when he did his first art
of Guy Harvey’s apparel, the new GH Outpost Resort at the Bimini Big
show in Jamaica and the rest, they say, is history. The brand has grown
Game Club, and the myriad products adorned with Guy’s art, the new
steadily since that first art show in the early 1980s. But things really
offices are a living catalog of the man, the brand, and the extensive line of
were a lot simpler back then and for years the Guy Harvey offices were
GH products. www.guyharveymagazine.com
15
Manta researcher Guy Stevens takes photos of unique individual markings (belly spots) used to identify manta rays that are feeding on plankton in Hanifaru Bay, Baa Atoll, Maldives in the Indian Ocean.
16
www.guyharveymagazine.com
TEXT & PhoToS By DoUG PErrInE
of Mantas
On the deck of a small wooden boat, rocking peacefully
stop completely.” Following the guide’s instructions, the
at anchor along the margin of a tiny, coral-fringed lagoon,
eight guests reached the shark’s position, and for the next
an alert guide rose to his feet. His eyes focused on a dark
three hours were treated to the unparalleled spectacle of
shadow moving slowly along the far side of the lagoon.
the largest fish in the ocean feeding contentedly on some
Quietly, he gathered together his passengers and whispered,
of the smallest creatures in the ocean.
“A whale shark has entered the lagoon. Watch that dark
The events just described occurred in a parallel
patch. If it stops moving, it has found a patch of plankton.
universe within an alternate reality framework somewhere
Then it will go vertical and rise slowly up and down sucking
in the time-space continuum. In the universe where my
in plankton. When that happens, you can slip gently into the
body was physically located at the time, here’s what really
water and swim slowly toward it. As soon as you can see
happened: the guide began to screech at the top of his
the shark, slow your swimming to an absolute minimum.
lungs, “Whale shark! Whale shark! Get in the water!
When you reach a distance of four meters from the shark,
Swim! Swim!” When his boat had emptied its load of www.guyharveymagazine.com
17
Manta ray swims over a patch reef among yellow sweepers and other schooling fish, Hanifaru Bay entrance, Hanifaru Lagoon, Baa Atoll, Maldives.
near-panicked passengers, he moved to the stern and called out to the
world to this remote corner of a small island nation. It is, rather, the bat-
other boats, which then took up the shrill alarm. In a matter of moments,
like relatives of this shark which account for the 300% increase in visitation
31 swimmers from five boats were thrashing across the surface in a frenzy
to Hanifaru from 2009 to 2010. Manta rays, like whale sharks, feed by
toward the animal which was still swimming into the lagoon. Beneath the
filtering tiny planktonic organisms from the water column. Unlike the sting
surface, 10 scuba divers were also converging toward the same point as
rays from which they probably evolved, they neither lie on the bottom,
fast as they could propel themselves, belching clouds of exhaust bubbles
nor possess venomous barbs to defend themselves. Their large size and
into the water column as they furiously finned toward the dark shape. The
harmless nature have elevated them to a position high on the “must-see”
slow-moving, but not dim-witted, fish quickly inferred that Armageddon
list of most divers and snorkelers.
was approaching, did a rapid about-face, and exited the lagoon. One of the
Manta rays are not generally considered to be social animals, although
divers managed to return to the boat with his prize—a digital image of the
they do aggregate in areas where a food source is concentrated, when a
faint outline of a large spotted fish, just identifiable through the haze of the
female goes into estrous, and at reef “cleaning stations” where smaller
water separating it from the diver.
fish pick parasites off of them. In a number of locations within their pan-
Hanifaru Lagoon, in Baa Atoll, in the northern Maldives Archipelago of
tropical range, it is not unusual to see a dozen or more mantas feeding in
the Indian Ocean, has developed a reputation as a whale shark “hotspot.”
close proximity. At Hanifaru, however, aggregations sometimes number
Indeed, as many as seven exemplars of the largest fish in the ocean have
more than 200 individuals within an area the size of a football field.
been seen there at one time, slurping a dense stew of plankton that collects
Even stranger, these “solitary” animals work together here in perfectly
in the small hook-shaped bay on the south side of the lagoon when the
choreographed formation to funnel plankton up through the center of
wind and tides are just right. However, the possibility of a whale shark
their spinning, polarized schools—a behavior never seen anywhere else
sighting is not the primary attraction that draws visitors from all over the
in the world.
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This seasonal phenomenon was known only to a few fishermen until only a few years ago. Even after a few Maldives tourism operators began to visit Hanifaru, it remained mostly unknown until it was revealed to the world in 2008 by a video posted on YouTube by Maldivian dive instructor/underwater photographer Mohamed Shafraz Naeem. The video was re-posted on Facebook and Dive Photo Guide, receiving tens of thousands of hits. Then Thomas Peschak’s photographs appeared in the July 2009 issue of National Geographic with an article by Bruce Barcott. Barcott wrote that “too many humans could drive mantas out of feeding grounds like Hanifaru Bay,” and noted that Maldivian Manta Ray Project (MMRP) founder Guy Stevens “hears the clock ticking, and he is scrambling to organize a self-policing regime among resorts and local guides before dive tourists overrun Hanifaru.” In fact Stevens had great misgivings about the possible effect of international exposure in the high-profile magazine, but felt that the publicity would also help to pressure the Maldives government to declare the site as a Marine Protected Area (MPA). The strategy was successful, and the Hanifaru MPA was proclaimed in June 2009 – in the nick of time, according to Stevens, to avert a planned development on nearby Hanifaru Island, and dredging of the manta feeding area to create a speedboat transfer station to serve an airport under construction on another nearby island. Declaration of the area as an MPA was accompanied by a minimal set of rules, adapted from other MPAs with little regard to special circumstances at Hanifaru, but did include a limitation of five vessels and 80 people within the MPA at one time. However, there was no designation of a protocol for determining which five vessels would be allowed in, nor of any authority to prevent other vessels from entering or to manage the behavior of boat
Mantas line up by the dozens as they feast on the plentiful plankton in Hanifaru Bay.
operators and tourists within the sanctuary. www.guyharveymagazine.com
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The results exceeded Stevens’ worst nightmares. In 2010 as many as 13 boats and 187 divers and snorkelers were counted in the tiny bay at one time. Boats constantly patrol the lagoon, and as soon as feeding mantas are sighted, cell phones are activated and more boats speed toward the site. With snorkelers carpeting the surface, and scuba divers occupying every level of the water column, the mantas are left with literally no place to go, except in the opposite direction from their food source. More troubling than the numbers of humans who come to pay homage to the mantas is their behavior. E.O. Wilson coined the term “biophilia” to denote an innate craving for contact with nature. In some nature— deprived urbanites, this seems to take the form of a desire to seize and possess the object of their desire—to extract its manna or spiritual power. Thus, you see acolytes finning frantically toward the mystic embodiment of everything that is missing in their lives with outstretched arms—as if by touching its sandpapery skin they will be able to absorb its aura and be healed. In this scenario, there is no consideration for the needs of the natural totem. It exists only to satisfy the desires of the human who worships it, ironically, while possibly destroying it. What are the needs of the mantas which have suddenly become the focus of intense cult-like human activity? When Stevens came to the Maldives in 2003 to work as a marine biologist/guide at Four Seasons Resort in Baa Atoll, he began to collect photos showing the
to attempt
patterns of spots on the undersides of mantas sighted
to feed, even
on his dives. These spots are unique to each individual.
when subjected to
Two years later, with the support of Four Seasons, he
boats driving over the top of
founded MMRP, using the I.D. photos to compile a census
them, surrounded by humans, kicked, poked,
of mantas in the Maldives. The following year, in 2006,
flashed, and struck with cameras and other objects. This seems
a local boat captain took him to Hanifaru, where he
indicative of a desperate need to obtain nourishment during the limited
found over 150 mantas plus a number of whale sharks
period when plankton is present in the lagoon.
crammed into the tiny bay hoovering down swarms of small crustaceans. Using the data from his manta catalogue, Stevens
These events occur only during the May-November southwest monsoon season, and only when the right winds and tides combine to create upwellings and currents that draw the plankton to the surface and
estimated that there are about 6,000 manta rays resident in
flush it down the long, narrow entrance of Hanifaru Lagoon, trapping it in
the entire Maldives archipelago. Of these, more than 1,100
the small bay at the end of the natural trap. Even at peak season, mantas
have been sighted in the small bay at Hanifaru, indicating
(and tourists) might have to wait weeks for such an event to occur. When
that this one spot holds a large significance for the manta
it does, the mantas do something extraordinary. They usually start by
population of the country. Feeding events can last from
feeding in long chains, sometimes with one or two mantas positioning
minutes to hours. While they are occurring, the mantas
themselves right on the back of the manta ahead, taking advantage of the
abandon their normal wary and skittish behavior and continue
avoidance response of the plankton, which may jump out of the path of
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Is it harassment or eco-tourism when snorkelers chase mantas for a chance at a fleeting touch while mantas feed on plankton in Hanifaru Bay?
one manta right into the mouth of the one behind. When a particularly
plankton shoals collecting in the one bay with the unusual geology to
rich patch of plankton is encountered, the chain may bend around into a
trap these shoals are so important to the local manta population that
spiral, forming a spinning column of mantas that creates its own current,
their reproductive rate could be influenced by their ability to take full
drawing water into the center of the column. Stevens termed this
advantage of it. If so, these mantas could be headed for trouble.
behavior “cyclone feeding” or “vortex feeding.” It has never been seen in any other location. Mantas are naturally slow-growing and late-maturing with very
On my first day at Hanifaru I am merely frustrated by the hordes of scuba divers and snorkelers that pursue mantas from one end of the bay to the other and back, shamelessly diving right into incipient
low reproductive rates, with females in other areas that have been
feeding formations and disrupting them, as well as foiling my attempts
studied averaging one offspring every other year. However, in the
to photograph the mantas’ natural behavior without bipeds and
Maldives, Stevens has found that females reproduce on average only
bubbles in the frame. On my second day, I witness a shouting match
once in five years, and there has been a disturbing trend at Hanifaru
between passengers on one boat and representatives of an operation
over the last several years. Of the mature females that frequent
blamed for running its boat over the top of surfacing divers. The next
the lagoon, 50% were pregnant in 2008. In 2009 only 15% were
day there is a physical altercation between a snorkeler and a diver
pregnant, and in 2010 no pregnant females were seen there. This may
who has accidentally bumped into several mantas. This is followed by
be natural variability, and the low breeding success could be due to
another shouting match, and a follow-up argument off-site. On the
a number of causes, but one possibility is food resource limitation.
third day I am drawn into a shouting match with the operators of a
Stevens believes the breeding failure in 2010 may be related to El
boat that has been driving back and forth through groups of feeding
Niño related food shortages. It is possible that instances of dense
mantas, scuba divers, and snorkelers, endangering both humans and
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animals. Every day there are dramas involving anchors dropped near divers, anchored boats swinging into other boats or snagging their anchor lines, boats busting up groups of mantas, and divers surfacing into the path of moving boats. Some mantas show injuries consistent with boat collisions (and many have scars from fishing gear), but it’s a miracle no humans have been mutilated. One might imagine that most of the people who would pay thousands of dollars and travel thousands of miles to visit a uniqueon-the-planet location where mantas engage in a mass-feeding phenomenon that is not known to occur anywhere else on earth would be experienced divers who had seen many mantas engaged in more ordinary behaviors and were intrigued by this unique and spectacular phenomenon. One would be mistaken. In fact, most visitors to Hanifaru Bay have never seen a manta before. Many are unable to swim, and stay afloat only with the aid of flotation vests. Rafts of non-swimmers float across the surface of the bay, heads out of the water, and swim fins pumping ineffectually under the surface. Some of the more accomplished swimmers dart rapidly in pursuit of the feeding mantas, even diving down to lay hands upon them, often surfacing with expressions of confusion and disgust upon discovering that the rough skin of mantas can cause abrasions and is covered with a dark slimy mucus that protects it from infections (which may result when this mucus is transferred to the hands of humans). Even divers who advertise their advanced level with specialized tech-diving gear and thousands of dollars worth of photo equipment seem oblivious to the unique feeding phenomenon that they disrupt by charging into the middle of a vortex and singling out one manta to photograph as they drive it away from its dance partners. Other photographers, however, seem to have done their homework, and are determined to surpass Peschak’s close-up of a feeding manta by actually shoving their underwater camera rigs – strobes and all – inside the mouths of feeding mantas. Proposals to regulate the chaos were set forth before the 2010 season, and the Save Our Seas Foundation (a partner of the Guy Harvey Research Institute) pledged funds to purchase a patrol boat, all to no avail. To date, proposals to establish regulations and an enforcement system in time for the 2011 season have been mired in partisan bickering – not surprising, considering that manta tourism is estimated to be worth over $8 million annually to the Maldives economy, with half a million dollars attributable to the manta aggregation at Hanifaru. To find out how management proposals are progressing, or not, check the Atoll Ecosystem Conservation Project
Thousands of snorkelers and divers come from around the world to mingle with
website at www.biodiversity.mv. Comments may be sent to Abdulla
the numerous mantas of Hanifaru Bay. Some experts are concerned that too
Mohamed (abdulla.mohamed@environment.gov.mv) and Abdulla
much human interaction will disrupt the manta’s feeding patterns.
Shibau (abdulla.shibau@environment.gov.mv) at the AEC Project. www.guyharveymagazine.com
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s c i t Plas “One wOrd:
stics.” a l P in e r u t u tf there’s a grea
The above headline references the famous words of advice to Dustin Hoffman in the classic 1967 movie, The Graduate. It was a funny line because it was so obscure. Unfortunately, it turned out to be one of the most profound statements ever made on film. Now, almost 45 years later, the plastic future has come true in ways we never imagined. Just go to your local convenience store and look at the endless plastic bottles of soda, milk, juice, and water. Look around your house, in your car, or in the airplane you’re crammed in. Plastic surrounds us. The problem is, we dispose of it with reckless abandon. Eventually, it ends up in our waterways and in our fish. The first step to solving a problem is recognizing it in the first place. There’s a growing group of people who are creating awareness and helping to pave the way for a plastic-free future. The following pages will inform you and they might scare you. But hopefully, our special section on plastics will inspire you to make a difference. One word? No, one world.
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Stiv Wilson with plastic bottle found in South Atlantic Gyre. Photo by Jody Lemmon
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\\ PLASTICS: ONE WORD/ONE WORLD
by TERRy WARD
Finding ways to reduce our use of plastics isn’t easy, but it can be done. The oceans, we know, mirror the sky. When it’s stormy overhead, the swells reflect that gunmetal gray. And when the skies are cerulean, a sailor’s delight, likewise, so is the ocean’s surface. Unfortunately, the oceans also share a lot in common with our land, where we deposit millions of tons of garbage every year. Like a sprawling liquid landfill, this water world we love receives a constant tide of trash – we’ve seen it floating by on the surface while fishing and we’ve collected it from reefs while diving. “The source (of marine trash) is literally every coastline,” says researcher and marine scientist Dr. Marah J. Hardt. “Most of what ends up in the ocean is coming from land, storm drains, and beaches – and from people being really, really careless.” Ocean garbage materializes as many things, from lobster and crab pots that get caught on whale’s fins, to commercial nets, plastic shopping bags, and plastic toys adrift in the seas. But for all the metal and paper rubbish in the water, it is plastic that has the longest lifespan. A plastic water bottle can take more than 400 years to break down, and nylon fishing line needs more than six centuries to disappear. To understand why plastics take so long to degrade – and why they are such a menace to our oceans – you must first understand how they break down.
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Marine debris being collected by members of the Algalita Expedition.
“Plastic breaks down through weathering, sun, and salt water into these tiny pellets smaller than a BB,” Hardt says. “It’s the smallest unit plastic will
But seeing the North Pacific Gyre did not hit him “like an a-ha moment.” “It was the fact that I couldn’t go on deck without seeing something
break down into.” In other words, plastic never completely disappears; it
floating by, some piece of manmade debris,” he said of sailing through
just becomes smaller over time. And unfortunately, says Hardt, those tiny
this part of the ocean. “I was always able to spot something within a few
particles of plastic look a lot like the fish eggs and plankton that are the
minutes of being up there. And I realized it had to be all around me.”
main source of nourishment for many marine animals, including baitfish and birds. Since 1997, Captain Charles Moore of the Algalita Marine Research
During Moore’s trips to the area in the late 1990s, he trawled for invertebrates and found evidence of plastics in the creatures. And in 2009, he returned to the North Pacific Gyre with a research crew to trawl for
Foundation in California has made numerous trips to the North Pacific
lantern fish – baitmass fish that live at the depths of the sea and surface at
gyre, an area of intense plastics accumulation caused by converging ocean
nighttime to feed. “Of 671 fish collected in trawls, mostly lantern fish, we
currents that lies about 1,000 miles off the California coast, halfway
found that 35 percent of them had ingested plastic,” said Moore of Algalita’s
between San Francisco and Hawaii.
most recent research in the area. One fish, no bigger than a pinkie finger,
“It’s a toilet bowl effect, but it never flushes,” says Moore of his explanation of the gyre. “It’s an atmospheric, high pressure system that rotates in a clockwise system and traps debris from the Pacific Rim that’s floating around in the Pacific.” The confluence of garbage in a gyre is not something that can be seen from space, even though it is estimated to be twice the size of Texas. “Some people picture these things like an ice breaker going through garbage,” says Moore about places like the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. 28
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was full of 84 bits of plastic, he says. “They are a baitmass,” says Moore of lantern fish. “So if we are affecting them we are affecting everything else.” Thoughts like this can seem very gloom and doom indeed, especially to those of us who love nothing more than a fresh fillet cooked on the grill. But for people like Captain Moore and Hardt who study the health of our oceans, it is clear that there is only one way to start turning the tide in our favor. “Source reduction is the only answer,” says Moore. And the good news
is that there are many ways to start doing your part. Take fishing gear, for example. A former commercial fisherman, Captain Moore still fishes recreationally and has this advice for fellow anglers: “I mostly fish for my own consumption, and I know how frustrating it is to snag your tackle. You want to cut it. But you need to retrieve as much of your line and lost tackle as you possibly can,” he says. “The hooks and lines get caught on fish and birds and go on killing. That’s why it’s called ghost fishing; it’s a big problem.” When you want to add new line to your reel, he says, don’t throw your old damaged line into the water. “It doesn’t biodegrade,” he says. His advice is to roll it up and take it home and dispose of it there.
“Source reduction is the only answer.” When your line gets hung, take the time to free it. “Move the boat to the other side of the reef, pull from a different angle,” he says. “A lot of
This microscopic photo shows tiny bits of plastic and plankton. Can you tell which is which? The fish can’t either. (The plastic is outlined in yellow.)
In addition to more careful fishing etiquette, Hardt says that reducing your plastic footprint is critical toward helping the cause. “Don’t take plastic bottled water on your boat. Get one of those big
times, it’s the angle of the pull that keeps you from retrieving the line.” And
coolers, and everyone can have a nice metal water bottle to refill,” says
if that fails, says Moore, pull in as much line as possible before breaking it.
Hardt. “For every liter of bottled water we use, it takes three liters of
Even for people prone to just soak up the sun on the beach, he says,
water to make the plastic that’s holding your one liter. And these used
something as simple as making sure your towels and clothing don’t get
plastic bottles are the kinds of things that blow overboard really easily. Try
swept away by an incoming wave does a lot more than save you the cost of
to shift from any sort of disposable type of gear.”
new beach gear. “The fleece jacket is made from Dacron, and that stuff lasts forever under water,” says Moore. “It can be as damaging as lost fishing gear.”
You can take things a step farther, says Hardt, by being a voice in your community. “Talk with your city council to make sure storm drains have the correct filters in place so garbage doesn’t get washed into the ocean.”
Finding bits of plastic in fish digestive systems such as this rainbow runner is all too typical.
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Anna Cummins, a California-based marine scientist, discovered the
returned from a presentation to high school students in Alaska to educate
scope of the ocean rubbish accumulations first-hand when she and her
them on ocean garbage. The session ended with a coastal cleanup session, she
husband, Dr. Marcus Eriksen, crossed the North Pacific Gyre in 2008. In
said, that took place on the islands near Sitka. “At first it looked beautiful (the
early 2010, the pair sailed a 72-foot racing sloop on a 1,700-mile journey
beaches), but when you got down and started digging through weeds it was
across the North Atlantic from St. Thomas to Bermuda and the Azores to
filled with plastic particles,” she says of the area. “We found a pen from Japan,
research plastic accumulation in the Sargasso Sea as part of the 5 Gyres
bottles, bottle caps, fragments, fishing related debris, Styrofoam.”
Project – a collaborative effort undertaken by the Algalita Marine Research
Targeting the next generation for the awareness campaign is the key to
Foundation and Pangaea Explorations that studies the plastics accumulating
Cummins’ work, and her adventures continue. In late 2010 she and Eriksen
in the world’s major circular current systems, or subtropical ocean gyres.
navigated through the South Atlantic Gyre looking for plastic and signs of fish
“The Sargasso Sea (a region in the middle of the North Atlantic Ocean) is where you can see it look more like a garbage patch,” says Cummins. “It
ingestion while making the crossing from Rio de Janeiro to Cape Town. Big news in 2010 was the Plastiki Expedition – the crossing from San
collects in these big mats.” Some of the things they found while trawling
Francisco to Sydney, Australia, of a 60-foot-long catamaran made from more
included bottle caps, shotgun shells, buckets, and unidentifiable fragments of
than 12,000 plastic bottles and other reclaimed materials that was as much
‘rice grain size’ plastic. “What’s remarkable to note when you’re crossing
about awareness as adventure (see page 32).
this massive area, is that no matter where you drop the net and skim on the surface, you’re going to find plastic,” says Cummins. And while she agrees with most scientists that a practical way to clean up these masses of ocean trash does not currently exist, Cummins says that
“The Plastiki was very much about sparking the imagination and curiosity in people and enabling a platform to inspire people to dream and live their own dreams,” says the ship’s British skipper, Jo Royle. “With the Plastiki, we didn’t take the off-the-shelf solution,” she says about
people can help by going to places that act like nets for the trash in the ocean
the ship’s construction. “And as such, we moved a lot slower over water. One
– beaches in places like Hawaii, the Azores, and Bermuda – to collect trash on
reason we were out there was to prove we can really use different materials,
the shore.
and we tested it by sailing it across the world’s largest ocean.”
Educating youth is also high on Cummins’ priorities, and she recently
Debris on Kamilo Beach on the Big Island of Hawaii.
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The Plastiki’s sails were made from post-consumer plastic. “The guy
“We’re living in an age where we’re so aware and really able to make a difference by our consumer choices.” who made them, a good friend now, thought I was some raving hippie when I told him what I was after,” says Royle. But the sailcloth he created was very high performance and “probably stayed in shape better than Dacron,” says Royle – a concept in ingenuity that’s a lesson in sustainability, too. “It’s always been about cost,” says Royle of general economics and affordability considerations when building a boat. “But it should be more and more about the cost not economically, but the cost of nature as well.” With the recycling of plastics and how to combat their accumulation in the ocean her obsession during her years preparing for the Plastiki, says Royle, she learned more than she ever imagined about her day to day consumption. “The main lesson I’ve learned is how unaware we are of the synthetic world we’re living in,” she says, “And that it’s too easy to pick up one-use items.” “As western females, we pump 200 different chemicals into the
The decomposed body of this albatross shows plastic bottle caps that were caught in its stomach and digestive system.
ocean every year because of the cosmetics we’re using,” she says. “I used to use this body scrub that it turned out had tiny pieces of plastic
Start by reducing your consumption of single-use plastics, she says, such
in it. And I thought, wow, I’ve just been using that without thinking of it.
as taking reusable bags to the grocery store when you shop. Single-use
Then you become aware of it and it’s pretty scary how many chemicals
plastic, Royle says, is the biggest offender, and is responsible for an estimated
are around us each day.”
60 percent of the plastic that ends up in the ocean. This includes plastic bags,
But she echoes the same hopeful sentiment of everyone fighting for the cause. As consumers, says Royle, we are so empowered to join the good fight for our oceans’ health. “We’re living in an age where we’re so aware and really able to make a difference by our consumer choices,” says Royle, admitting that living completely plastic-free, which she set out to attempt for two weeks, was pretty much impossible. “Plastic is everywhere and it’s become a part of life. It was only invented 100 years ago, and every item is still with us today. It’s going
bottles and bottle tops, and food containers – the kinds of things you buy, use, and then throw away. Another important outlet, says Royle, is adventure – no surprise from the woman who, like her peers, sets off to sail across the world’s oceans as part of making her point. “Adventure is a good platform because you can come back as a storyteller,” she says. “As divers and boaters and fisherman, the stories are really important.” And telling the story of the glory of our oceans and the garbage that
to be our legacy,” she says. “But it’s not that every beach and ocean is
threatens them – and more importantly, what we are doing to fight it – is
covered in plastic. It’s not so negative that we can’t do anything about it,
the right place to start.
we have the power to change it.” www.guyharveymagazine.com
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ew Grey
Photo by Matth
Photo by Patrick Riviere
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\\ PLASTICS: ONE WORD/ONE WORLD
David de Rothschild is an adventurer in the British tradition of great adventurers. Just 33 this year, he’s the youngest Britain and one of only 42 people to reach both the North and South Poles. He’s one of only 14 people to make it all the way across Antarctica. A rare combination of passion, ability, and means – he’s the youngest heir to the Rothschild banking fortune – his adventures have taken him from the Greenland ice cap to the rain forests of Ecuador.
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Plastiki founder David de Rothschild on board his plastic-bottled vessel. Photo by Patrick Riviere Right: The Plastiki arrives at Sydney Harbor, Australia. Photo by Matthew Grey
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The latter was to document the environmental impact
expedition, the Adventure Ecology team decided to forego
of oil drilling, and that’s where de Rothschild is distinguishing
the use of any normal sailing craft and, instead, built their own
himself from his predecessors. His exploits have become
out of plastic trash, including thousands of reclaimed plastic
less about exploration and more about proclamation. His
bottles. The “Plastiki” is a catamaran 60-feet long and 20-feet
messages are about critical environmental issues. His
wide. Its basic structure is formed from a recycled plastic
organization, Myoo (formerly Adventure Ecology), takes on
material called srPET, the mast is a reclaimed aluminum
field missions to raise awareness of environmental topics
irrigation pipe, the sail is hand-made from recycled PET cloth
and also to help develop and then showcase solutions
and 12,500 plastic bottles are laced into the catamaran’s hull
to problems. His intended audience is “a youth-based
and provide 68% of the vessel’s buoyancy.
community of change makers” to help promote “smart
The vessel is the perfect expression of one of the group’s
thinking” for a better “Planet 2.0.” Leave it to an adventurer
core philosophies—that waste as we know it is not seen in
nurtured in the internet age to try and install an update on
nature and is therefore a design flaw. Recycling and re-using
the global consciousness about how people treat the planet.
are critical to long-term sustainability of the planet. Of
On March 20, 2010, de Rothschild set out on a trans-
course, recycling and re-use comes with its own challenges.
ocean voyage from San Francisco to Sydney to focus the
The Plastiki was four years in development and helped refine
world’s attention on the explosive growth of plastic waste
and pioneer a number of building techniques for recycled
accumulating in the oceans. To crank up the volume for their
plastic. It even used organic glue made from cashew nuts
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and sugar cane. The finished vessel completed its 8,000 mile trek without major incident, a testament to the preparations of the design team and the skill of the crew. If it sounds insane to cross the Pacific Ocean on a high-tech raft of plastic bottles, then the Plastiki was just living up to its namesake. David de Rothschild’s inspiration for the epic voyage was two-fold. First, the issue of plastic trash and its impact on the oceans was driven home to him by a 2006 UNEP report named “Ecosystems and Biodiversity in Deep Waters and High Seas.” The idea of raising awareness by sailing across the Pacific on a questionable craft came from Thor Heyerdahl’s epic 1947 expedition, the Kon-Tiki. That adventure sought to demonstrate that Polynesian islands were settled by South American migration across the Pacific. Heyerdahl’s raft was made from nine Balsa logs, had a square sail, and traveled downwind 4,300 miles from Peru to the Tuamoto Islands, successfully proving the feasibility of such a trek by ancient peoples. The craft was so bare the crew of five had to lash themselves to the deck at night so as not to be washed overboard. The crew of the Plastiki – which included Heyerdahl’s grandson, Olav, as an expedition diver – had a few more creature comforts than their predecessors. There was a cabin with proper bunks, modern electronics for navigation,
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and even a hydroponic garden for a few fresh veggies. What
for re-supply and rest, but also provided another chance
they didn’t have was an abundance of fish, something the
to preach the Plastiki message. On Christmas Island,
Kon-Tiki voyage had daily and used as a primary source
in Kiribati, the crew was invited to visit with 1,000 high
of food and hydration. Whether the apparent lack of marine
school students to talk about recycling. It’s just the sort
life around the Plastiki is a significant statement about the
of youth-inspiring opportunity de Rothschild was after, and
conditions of the oceans is perhaps up for discussion, but
combined with prolific media coverage of the entire voyage
one thing the Plastiki crew did have was trash. Nine hundred
– 90 interviews conducted from the vessel, more than 300
miles from land the crew noted in a single day, the presence
print articles, 200 radio and TV broadcasts, and, of course,
of a garden tray, two jerry cans, multiple buoys, and a large,
a spot on Oprah – the Plastiki has generated serious buzz.
white PVC tray floating by on the waves. Throughout the trip
At last count there were more than 1,800,000 internet
there was a regular trail of plastic bags, bottles, and Styrofoam
search terms relating to Plastiki and 52,200 related images
containers. At times, when swimming or inspecting the hull,
on Google. Perhaps it’s the first step in a new world
the crew found “mermaid’s tears,” or millions of bits of plastic
attitude. Call it “Plastic 2.0.”
degraded by sunlight and saltwater awash beneath the surface. Four months after sailing under the Golden Gate
For more information on Plastiki, go to www.Myoo.com and also be on the lookout for a new book written by de
Bridge, the Plastiki made a safe arrival in Sydney on July 26,
Rothschild, Plastiki: An Adventure to Save Our Oceans, due to
2010. The four legs of its voyage included stops in Kiribati,
be on bookshelves on May 1.
Western Samoa, and New Caledonia. Each was chance The Plastiki voyage begins from San Francisco with the Golden Gate Bridge looming ahead. Right:The boat and two views of its hydroponic garden attached to the mast. Photos by Luca Babini
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\\ PLASTICS: ONE WORD/ONE WORLD
by DANNy THORNTON In the mid-1990s a Scottish band called the Gyres hit the British music scene with songs like Are You Ready and Sly. At the height of their success they opened for the likes of David Bowie and Bon Jovi. Unfortunately, their popularity went downhill, and in 1999 the group disbanded (no pun intended). Little did they know that less than a decade later their name would gain international fame – something the band itself was never able to accomplish. If you haven’t yet heard of gyres (giant, swirling, ocean currents – not the band) it may be because their celebrity is relatively new.
Nonetheless,
interest in ocean gyres (rhymes with tires) is growing rapidly because of their unique capability for attracting massive eddies of trash. There’s even a website called 5gyres.org that explains everything you’ll need to know should the topic of gyres come up at a cocktail party or as a category on Jeopardy. Perhaps this
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new-found fame will trickle down to the original
to study the various oceanic garbage patches of
Gyres and help sell some records, or maybe even
the world. For the past several years, the Sea
lead to a reunion tour. It’s not likely, though.
Dragon, a 72-foot sloop, has been accepting paying
One thing that is for sure, however, is that
passengers who want to observe and study the
gyres do exist, and planet Earth is home to five
garbage patches. Pangaea Explorations runs the
major ones, inauspiciously named the North
trips and, not unlike an ocean current, the Sea
Atlantic, South Atlantic, North Pacific, South Pacific,
Dragon seems to always be on the move.
and Indian Ocean Gyres. And while we all know
It’s both impressive and inspiring that Captain
that the motion of the ocean is constant – with
Moore’s discovery some 15 years ago has spawned
upwellings, currents, rip tides, tidal action, the
a revolution against plastic waste in the ocean.
Gulf Stream, gyres, and more non-stop action
There are countless websites on the subject,
than a James Bond flick – the five ocean gyres,
including several on The Plastiki Voyage (see
are predictable, extremely humongous, and
article on page 32), that have gained worldwide
The Scottish Rock Band – The Gyres. Photo
home to every imaginable type of floating and
attention, as well as many YouTube videos that
courtesy of online music store, 991.com.
subsurface garbage the planet dishes out on a
have gotten hundreds of thousands of views.
daily basis. In fact, the North Pacific Gyre, which
Why? Because people are genuinely concerned
Implementation is the key, and education is vital if
is located roughly between California and China,
about the preposterous amount of plastics that
we’re going to turn the tide on plastic waste. First,
is approximately twice the size of Texas and home
are flooding into the oceans constantly. So how
we need to change our habits and get aggressive
to an estimated seven million tons of plastic debris.
then do we go about correcting the issue at hand?
with recycling. Only then can we begin to reduce
It also has collected six times more plastic than
The answer to this problem is simple – reduce our
our use of plastics through the use of substitute
plankton, and since plankton is the primary source
use of plastics. Unfortunately, millions of plastic
materials while also pushing for biodegradable
of nutrients for many marine critters, that is a lot of
containers are sold daily for water, milk, soft drinks,
plastic containers that won’t litter the planet for
plastic! Gyres collect more than just plastics. They
and a myriad of other products. Just peak inside
thousands of years.
accumulate everything from Styrofoam to wood
the glass refrigerator at your local convenience
to basically anything that floats. But, by far the
store and you’ll immediately see the challenge.
most harmful substance among the “collectables” is plastic.When plastic breaks down it releases pollutants such as PCBs and DDT that degrade the water quality. Also, plastic never totally disintegrates – it just gets smaller. And possibly the most harmful aspect of plastic is that many sea birds and waterdwelling animals often mistake plastic as food. Have you ever tried to pass a plastic bottle cap? It makes a kidney stone seem like a day at the water slide. The discovery of these gigantic trash accumulations, dubbed “garbage patches,” is widely attributed to Captain Charles Moore, founder of the Algalita Marine Research Foundation (www.algalita.org), who sailed through the North Pacific Gyre in 1997 and was shocked at the masses of manmade debris littering the ocean’s surface. Moore published his findings in 1999 (ironically the same year the Gyres were breaking up) which inspired ventures such as the 5 Gyres Expedition, a series of ongoing research voyages 42
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Members of the 5 Gyres Expedition use recovered plastic to spell out their message.
PLASTIC
PARADISE by DARyL CARSON
The term “nation building” can be applied to any number of activities, from boosting domestic prosperity to revitalizing a war-conquered foe. But for one British ex-pat in Mexico, it has more to do with plywood, fish nets, and a whole bunch of plastic bottles than anything political. Well, except that the government expressed interest in claiming his project as their own territory…something about tourism potential. The ex-pat in question is Richart Sowa, a British artist, musician, and carpenter who traded his job for a life in the balmy, sun-drenched tourist haven of Cancun. His project was a sand-covered island. Actually, it was more of a homemade barge turned single man’s ecofortress, with a two-story structure suitable for living and enough vegetation to provide both shade and sustenance. At one point it was home to Sowa and several pets, including two chickens and a duck. It boasted solar power, several water features, and soft, sandy beaches. And it floated on plastic trash. 44
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\\ PLASTICS: ONE WORD/ONE WORLD
Richart Sowa’s private Spiral Island floats on 250,000 plastic bottles collected from city streets, parks, and garbage dumps. Photo by Christina Newberry
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The story goes that when Sowa arrived in Cancun he began to
In fact, the Spiral Island projects have spawned a kind of global
walk the streets, collecting old plastic bottles – everything from big,
community. As Sowa built his islands he also built a following, mostly
multi-liter soda bottles to small, single-serve water bottles. Then he
through a string of web pages,YouTube videos posted by visitors, and
had an epiphany and began to stuff the bottles into old pieces of fishing
blog sites that documented his efforts and provided a way for others
net, making highly buoyant bundles. He rafted the bundles together, set
to participate. Like the work itself, the Spiral Island web presence
them afloat, and began to build on top of them. First came a platform
has been a start-and-stop process, always changing and evolving. This
made from a bamboo frame and plywood deck. Then came the sand. It
certainly speaks to the reality of the ups and downs faced in any
was literally one bucket at a time, as Sowa paddled his little boat back
venture, but it may also reflect Sowa’s artistic nature and a kind of
and forth from the beach to his future home. The sand came from a
free-ranging rhythm to his life. (Even his name, Richart, has changed
nearby point that, left alone, would naturally build until it blocked an
over the years, morphing at different times from Richart to Richie to
adjacent canal. Sowa’s sand collecting saved regular dredging so it was
Rishi.) Whatever the case, it’s something many people find attractive.
a win-win for everyone.
Just this year a brand new social networking site has been launched
With this process it took nearly six months to establish a base
– spiralislanders.info – where “Spiral Islanders” can swap stories, share
roughly 20-feet across. Sowa’s friends began to collect bottles for him
eco-minded technology, and soak in a kind of sun-drenched, earth-
and volunteers began to show up. Soon the project began to look like a
friendly vibe.
real island, eventually incorporating a quarter-million plastic bottles and
Some would say it’s this artistic, imaginative vibe that will really
spreading to more than 60 feet across. A building was built, and a rain
determine the future of Spiral Island, at least more so than hurricanes
barrel, and a composting toilet. There was a homemade solar oven and a
or government interest. Sowa has often mused that he’d like to build
plastic tub-turned-washing machine powered by wave action. However,
his island up a little bigger and set it free on the oceans currents,
the island’s most striking feature became its greenery – everything from
making it a country all its own. Whatever the project’s fate, it has
mangrove trees to fruit trees to tomato plants.
certainly demonstrated one thing: no man is an island, even if he
This eco-paradise became known as Spiral Island and garnered
builds his own.
international attention, including, naturally, a coveted spot on TV’s Ripley’s Believe It or Not! (Check it out on the web.) Sowa’s feat was impressive, but its symbolism was absolutely iconic – one man stands against the modern world and wins! An artist who decides to live on his own terms escapes to paradise and then through sheer personal effort turns the poster-child of modern waste – the plastic bottle – into a foundation for idyllic sustainability. The fact that the mangrove roots grew down and entangled themselves among the plastic bottles, literally embracing and strengthening the whole structure became an irresistible metaphor. Sowa made a grand gesture to respect nature and she responded with a hug. (Somewhere, James Cameron weeps.) But the natural world is a finicky place, and what is built can quickly be taken away. Spiral Island, begun in 1998, was pushed ashore and dismantled by Hurricane Emily in 2005. The island was destroyed, but all the pieces were still largely connected. Sowa, undaunted and encouraged by friends, salvaged nearly all of his plastic bottles and began construction on Spiral Island II. Today it is a fully functioning landmass and appointed with improved features including solar panels and a waterfall. Sowa did relocate his island, but not too far away. It’s currently off the coast of Isla Mujeres where it has served as a popular tourist attraction and gathering place since 2008.
Spiral Island has its own waterfall, pool, fruit trees, and solar panels. Photo by Christina Newberry
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Wide angle view of a running Hatteras Yacht in the green inshore waters of Pamlico Sound.
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THE AQUA PAPARAZZI Photo Portfolio of Scott Kerrigan www.guyharveymagazine.com
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Wide angle view of a Pacific sailfish’s dorsal fin just prior to release.
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Fighting chair angler Eric Anderson winds line in pursuit of a large marlin as seawater pours in the cockpit while the boat roars backwards.
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Unknown photographer gets a front row seat of a jumping Pacific sailfish. 52
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A proud Texan wears her state’s colors on one toe, with the vacationing countries colors on another. The beautiful water and white sand beach of Isla Mujeres can be seen in the background.
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Atlantic sailfish being billed and then released aboard the charter boat Keen M. This fish ate a slow trolled ballyhoo bait although it had been feeding on schools of live sardines, evident by a mouthful of fresh dead sardines that were being burped up prior to release.
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Gannett seabird takes a break, along with a crab, on the back of a sea turtle off the coast of Guatemala.
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Wide angle view from the tower of the Bayliss Boatworks Southpaw while trolling the water off Venezuela.
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Wooden pier for local skiffs along the white sands beaches of Isla Mujeres.
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President John F. Kennedy made these remarks at a dinner for the America’s Cup yacht crews in Newport, Virginia, put on by the Australian Ambassador on September 14, 1962. Since then, it has been republished hundreds of times. While President Kennedy was extremely poetic and most certainly charmed all of the men and women (especially the women) attending the dinner, he was unfortunately quite wrong. It’s true that human blood contains salt. However, the fact is, seawater is approximately three times saltier than our blood. Kennedy struck a nerve about our attraction to the sea and even though our blood and seawater aren’t exactly the same, we do have salt in our veins, just not saltwater.
Is seafood safe to eat? by FRED GARTH We humans love eating fish. It’s something primal that goes back to the days when we fashioned spears out of sticks, and hooks from bones. Unfortunately, modern man has figured out a lot of ways to make fish inedible. And I’m not talking about Aunt Martha’s baked mullet recipe. Chemical factories, oil spills, and industrial discharges have threatened the scaly animal that tastes so good on my grill and has so many health benefits. We fish eaters just have one question: Is it too much to ask to be able to eat fish and not worry about it? I attended a meeting about 10 years ago when Florida officials were setting legal limits on dioxin, a highly toxic carcinogen. I thought zero was a good limit, but highly-paid, big-industry lawyers argued otherwise. The lawyers were winning. Then a funny thing happened. At the lunch break, a group of women served the committee members plates of fried mullet with two fillets. As the hungry group was about to chow down on the fish, they were told that one mullet fillet had come from the clear waters of the Gulf of Mexico and the other fish was caught in the Fenholloway River, Florida’s most polluted river where high levels of dioxin contaminated the fish. Problem was, the nice ladies told them, they weren’t sure which fillet was which. Each member stared at the plate of food and one-by-one they slowly pushed it away. A few minutes later, the committee tabled the dioxin vote and sent out for sandwiches at Subway. The women, who all lived on the Fenholloway River and were forced to have bottled water shipped in, won a small victory that day. They weren’t trying to save the world; they just wanted to eat fish and not get sick.
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Edible fish are part of the fabric of society. Did the oil spill change that? Photo by Tanya Burnett www.guyharveymagazine.com
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The recent oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico
This involves the U.S. Department of Agriculture
for everyone. Certainly the tourism industry
raised the same question. Is the fish safe to eat?
and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. It’s
went from taking reservations to fielding phone
A lot of people are worried and have simply
big time. When FERN began, only eight labs
calls from people cancelling their vacations.
stopped eating Gulf seafood. Those of us who
around the U.S. were selected. The folks at
From May through June, when the tourism graph
live along the Gulf and have caught seafood all
DACS are proud, and rightfully so, to be one of
usually rises, it petered out. Restaurants, bars,
of our lives want answers. Despite the massive
the original “elite eight” labs.
hotels, and the like saw their business tumble.
output of the oil spill, there are reasons to be
I’ll admit I was a little intimidated by the
The shift at the Department of Agriculture went
PhDs in lab coats, surrounded by many millions
from cruise control to pedal to the medal. They
of dollars of testing equipment, high-tech
got to work collecting seafood samples and
in no way exonerates BP from the equation.
computers, and basically a room full of people a
bringing them in for analysis.
Did BP screw up? Of course. Did they handle
lot smarter than I am. But I pressed on.
optimistic about the health of Gulf seafood. I must say at this point that this optimism
the situation well? Not really. However, placing
Before the oil spill occurred, DACS was
From August until December 2010, they collected more than 200 tissue samples from
blame isn’t the point of this article. I’ll leave that
cruising merrily along making sure everything
fish houses and processors around the state.
to the trial lawyers who are far better at placing
from strawberries to steak was free from harmful
Most of the samples came from the Panhandle
blame than I. Rather, my quest is to answer the
contaminants that we’d rather not include in our
because of its close proximity to the well head.
fundamental question of seafood safety.
dinner menu. They’ve been testing Florida’s food
The variety of species was broad: shrimp,
for several decades so they have it down to a,
lobster, oysters, blue crabs, stone crabs, red
to Tallahassee for a tour of Florida’s high-tech,
um, science. After the oil rig exploded in April
snapper, yellow snapper, mutton snapper, grey
food testing laboratory. It’s called the Florida
2010 and then continued to flow, seafood testing
snapper, mullet, flounder, king mackerel, Spanish
Department of Agriculture and Consumer
quickly vaulted to their number one priority.
mackerel, grouper, mahi-mahi, trigger fish, tuna,
With that said, I took my show on the road
Services (DACS) Food and Chemical Residue
“We really had to ramp up our efforts,”
sheepshead, jack crevalle, sand perch, grunt fish,
Laboratories. And they have been charged
said Dr. Marion Aller, Deputy Commissioner
bluefish, and even the lowly ladyfish. In addition to
with testing Florida’s abundant seafood before
at the Department of Agriculture. “This was a
the Panhandle, samples were retrieved from the
and after the spill. To give you an idea of their
serious threat, not only to the fishing industry,
Tampa area and all the way down to Miami and
capabilities, they are members of the Food
but especially to the overall health of our
Key West. They even covered the East Coast with
Emergency Response Network (FERN) which
citizens. We knew our workload was going to
fish from Jacksonville and Cape Canaveral, even
was formed to respond to national food
increase exponentially.”
though it’s highly unlikely any oil reached that area.
emergencies and the threat of terrorism in foods.
Along the Gulf Coast, the paradigm shifted
And what did they find?
Industrial freezers chill fish to as cold as -88 C in order to be able to blend the fish fillets into a powdery substance for the lab tests. O
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Lab techs use USDA- and FDA-approved methods to test for contaminants in seafood. According to Dr. Aller, the results are as clear as Crystal River.
tremendous amount of news coverage but ultimately the scientists worry
“Zip, zero, nada,” she said, knowing those were terms I could
about the PAHs.
understand. “Most of our tests registered in the less than detectable levels,”
“The dispersants are basically detergents, similar to laundry detergent.
she said, with a slightly more scientific tone. “If a significant amount of oil
They break up the oil, and make it easier for the microbes to eat the oil. We
made it into the far eastern gulf, it did not contaminate the seafood.”
have just obtained the method and will start to monitor them in our lab
In their report, they recorded 2,808 results for 13 different possible contaminants. More than 99% of the time the results are listed as “<LOD,”
but we’re mostly concerned about PAHs.” On the PAH front, DACS tested (and continues to test) for 13 types
which means “less than Level of Detection.” In layman’s terms, that means
of PAHs: naphthalene, fluorine, phenanthrene, anthracene, fluoranthene,
that these super brains working in a high-tech lab with millions of dollars of
pyrene, bena(a)anthracene, chrysene, benzo(b)fluoranthene, benzo(k)
equipment didn’t pick up any signs of contamination.
fluoranthene, benzo(a)pyrene, dibenz(a,h)anthracene, and indeno(1,2,3-
“We measure in increments as small as ppb, or parts per billion,” Dr.
cd)pyrene. The fact that they have found nothing is outstanding news.
Aller explained. “And we’re finding very little – and nothing anywhere near a
However, it’s just not something you’ll find on the front page or the six
level of concern.”
o’clock news because it doesn’t involve death, maiming, airplane crashes, or
Of the 2,808 results, there were only two findings that registered a
a double-wide meth lab going up in a ball of flames. Those are the stories
miniscule but at least quantifiable number – a flounder in Pensacola Bay and a
the media loves to shove down our throats. God forbid they sprinkle a
sand perch in Tarpon Springs. The flounder had 0.0036 ppm of fluorine and the
little good news between the depressing and the horrifying.
sand perch registered 0.028 ppm of fluoranthene. The LOC (level of concern) for both is 65.3ppm or 10,000-to-20,000 times greater than was detected.
Again, I must digress and recognize that some of our loyal followers are reading this and wondering why I’d infer that Gulf seafood is safe.
Does that mean you should fire up the grill? Maybe.
I know it’s hard to believe that an oil spill of that magnitude has not
As Dr. Aller and her team pointed out (and you’ll discover, if you
destroyed everything in its path. It’s also against human nature to forgive a
Google it), the major concern with oil spills are PAHs (polycyclic aromatic
massive corporation for their colossal screw up. However, at some point
hydrocarbons). If you go back and read up on the Exxon Valdez crash, you’ll
we have to rely on the science rather than emotion. And as I dug deeper,
see that researchers are still talking about PAHs. The dispersants got a
the news seemed to get better. www.guyharveymagazine.com
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DissipATion AnD EvApoRATion
in the chilly waters deep in the gulf. It was previously believed that these
Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons are one of the most widespread organic
critters only lived in warm water, but the truth is there’s a lot we don’t
pollutants on the planet because they’re present in everything from oil to
know about the science of microbes. Terry Hazen, head of the ecology
wood smoke to burning coal, and even that stick of smoldering incense
department at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California,
you had in your college dorm room (don’t try denying it). Some PAHs can
makes bold claims about microbes. “There is no compound, man-made
be highly toxic and some are fairly benign. The oil from the Deepwater
or natural, that micro-organisms cannot degrade,” he said. Scientists
Horizon contained toxic PAHs that presented serious health risks to any
have even found microbes that will turn hexavalent chromium – the toxic
life forms they came in contact with. Fortunately, PAHs in raw oil tend to
substance exposed in the movie Erin Brockovich – into chromium III, a
dissipate, weaken, and evaporate fairly quickly so by the time tar balls were
benign form of the element.
hitting Gulf beaches their toxicity levels were greatly diminished. This was
In addition to raw oil, tar balls, and the rest, scientists also worried
accelerated greatly by the very warm Gulf water and steamy summer days
about enormous amounts of methane that billowed from the well. In
that helped in the initial process of breaking down the PAHs. That doesn’t
June, Texas A&M oceanography professor John Kessler measured methane
mean you should put tar balls in your gumbo but the warm gulf water and
levels at 100,000 times higher than normal. Methane is bad, much worse
steamy summer days did help the initial process of breaking down the PAHs.
than carbon dioxide, and scientists worry that methane trapped under the ice cap could dramatically accelerate global warming as the ice melts.
THE pRobE oF THE MicRobE
Kessler’s report caused the methane red flags to fly high. One blogger
Another major factor working in the Gulf’s favor were super bugs called
got a lot of press when he claimed methane gas would stay trapped in the
microbes that were eating the oil spill like an army of Pac-Men. It
Gulf like “a massive planetary fart.” I like the turn of phrase but so far no
sounded a lot like science fiction but, in fact, it was just science. Oil-
humongous Silent Suzie has escaped from the buns of the ocean. After the
eating microbes have been around for eons consuming oil that seeps
well was capped Kessler went back and found normal levels of methane.
naturally from the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico. An article in OnEarth.
He was shocked. He also found large numbers of ocean bacteria called
org claimed that microbes eat the equivalent of two Exxon Valdez spills
methanotrophs, another group of microbes that feast on methane. Kessler
each year in the Gulf of Mexico. And that’s in a normal, non-spill year.
speculated that the microbes, which are usually present in small numbers,
Why do they eat oil? It’s their main source of food energy. Let’s just
multiplied rapidly and disposed of the methane. It was just a theory
say it’s what spinach is to Popeye.
because he didn’t witness the act. However, the methane was gone and
During the spill, when teams of scientists swooped in to investigate, they actually discovered new strands of cold-water, oil-eating microbes Typical Gulf shrimp boats tied along the docks in Apalachicola, Florida.
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the microbes were not. With all of these microbes multiplying faster than a band of dessert
rabbits, some experts wondered if the exploding microbe population
Studies on sharks, tuna, shellfish, shrimp, and more are on-going and there’s no
would cause their own problems. Some feared, as the oil disappeared,
doubt more and more data will be revealed.We may not know the full effects
that millions and millions of microbes would die and decay and deplete
of the oil spill for decades but early indicators for seafood are hopeful.
the oxygen levels in the Gulf leaving massive dead zones. It was another nightmare that, thus far, has not happened.
“For now it appears that Florida got lucky,” said Dr. Dean Grubbs of the Florida State University Coastal and Marine Laboratory. “Researchers at the University of North Florida analyzed fish samples we collected, looking for
bioAccuMulATion
the presence of enzymes associated with breaking down PAHs, and found no
One of the concerns armchair environmentalists like me tend to shout
detectable levels at this point. That’s not to say that we won’t see something
about is the bioaccumulative effect on the food chain. That is, a little fish
different after another year of two but for now our results are promising.”
eats lots of plankton, then a medium-sized fish eats lots of little fish, then
Dr. Grubbs makes a good point because it’s been less than a year since
a big fish eats lots of medium-sized fish, and so on. Eventually that big fish
the well was capped. During that time so many stories have been swirling
has lots and lots of plankton concentration that accumulated up the food
around that make claims from the gulf is dead to the gulf is perfectly healthy.
chain. And, if the plankton was contaminated then the biggest fish will be
We all know the real answer falls somewhere between the two extremes.
exponentially more contaminated. This happens every day with mercury,
There are still a lot of unanswered questions but there are some reasons to
lead, and other heavy metals, and it’s why shark meat is not recommended
have hope. And to the question: Are the fish safe to eat? You’ll have to make
for your dinner plate and we’re warned not to eat tuna every day. But, it’s
that judgment yourself but from my observations, most of the local folks
not a concern with PAHs as they do not have a tendency to bioaccumulate
along the gulf coast are eating seafood. And if you trust the science and the
in fish. This is partly because fish have a very high metabolic rate. For
scientists, then the prognosis is good.
those of us who love to eat fish, this is possibly the best news of all. It
It should be noted that this article focused on fish from Florida waters. All of
still doesn’t mean we should have fish for breakfast, lunch, and dinner, but
the fish tested by DACS came from Florida. This article does not address seafood
it does mean that we don’t need to worry about PAHs accumulating and
from the entire Gulf of Mexico or other state waters outside of Florida. In future
riding up the food chain.
issues, we will expand our quest to include more Gulf waters.
oil in THE sTREAM Perhaps one of the Gulf’s greatest assets is the Gulf Stream, the massive river of clear salt water that gushes non-stop north from the Caribbean. If you’ve ever sailed a ramshackle, 30-foot wooden sailboat by the name of Home Brew on a southern heading between Cuba and the Yucatan Peninsula, you will discover as I did, that the water gushes through that 100-mile gap at four-to-six knots. The Home Brew was ugly but she was also very, very slow (the price was right) and we could barely scrape out five knots under full sail in a minor hurricane. The only way to end our six-day crossing from North Florida was to crank up the iron jib and power through the channel using both wind and internal combustion. It had been a long, hot ride and we were shooting for the nearest bar with cold beer on Isla Mujeras. After a 600-mile crossing, it took an excruciating 24 hours to go the final 50 miles. But I digress. The point is the Gulf is not a giant, stagnant mill pond. It’s replenished by the mighty gush of the Gulf Stream and it’s also gravity fed by the hundreds of rivers that branch out across North America. This flow of new water has undoubtedly assisted in clearing the way to a cleaner Gulf. Does all of this mean that the Gulf of Mexico is a pristine body of water? Not really. It had issues before the spill and it has problems still. In fact, there are numerous studies going on presently that will reveal more about the oil spill for many years to come. For example, scientists are studying the depths of the DeSoto Canyon in the northern gulf to see if sea life there has been affected. www.guyharveymagazine.com
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MIaMI MUsCLe by GHM sTAFF
A walk about at the Miami boat show in February was a stroll through a world of beautiful beasts. In addition to the bikini models strutting around, I’m referring to the raw power of the internal combustion engines on a scale to make Prius drivers cry for their mama. There was enough horsepower on the show floor of the Miami Convention Center to put a smile on every man, woman, and child in Saudi Arabia. Center console boats with triple and quadruple 350-horsepower boats used to draw gasps, stares, and rows of camera-clad gawkers. Now people practically yawn as they pass a 1,400-horsepower boat that will run 80 miles per hour. Of course, we’re talking gallons per mile rather than miles per gallon.
Yet, there was a green leaf quietly
thinking as Nissan with the introduction
beginning to sprout in some corners of
of the new Leaf electric car might have
the show. Among the mighty Yamahas
something up their sleeve. If they did,
and Evinrudes, and the 12-cylinder
they weren’t going to tell me. In fact,
Caterpillars and GMs, were some humble
they seemed dumbfounded that I even
electric engines, solar panels, dreams of a
asked such a stupid question. An electric
future without carbon. I must mention,
outboard engine? What planet are you
of course, that the technology in the big
from, Zantoor?
outboard and inboard engines has already
So the most prominent leader in
reduced our carbon footprint significantly.
electric outboards is not Nissan, not
Four strokes and high-tech fuel injection
Yamaha, not Mercury, but little-known
has resulted in far less emissions and
(in the U.S. anyway) German company,
much better fuel economy. But so far
Torqeedo (see article in Winter 2011
the big guys have not unveiled anything
issue). Their largest outboard is equal
truly radical from a green point of view.
to an 8-10 horsepower engine that
I stopped by the Nissan booth where
will plane out a skiff, all electrically.
their gleaming black outboards were on
Torqeedo has also teamed up with
display. I figured a company as forward
PowerFilm Solar so you can charge their
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Big power: Quad 350-HP Yamahas
engine batteries on the fly. Powerfilm’s panels are about the thickness of
IPS drives. In each case, the boats – from 41 to 62 feet – reduced their
cardboard, lightweight, and extremely flexible so you can put them just about
fuel consumption by 25-35% traveling about 30 knots. That extended their
anywhere without installation. They’re tough, too, and form easily to uneven
range from 36% to 50%. Fifty percent better range at 30 knots! That is
surfaces. Just throw them on the deck or on the Bimini top and roll with it.
impressive, not to mention 30% less CO2 emissions and greatly reduced
An enterprising dude from California, Steve Murray, who runs Murrays Sports, brought Sea Eagle boats to the table and created an all-in-one
levels of noise. Radical? I vote yes. And while it’s not necessarily a green feature, the IPS has integrated
package – boat, electric motor, and solar panel. The Sea Eagle inflatable will
joystick steering that apparently makes docking large boats a breeze, even
run at three-knots forever using only fuel from the sun. Less than $4,000
in a breeze and even if you’re all thumbs.
buys the boat, Torqeedo engine, batteries, Bimini top, solar panel, and they even throw in oars, even though you will probably never need them. For more info or to purchase your carbon-free ride, check out Murrays Sports at www.murrays.com. Torqeedo also showed up in the kayak section of the boat show with their Ultralight, a bite-sized electric engine specifically designed for kayaks. This little thing was mounted on a Hobie kayak but has a universal mount for any kayak. It can push a typical kayak almost six knots for about an hour, or two-and-a-half knots for six hours – that’s about 18 miles. The whole set up, battery, engine, throttle, and digital display panel, weighs less than 15 pounds. For more information, visit www.torqeedo.com.
Volvo IPS When I said earlier in this article that none of the big boys had unveiled anything truly radical, I lied. The fact is, Volvo is one of the big boys. And Volvo is making some bold claims about their new IPS outdrive system. Essentially,Volvo has created an alternative to the straight-shaft drive system that most large fishing boats and yachts use. Instead of a straight shaft,Volvo’s IPS is an outdrive, similar to what we all know and love (I jest) as the inboard/outboard system. Yet, instead of connecting the engine and the outdrive through the transom, the IPS system mounts through the hull, or in layman’s terms, on the bottom of the boat. Apparently, the combination of streamlined outdrives, efficient propellers, and the elimination of the straight-shaft, dramatically improves efficiency. And, when I say dramatically, I mean it. In their tests,Volvo outfitted identical boats with straight shafts and
Eco-combo package – electric motor by Torqeedo, solar panel by PowerFilm, and boat by Sea Eagle. This baby will run at three knots indefinitely on solar power.
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Interior of the Greenline 33 is comfortable and well appointed.
First Real Solar Boat Without a doubt the most impressive green vessel at the show was the
toward the stern. This creates less friction and better fuel efficiency. Built-
Greenline 33 Hybrid. This is a true luxury cruiser built from the ground
in stabilizers help to keep the Greenline steady.
up as an electric/solar/diesel hybrid. Even the tagline, “The Future is Now”
The boat can be powered three ways – shore power, diesel power, or
is not an exaggeration. The 33-foot Greenline has won numerous awards
pure electric power from the big burning star in the sky. The batteries can
and is built by Seaway, a 28-year-old Slovenian boat builder that produces
be fully charged by the sun but also by the diesel engine when you’re at
large sail and power yachts. Seaway is no garage operation. Their Skagen
anchor or if you’re using more power than the sun can provide.
sailing yachts range up to 150 feet and their 50-foot Shipman is a beauty. But the Greenline is their latest technological marvel. This is a new introduction to the United States and the jury is still out
The boat has a cruising speed of 12 knots, but if you’re just using the electric engine, she cruises at six knots. At four knots, she will go for five hours on a fully charged battery bank. And at three knots, Greenline
whether or not the gasaholic American market will embrace the boat. In
will run forever, as long as there sun is shining. Sure, three knots is slow
Europe, where gasoline costs four times more, Seaway sold more than 100
but if you’re interested in getting somewhere quick, get a speedboat and
Greenline boats in 2010 and interest continues to rise. The company is betting that it’s just a matter of time before it catches on here.
The boat has a cruising speed of 12 knots, but
With a large solar panel built into the hardtop roof, the Greenline provides carbon-free power without compromising on luxury. The
if you’re just using the electric engine, she
interior is well appointed with big-screen TV, air-conditioning throughout, a full galley, a roomy head, and everything you’d expect in your personal
cruises at six knots. At four knots, she will go
cruiser – even a custom coffee maker for sunrise watchers. One difference from your typical trawler is the tapered hull design which gets thinner 70
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for five hours on a fully charged battery bank.
make friends with every gas pump operator at all the marinas. And keep an extra credit card handy. The Greenline is all about keeping your fuel costs low and it’s a pretty good feeling to know that you can at least move forward without using any fuel. It’s also cool to realize that you’ll never actually run out of fuel, as long as there’s a sun and a solar system around us. The Greenline is the first real solar/electric/hybrid luxury cruiser that was built to provide comfort, stability, and energy efficiency. Its 1.3 kW solar roof and the hybrid drive (5kW generator/7kW electric motor integrated in one unit) provide a constant supply of electric power on board. If the future is now, I can’t wait to see what they come up when the future really is the future. Kudos to Volvo, Seaway, Torqeedo, Sea Eagle, Powerfilm Solar, and the rest of the forward thinking companies that have recognized the need for hydrocarbon reduction in our boating lives. Hopefully some of the mainstream engine makers are listening, watching, and planning. I’m just hoping for a fully electric 115-horsepower for my 20-foot center console fishing boat. Maybe next year. The salon leads to a roomy V-birth. www.guyharveymagazine.com
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guy harvey LIFeSTyLe
MaNY faCes of JULI GoLdsteIN by GHM sTAFF When GHM caught up to Juli recently she was frantically packing for a trip to California to compete in the Ms. America Pageant. On her Facebook profile, she’s wearing a Guy Harvey Ocean Foundation shirt (she wears it well, by the way) because one of her passions is ocean conservation. During the course of our conversation, we learned there’s a lot more to Juli than a pretty smile and the ability to strut in front of judges in five-inch heels. You see, Juli is actually Dr. Juli Goldstein, veterinarian, specializing in marine mammals. She’s a college professor, has run nine marathons, is a Rotarian, a lecturer, a Junior Leaguer, and, oh yeah, she competes in pageants and is the current Ms. Florida. That’s an impressive resumé for a 33-year-old. Fortunately, she donated a slice of her time to tell us more about her life, her passions, and her connection with the oceans. What got you into the pageants scene? I entered my first pageant as a teenager since almost every little girl dreams of being a beauty queen. However, as I soon learned, there was more to the pageants than just “beauty.” I was coached in interview skills, what to wear, and most
Juli Goldstein, beauty queen, poses for a promotion photo. She does not condone
importantly how to maintain one’s poise and composure under pressure.
touching marine mammals unless it is for medical purposes.
These are life skills that I have built on and use every day. Finally, after winning several titles, I took a break and went to college. What are some of your proudest pageant titles/
How have pageants helped you raise awareness for ocean conservation? Holding a title provides instant access to different
accomplishments? Holding the title of Ms. Florida 2009 opened many
audiences than I would normally speak to. Pageants have allowed me to
doors and allowed me to support a variety of people and organizations. During
give a face and a voice to ocean conservation on a much broader scale. It’s
that year, I ran with a relay team over 200 miles across the state of Florida to
not a common platform and, therefore, it stands out amongst the other title
raise money for the Guy Harvey Ocean Foundation. I was also honored to help
holders. In addition, I have worn my banner in races that I was raising funds
raise funds for the Wheelchairs for Warriors charity, when I pushed a wounded
and bringing awareness to. A shiny banner and crown often gives people
USMC combat veteran in his wheelchair during the 26.2 mile Tampa Marathon.
cause to take a second look, ask questions, and get involved.
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Did a love of the oceans draw you into veterinary
at HBOI. I am also an assistant research professor at Florida Atlantic
medicine or are you an animal lover in general who decided
University. Our research is focused on the overall health of marine
to focus on marine mammals? A little of both. I grew up along the
mammals inhabiting the east coast of Florida. I am on call 24/7 for marine
east coast and always had a love for the ocean. Then, when I was three
mammal stranding events and provide care and assistance to sick or injured
years old, my first dog had to be put to sleep. I remember it so clearly –
marine mammals. I also conduct pathology examinations on deceased
it was then and there, as a young, impressionable child, that I decided to
marine mammals to determine their cause of death and gain insights into
become a veterinarian, so no other animals would be put to sleep. Later, I
their life history. I also teach courses focusing on marine mammal biology
developed a fascination with dolphins and decided to specialize in aquatic
and medicine.
animal medicine. This allows me to treat everything from a delicate seahorse to a sick whale. What are the most pressing concerns with marine
What attracted you to long distance running? I ran my first marathon over 10 years ago, during my first year of veterinary school. In the beginning it was something to cross off my bucket list. Then, after my
mammals? Anthropogenic (human-induced) stressors! Human
first 20-mile training run and first full marathon I was hooked. Distance
activities from pollution and non-sustainable fisheries are taking a heavy
running became the perfect way to disconnect, think and keep my body in
toll on the world’s oceans, as is global climate change. As apex predators,
shape. I am a goal setter, so naturally my first goal was to run and qualify
marine mammals serve as sentinels of ocean and human health, and several
for the Boston Marathon which I completed in 2009. Currently, I am
studies show a decline in the overall health of the world’s marine mammal
training for my first 50-mile race.
populations. Not only are they contaminated with dangerous chemicals
Are you using that platform to raise awareness and
such as mercury, they are becoming increasingly resistant to human/animal
money, too? Absolutely, the running community is very large and very
antibiotics and at the same time are evolving with new, emerging infectious
supportive of philanthropic efforts. Running for a cause is a great way to
diseases. We humans are destroying our oceans on all levels and will soon
combine two of my passions, running and volunteering.
pay the same price as the dolphins and whales. Tell us a little about your work at the Harbor branch oceanographic institute. I am the staff veterinarian and medical
What’s your greatest passion: running, dolphins, pageants, medicine, or all of the above? All of the above, plus much more!
manager of the Marine Mammal Conservation and Research Program
Juli Goldstein, a veterinarian, specializes in aquatic animal medicine.
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MEET THE CHEF
FLORIDA'S CHEF by NICOLE HAUGDAHL
In the past few issues, we’ve featured some succulent seafood recipes and the chefs who cook them from various Guy Harvey’s Island Grills around the country (and one in Grand Cayman). This issue we changed the ingredients a bit and borrowed some mouth-watering recipes from Chef Justin Timineri, who is the executive chef for the state of Florida. We all know that states have governors and attorney generals and congressmen in bad suits, but executive chefs? Who knew? Having grown up in Florida, Justin was
“Having such an incredible diversity of foods
exposed at an early age to the many cultures and
to work with is a huge advantage when creating
cuisines from this diversified part of the country.
menus and recipes,” he notes.
His love and passion for cooking came at an early
While he focuses on local foods, he’s
age when he watched his mother, father, and
also comfortable around famous chefs and
grandmother cooking up a storm. “I was raised in
dignitaries. “I have been fortunate to be able to
a family of really good cooks. I was always getting
meet and gain inspiration from many talented
shooed out of the kitchen for causing trouble,”
chefs, including Art Smith, John Besh, Dean
said Chef Justin. This family inspiration convinced
Max, John Folse, and Jeff Corwin, just to name
him at a very early age that cooking would be his
a few,” Chef Justin said. Through his service in
lifelong career.
the kitchen at the governor’s mansion over the
Chef Justin embraces the new style of
past 10 years, Justin has cooked for generals,
Chef Justin Timineri Executive Chef/Culinary Ambassador State of Florida Department of Agriculture
American cooks, whose straight-forward
professional athletes, famous businesspeople, as
approach to cooking relies on simple ingredients
well as former President George Bush, Sr., and
educating children on the value of healthy food
combined with fresh, locally-grown produce and
his wife Barbara.
choices and proper nutrition.
locally-caught seafood. Simplified ingredients
In addition to creating gastronomic delights,
Justin’s philosophy on food is a simple
do not mean a lack of choices for Chef Justin.
Justin’s responsibilities include promoting all of
one: “Cooking should always be fun, simple,
As a guy who works for the state, he has an
Florida’s freshest commodities, creating new
and flavorful.” He always keeps nutrition in
all-access pass to fresh local produce, seafood,
recipes, attending trade events around the
mind and enjoys cooking with fresh, local, and
beef, and just about anything grown in the
world, performing cooking demonstrations, and
regionally harvested foods.
Sunshine State. 74
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In addition to his certification as an executive chef, Justin is also an author, award-winner, teacher, and international culinary ambassador helping the world to rediscover simple, healthy cuisine. He thinks
Some offbeat tidbits about Chef Justin:
that Americans need more confidence and practice when it comes to cooking seafood at home. He encourages people to start small with different seafood appetizers and work their way up to being able
» Chef Justin’s favorite place to go for
to cook full seafood entrées. Now you can get a peek into some of his favorite seafood recipes. They
seafood is Apalachicola – to slurp down some fresh oysters
are guaranteed to please your palate!
» The three most important qualities he believes a chef should have are temperance, skill, and passion
Grilled Mahi with Key Lime 4, 6oz. Florida mahi fillets
Florida Clam Scampi
» The strangest seafood dish he has ever eaten was live, baby octopus
è cup Florida key lime juice
4 tablespoons butter
2 Florida key limes, zested
2 tablespoons olive oil
2 tablespoons dry white wine
4 Florida garlic cloves minced
pompano because of its sweet,
3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
2 dozen Florida hard clams, rinsed well
succulent meat
1 teaspoon fresh Florida rosemary
1 cup fresh Florida parsley, chopped
è teaspoon fresh Florida thyme
2 tablespoons lemon juice
è teaspoon black pepper, course ground
Salt to taste
Vegetable cooking spray
Pepper to taste
Fresh herbs for garnish
è cup Florida dry white wine
Key lime slices for garnish
è cup Florida sun-dried tomatoes
Place the fillets in a shallow dish. To prepare the
in Korea » His favorite type of seafood is
Shrimp Remoulade Wraps 2 pounds medium Florida shrimp, cooked and peeled
1 pint Florida grape tomatoes, halved
1 è cups light mayonnaise
8 ounces spinach fettuccine, cooked
è tablespoon catsup 4 tablespoons Dijon mustard
citrus marinade, combine the key lime juice, zest, olive oil, white wine, herbs, and black pepper in a
Melt butter with oil in medium skillet over
2 Florida shallots minced
small bowl; mix well. Pour the marinade over the
medium heat. Add garlic, cook, and stir one
è cup prepared horseradish
fish and marinate for 1 hour in refrigerator. Coat
minute. Add clams, cook, and stir five minutes.
è cup rice wine vinegar
grill with vegetable spray and preheat on medium-
Add parsley, lemon juice, salt, pepper, and wine.
è teaspoon celery salt
high heat. Grill fillets for 4 to 5 minutes on each
Continue steaming, stirring occasionally, until
1 teaspoon paprika
side until center is opaque and meat flakes easily
clams open. Stir in tomatoes and serve over
3 tablespoons seafood seasoning spices
with a fork. Garnish with herbs and key lime
fettuccine. Yields: 4 servings
2 teaspoons lemon juice
slices and serve. Yields: 4 servings
1 teaspoon hot pepper sauce è teaspoon salt 6 flour tortillas Shredded Florida lettuce Chill the cooked shrimp in a large covered bowl in refrigerator for 1 hour. Make a remoulade sauce by combining all but last two ingredients in a food processor; blend until smooth. Pour mixture over shrimp, stirring to coat. Marinate shrimp in sauce for an hour or more before serving. Spoon shrimp mixture onto center of tortilla and top with lettuce. Roll into a wrap and cut in half to serve. Yield: 6 servings www.guyharveymagazine.com
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guy HarvEy rEsEarCH insTiTuTE
STALKING TIGERS by DAryL CArsON
Tiger sharks, including their travel habits, have been an enigma for scientists and fishery managers for years. These large-bodied sharks, with their distinctive vertical stripes and fearsome reputations as apex predators, can be found all around the globe in tropical and warm temperate waters. They are a popular target for boats involved in the shark fin trade and there is some concern they are overfished in some places and may become over-fished in others without better management. To help fisheries managers make more informed decisions about conservation practices, the GHRI and several partners have launched a series of tracking studies aimed at solving the mystery of tiger shark long-term migrations, including their preferred habitats. There is increasing evidence that as large, apex predators, tiger sharks play a key role in their ecosystems. Researchers are looking for patterns of movement that will tell them how tiger sharks use different kinds of habitats, from shallow seagrass areas and near coral reefs to open oceanic waters. Understanding how the sharks use
Guy Harvey’s “Fair Game” painting of a tiger shark and turtle.
these environments related to issues such as feeding and reproduction will help managers promote their sustainability as well as that of the ecosystems they frequent. “The handful of studies that have focused on tiger shark
In 2009, the GHRI, in conjunction with the Guy Harvey Ocean Foundation, the Bermuda Shark Project, the University of Rhode Island, and the University of the Virgin Islands began a series of long-
movements to date have failed to reveal definite migration patterns
term tracking studies based in Bermuda and the USVI to look at tiger
or predictable behaviors when it comes to movements,” says Dr.
shark movements in the western North Atlantic. The project is using
Mahmood Shivji of the GHRI. “Some sharks have been shown to stay
three types of high-tech tracking tags, including acoustic tags, which
localized in a particular area while others migrate long distances
register their location with pre-positioned receivers as the animal
along coastlines or even across ocean basins. But no clear movement
swims nearby and two different kinds of satellite tags that transmit
pattern has emerged to base management decisions on.”
tracking data on animal location and depth along with other details. Tracking data obtained from satellite tags over 17 months has
Tracking data obtained from satellite
revealed some unprecedented tiger shark behavior. Most sharks
tags over 17 months has revealed some
from Bermuda starting in the fall, spending the winter months very
unprecedented tiger shark behavior.
5-8 months in warm waters, they consistently migrated north in the
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tagged in Bermuda in the summer migrated almost directly south close to shore and coral reefs in the Bahamas or Caribbean. After spring, very interestingly traveling well past Bermuda and east into
nearly the middle of the Atlantic where they spent 2-3 months out in the open ocean. Remarkably, a few tiger sharks whose tag batteries lasted the longest were found to return to the Bahamas or Caribbean for a second over-winter stint. Even more amazingly, these returning individuals have come back to island locations very close to where they were a year ago. The discovery that tiger sharks show a consistent pattern of long-term migrations and that individual sharks seem to find their way back to nearly the same locations after months of wandering across thousands of miles in the open ocean is both surprising to researchers and critical for fishery managers. It’s also a fascinating revelation of the finely honed navigational abilities of these sharks. “Also noteworthy,” says Shivji, “is that while it’s yet to be determined what activities—feeding, mating, etc.—might be associated with each of the habitats, these sharks are displaying a remarkable ability to use highly diverse ecosystems. They appear completely comfortable using both shallow island environments, things like coral reefs and seagrass habitats, as well as deep water, open ocean, open environments. Not many shark species show this kind of flexibility.” Guy filming a tiger shark in the Bahamas. Photo by Bill Watts
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This flexibility, says Shivji, implies that as apex predators tiger sharks may be even more important than previously realized in maintaining the health of a diversity of marine ecosystems, reinforcing the need for protecting these magnificent animals.
Marlin MayheM Everything you think you know about white marlin is wrong! Well, probably. Prized in fishing tournaments, studied by researchers, and carefully monitored by government fishery managers, the white marlin is wellknown as a much sought-after game fish. It might seem funny then that quite frequently people who think they’re looking at a white marlin are really looking at something else. The fact is not everything identified as white marlin is really a white marlin. A joint study produced by the Guy Harvey Research Institute (GHRI) at Nova Southeastern University and NOAA Fisheries in Florida has recently determined that as many as 27 percent of the white marlin caught in the Atlantic are really an entirely different species known as the roundscale spearfish. The “good” news is that there’s a previously unrecognized species of spearfish swimming around the Atlantic, which is fascinating from the perspective of discovering the complexity of biodiversity in our oceans. The potentially “bad” news is that this discovery throws into doubt all previous population research aimed at tracking white marlin populations and conserving a species many researchers already believed should be listed as endangered. In 2007, the Bush administration decided not to list the white marlin as endangered based on research by the International Convention for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT) that showed white marlin
The “good” news is that there’s a previously unrecognized species of spearfish swimming around the Atlantic, which is fascinating from the perspective of discovering the complexity of biodiversity in our oceans. 78
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populations were beginning to improve. That information not only
the very least it means we don’t know what we thought we knew in
prevented an endangered species listing, but also led to the removal
terms of white marlin management. “It’s back to the drawing board
of the white marlin from NOAA’s Species of Concern List. This new
for the white marlin,” says Dr. Shivji. “We are now completely unsure
species discovery could have fishery managers reversing course.
of how white marlin stocks are fairing, whether good or bad. And
The two-species/single-moniker mistake came while NOAA Southeast Fisheries officials were monitoring bycatch from commercial fishing operations. Since white marlin are attracted
that’s not even considering the condition of the roundscale spearfish. We now have a whole new species to research and safeguard.” As population sizes are re-assessed, changes in management
to the same baits used for long line fishing of tuna and swordfish,
practices could follow, impacting not only commercial fishing
managers keep an eye on bycatch to help gauge population numbers
operations but also fishing tournaments where white marlin are
of the popular game fish. The issue surfaced in 2009 when officials
considered a top prize.
noticed not all of the white marlin looked quite right. To follow up, they sent tissue samples to Dr. Mahmood Shivji at GHRI for genetics analysis. The results were conclusive – some of the samples were from a completely different species; one was the white marlin. The other was the roundscale spearfish, first discovered in the 1960s but not previously confirmed. The two species are so similar in appearance it takes a highly trained eye to tell them apart. The primary difference is placement of the anal fin further back from the anal vent and it’s so slight that fishermen and scientists alike have
The impact of this discovery is yet to be fully understood, but at the very least it means we don’t know what we thought we knew in terms of white marlin management. “It’s back to the drawing board for the
been missing it for years. The impact of this discovery is yet to be fully understood, but at
white marlin,” says Dr. Shivji.
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79
lasT CasT
“HOOKED” ON APALACHICOLA Tallahassee may be Florida’s capital city and home to
fried chicken: if you don’t like it, there’s something’s bad
the proud Florida State University Seminoles but it’s
wrong with you.
no Apalachicola. After I’d spent a full day of touring
Fortunately, I have a strong connection in my
the Department of Agriculture’s laboratories (see
friend Dan Tonsmeire, who heads up the Apalachicola
page 62) and battling traffic with co-eds and reckless
Riverkeeper organization, a non-profit group that pretty
governmental types, I was ready for a coastal sunset, a
much spends every day, day-in and day-out, working for
couple dozen oysters, and some cold adult beverages.
the humble oyster. This entails creating management
Only 90 minutes south was Apalachicola, a town that
plans and making sure the water quality in the bay and
literally runs on oysters. Some 90 percent of Florida’s
surrounding watershed is top-notch. Their work could
oyster exports come from Apalach and tourists drop
fill several books so I’ll just say that they fight the good
in from all over the world to scarf down the slippery
fight every day for our tasty friend and other inhabitants
bi-valves. The entire job market has some kind of
of the surrounding estuaries.
oyster connection. Even the newspaper’s logo, the
As it so happened, Dan was in Tampa but he gave
FrED GArtH
Apalachicola Times, depicts an oysterman working in the
me a full portion of his local knowledge. Plus, he let me
For the past 25 years, Fred D.
bay with his giant tongs. It’s a little bit freaky that an
bed down in his house, which I gladly accepted. I was
Garth’s articles have appeared in
entire community and economy lives or dies on a single
traveling this past January, almost dead center in the “R”
numerous books, magazines, and
species of shellfish. It goes without saying, they take their
months. If you’re a non-oyster person, you should know
newspapers around the world.
oysters seriously. So do I.
that as a general rule oysters are best in months with
His most recent novel, A Good
I’ve always loved Apalachicola, not just because
the letter “R” in them, that is, September through April.
Day to Live, is available online
they have the best oysters in the world (in my humble
Lots of folks eat ‘em year round but I’ve always waited
and in select bookstores.
opinion), but it’s just a cool little waterfront town.
until the coldest winter months for my oyster fest.
(www. agooddaytolive. com)
When folks give directions, they start with, “turn left at
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My palate was already eager because Dan told me
the stop light.” And they mean THE stop light. There’s
the oysters were particularly salty, just like I like ‘em.
only one in town. And while most of our cities have
Then the positive reports from food testing labs in
been gobbled up with WalMart-mania, Apalachicola’s
Tallahassee really got my juices flowing. They’d tested
biggest shopping “complex” is still the Piggly Wiggly
oyster samples from all over the Apalachicola Bay
grocery store. The downtown is sprinkled with a few
area and everything passed with flying colors. No oil,
small hotels, B&Bs, art galleries, nautical stores, and
no contaminants, no problem.
enough for about a day and a half of leisurely window
Just because the lab tests showed no signs of
shopping. Oh, and by the way, it just happens to have
contamination doesn’t mean the local oyster industry
some of the best sport fishing around – from massive
was unaffected by the spill. On the contrary, when the
tarpon runs in the summer to red fish, to speckled
oil flowed unabated during May, June, and July, officials
trout, to you name it. For me, Apalach is kind of like
feared the worst – that giant slicks of oil would billow
The sleepy, one-stop-light town of Apalachicola is the oyster capital of Florida. into the bay and snuff out their very way of life. So they gave the green light
A few years earlier I’d spent a fabulous night at the wildly-popular Boss
to the oystermen to harvest everything. Within a couple of weeks, they
Oyster, a flamboyant dive with a dozen or so oyster delights like the Crumbly
brought in a record haul. This type of open season on oysters is unusual
Bacon Oyster, the Jalapeño Oyster, and Oysters a la Artie (with artichokes).
because the bay has a management plan, thanks to state agencies, local
Instead of trying to relive that night, I went next door to Caroline’s at the
regulations, and groups like the RiverKeeper.
Apalachicola River Inn.
“The plan is focused on protecting public health,” Dan told me. “But
I plopped down between a friendly snowbird couple from New York and
it also provides a means for ensuring a sustainable harvest by limiting size,
a real live oysterman who’d obviously been there (at the bar) for a while. The
seasonal harvest areas, and routine testing of water quality.”
bartender was wearing a lovely Guy Harvey T-shirt so I promptly gave her a
When it turned out that no oil ever reached Apalachicola Bay, there
copy of the magazine (I carry them everywhere, just in case) and we became
was a collective sigh of relief but an all-out celebration was postponed. The
instant soul mates. The New Yorkers were intrigued with the oysterman’s
problem was that the crop had been over-harvested. The golden egg was
story of making a living off the sea with hard work and sweat, and all that.
gone – or at least hard to find.
The more he talked the more poetic his life got and the more beer they
“The bay will come back given time to recover and a good supply of
bought him. I figured I had to step up my game. I mentioned that I’d been
fresh water,” Dan said, “but harvest is down because it takes more time and
in Tallahassee with some big-cheeses in state government. They were not
effort to find the oysters and get them on board.”
impressed. I gave them a magazine. Still no free beer.
The fresh water thing Dan mentioned is huge. It’s essential to the health
My new T-shirt friend set me up with a couple dozen oysters and as Dan
and rapid growth process, but the upstream demand for water from places
had reported, they were salty and delicious. I squeezed a little lemon, mixed
like Atlanta and Columbus, Georgia, is a major issue. It’s another battle the
up a ketchup and horseradish mix that was more white than red, and dug in.
RiverKeeper group is waging.
Life was good.
The good news about Apalachicola Bay is that oysters tend to grow
As the night wore on, the bar began to fill up, and a DJ set up shop in the
really fast there – from spat (spawned from the oyster) to harvestable size in
corner of the room. Turned out I had stumbled into Apalachicola’s hottest and,
about a year. In most places, that takes two to three years. So even though
in fact, only Friday night dance-a-thon. Dan had set me up. If eating in a fancy
the bay had been harvested heavily, the rejuvenation was coming on strong.
restaurant alone is awkward, dancing with a room full of strangers is positively
Because I’m a journalist who likes to get to the meat of the story, so to speak,
bizarre in my book, even though I’ve been known to do a mean Electric Slide.
I was there in person just to verify the oyster renewal. It’s just the way I roll.
I bid farewell to my new friends and hit the door.
I made it to the coast just in time to sit on Dan’s front porch, watch a
Dan’s final advice had been to stop by Lynn’s Seafood for a bushel of her
spectacular sunset, and borrow a cold beer from the fridge. My warmup
finest oysters. She’d even set a bag aside for me. As I headed out of town I
for the oysterfest was going just as planned. I haven’t done a formal survey
thought about the oil spill and the heartache it has caused all of us along the
but I’m pretty sure you can get oysters in every restaurant in Apalach.
Gulf Coast. The stress and hardship is still strong. But the swing through
Dan had suggested one of his favorite hangouts, a place called Owls. It’s
Tallahassee and Apalachicola brightened my spirits as well as my taste buds.
one of the nicest places in town complete with tablecloths, candles, and
And with that I called my wife and asked her if we had plenty of cooking oil.
ultra-polite servers. I glanced in the window at a bunch of nicely-dressed
“You got some oysters?” she asked.
couples sipping red wine and making goo-goo eyes at each other. I quickly
“Does a bi-value have gills?” I replied.
determined that I’d be better off bellying up to a bar somewhere than having
“Uh, I don’t know, do they?”
people in a fancy restaurant take pity on me because I couldn’t get a date. That’s just weird. So I hit the waterfront where it’s a little wilder and funkier.
“You bet they do,” I said as I pulled into the rest stop and got my oyster knife ready. A half dozen for lunch was all I needed to get me back home.
By
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