Jason Kovac isn't the first person to decide to leave it all behind - to sell up and and set sail out into the wild blue yonder, but he and his partner Jolene are doing it a bit differently. After being posted in East Timor as part of the UN peace keeping mission in 2012, Jason decided he couldn't continue with his old life and used his life savings to buy an old yacht, refit it and embark on a voyage across the Coral Triangle. But instead of just making it a personal experience, Jason decided to tell other people's stories, with a specific goal in mind - to document the ways in which people and organisations are trying to sustain marine environments all over the Coral Triangle.
Jason Kovacs short film telling the story of grass roots conservation
Labyrinth crawls across Sulu Sea. Adrift after a catastrophic engine failure, Jase and Jolene spent four days waiting for a favourable wind to bring them to a safe port.
It was on the island of Mindanao in the southern Philippines, he came across a little boy called Nico. The boy's father, a fisherman, had pulled up his net to find a critically endangered Hawksbill turtle trapped inside. Nico decided to save the turtle's life - even though the shell could have fetched his family $250 - a small fortune for them. Instead, he handed it over to a local NGO called Amihan, which works with the local community including at risk kids to drive ocean conservation through education and action at the grass roots level. It set in motion a chain of events that ultimately led to Nico getting rewarded, revealing himself to be an amazing singer - and inadvertently prevented the probable kidnapping of Jase and his wife by Islamic Militants, who took four other foreigners from a marina where the couple would have been had they not met Nico...
It's always been a dream of mine to own a yacht and sail around the world. I expect is the reason is watching too many Jacques Cousteau movies as a child. I never thought I would ever be able to afford it, but in 2013 I found my boat, Labyrinth, at a bargain price in Malaysia, so I took the plunge and bought her.
Jase and Jolene are exhausted after a rough four day passage across the South China Sea, but their fatigue can't douse the excitement of the first glimpse of Borneo.
Jolene and I did our divemaster qualifications in Malaysia. When you are diving in areas rife with environmental problems, the differences between a managed reef and an overfished one are stark. The damage caused by blast fishing is plain to see. Since we were diving in the region, it was only natural that we learned about the Coral Triangle, its importance to the global oceanographic system and its fragility in the face of the myriad of threats and challenges humanity presents. Since we had made the sea our home it would be insane for us not to protect it. We looked at the equipment, skills and experience we had and decided making the films was the best way we could help.
Nico was quite shy - until Jason asked him to sing, having learned about his reputation. Jase & Jolene could hardly believe the richness of his voice and the emotion it conveyed - Philippines' Got Talent, watch out!
Through inspired local leadership. It doesn't have to be from the area but it has to be in the area. By that I mean, it can't be helicopter programs, where the conservationists turn up every six months, do a couple of surveys or seminars and then leave. It has to be constant, in the community and part of the community. People like Alvin Chelliah, from Reef Check Malaysia, who we featured in our film Coral Island Clean Up has the right idea. He has based himself on Tioman Island for five years, to develop recycling, waste management and conservation programs and to mediate between the locals and the authorities and, because he has made the commitment, is achieving real results.
The hawksbill turtle is critically endangered - but it is also extremely valuable, fetching $250 on the black market, a small fortune to fishers who make just a few dollars a day. But Nico decided to save it.
Over and over we see that the best way to influence parents behaviour is by teaching their children. Fishermen and village folk see their way of life, even the parts with plastic, outboards and dynamite fishing, as traditional and don't want to change. Children aren't hung up on tradition and don't need a reason to do the right thing. Even so, Nico is almost a man and his weekends are spent working on a fishing boat himself, so he was well aware of what he asked his father to give up. His selflessness was one of the reasons it was important to reward him.
Local consultation, buy-in and emotional investment are all keystones of any successful conservation intervention. Having the local kids place the sponsorship stickers on their new recycling bins gives them a sense of ownership of the program.
We will be around the Philippines for the next few months, filming more local projects and raising funds to continue filming. I particularly want to look at whale shark tourism and compare and contrast different approaches to find a best practice model. Then next we'll be heading to Indonesia, where we will explore Indonesian Borneo, Suluwesi and Raja Ampat and look at some of the unique ecological challenges found there.
For the full story, watch the brilliant film here: https://vimeo.com/141631532
Jun Plaza runs a surf conservation project on Dahican Beach in Mindanao in the Philippines. In Dahican he has carved out a safe haven, both for the dugongs and turtles and for the local children who call Dahican home. However, threats such as economic pressures and unregulated development still threaten.
Associate Professor Lea Jimenez in Mati, Philippines, briefs Jase and Jolene on the Ridge-to-Reef program, a holistic program that looks at the effects of land management practises on the marine environment.
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