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  • Peter Gash OAM: Custodian of Curiosity
    2025/12/05

    Not long ago, Lady Elliot Island was basically unrecognisable. In the late 1800s, it was mined for guano used as agricultural fertiliser. The island was stripped bare.

    This is a story about what happens when one person has a vision and refuses to let hard work, qualifications or accepted definitions of 'possible' get in the way of curiosity.

    Regenerating the precious coral cay Lady Elliot Island is part of Peter Gash's legacy. He is the Custodian and Managing Director of Lady Elliot Island Eco Resort and CEO of Seair Pacific Aviation.

    Peter is a licenced Pilot and has been flying tourists to the Great Barrier Reef for over 35 years. In the mid 90's, Peter took the floats off his seasplane and began flying guests to the coral cay of Lady Elliot Island on the southern end of the reef.

    In 2005, Peter and his family took over the lease of the island.

    In 2018, the island was selected as the first site for the Great Barrier Reef Foundation’s Reef Islands Initiative, a bold program focused on building climate resilience across key reef habitats.

    In 2020, Peter was the recipient of an Order of Australia Medal (OAM) for his service to eco-tourism and aviation.

    Peter talked us through the unexpected interconnections between reef systems and terrestrial ecosystems, the importance of being a ‘doer’ not a gunna, the compromise of flying airplanes, and how he’s embraced his role as an “injection of enthusiasm” for visiting world leaders, decision-makers, business folk and scientists alike – from King Charles to David Attenborough.

    Send us a text

    ...

    Listen with Lauren L. Hill & Dave Rastovich

    Sound + Video Engineer: Ben J Alexander

    Theme song: Shannon Sol Carroll

    Additional music by Kai Mcgilvray + Ben J Alexander

    Join the conversation: @Waterpeoplepodcast

    ...

    Thanks to our generous sponsors this season:

    Patagonia Australia

    Alkaway

    The Sunglass Fix

    ...

    Get monthly musings and behind the scenes content from the podcast by subscribing to our newsletter.

    You'll get water-centric reading and listening recommendations, questions worth asking, and ways to take action for the wellbeing of Planet Ocean delivered straight to your inbox.

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    1 時間
  • Ethnomads: Ke'ili Mcevilly + Chris Miyashiro
    2025/11/21

    Grief, love, and lineage shape a rite of passage as our guests recall learnings from storms, stars, mentors, and manta rays at midnight.

    Ke'ilii Mcevilly is an environmental scientist with a Masters degree in sustainability. Ke'ili grew up surfing in California, and is now based on the island of Oahu. She is an artist and waterwoman involved in the flourishing of traditional Hawaiian cultural practice, from aloha aina based conservation work, to hula and making kapa under the tutelage of Pūkoʻa Studios.

    Artist- surfer- sailor-filmmaker Chris Miyashiro shares his story in-depth here.

    Together, they are Ethnomads, two pacific islanders learning how to wayfind.

    We get into an unlikely origin story: finding the canoe on Craigslist, and calling in a mentor to teach traditional lashings.

    Then the real crossing begins: A compass left unsecured spins uselessly on day one, a phone with charts pops overboard, and the crew leans into mixed navigation: swells, stars, and disciplined watches.

    Ke'ili shares what it meant to be the only wahine aboard, from cycle logistics and zero‑waste choices to the mental endurance of being surrounded by water you can't get amongst.

    They weathered cold, wet nights under June gloom, feet stuffed into wetsuit tops, and defied a fear list that covered everything from infections to constipation - revealing the gritty side of ocean travel. Along the way, the ocean becomes a classroom—mahi on the lines, journals open, and the sky replacing the newsfeed.

    Threaded through the voyage is lineage. Aʻa, the star whose name means 'to burn bright' and 'to dare,' becomes both compass and prayer. We talk kuleana and wayfinding ethics, the quiet authority of mentors, and how culture lives through practice.

    The canoe A'a shapes not just their route but their relationship, teaching balance, patience, and mutual care—two hulls moving as o

    Send us a text

    ...

    Listen with Lauren L. Hill & Dave Rastovich

    Sound + Video Engineer: Ben J Alexander

    Theme song: Shannon Sol Carroll

    Additional music by Kai Mcgilvray + Ben J Alexander

    Join the conversation: @Waterpeoplepodcast

    ...

    Thanks to our generous sponsors this season:

    Patagonia Australia

    Alkaway

    The Sunglass Fix

    ...

    Get monthly musings and behind the scenes content from the podcast by subscribing to our newsletter.

    You'll get water-centric reading and listening recommendations, questions worth asking, and ways to take action for the wellbeing of Planet Ocean delivered straight to your inbox.

    You can stream every Waterpeople episode from your desk.

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    51 分
  • Chris Miyashiro: Homecomings
    2025/11/16

    A captain wakes in the night certain he’s wrecked in mangroves—only he’s on his own porch. That jarring reentry from a month under sail becomes our portal into a deeper story about attention, tradition, and becoming a different kind of person at sea with artist-sailor-filmmaker Chris Miyashiro.

    Chris takes us from his grandfather’s walls—painted with visions of Hōkūleʻa —to a 2,700‑mile, unsupported crossing on a double-hulled canoe that reshaped his senses and his sense of home (more on that voyage in the Ethnomads episode, forthcoming),

    Chris shares how homeschool freedom and skate culture trained him to see the world as material for making, a mindset he has carried into surf/films that inspire a sense of playful wonderment. For Chris, film school offered rules and he's learned how to break them well.

    We talk about “nai'a brain,” the half-sleeping state where awareness sharpens, the importance of values-grounded voyaging, and his time as a guest professor at Laguna College of Art and Design.

    If you’re craving an episode that blends voyaging wisdom, creative practice, and some encouragement to get out amongst the living world, then this one's for you.

    Send us a text

    ...

    Listen with Lauren L. Hill & Dave Rastovich

    Sound + Video Engineer: Ben J Alexander

    Theme song: Shannon Sol Carroll

    Additional music by Kai Mcgilvray + Ben J Alexander

    Join the conversation: @Waterpeoplepodcast

    ...

    Thanks to our generous sponsors this season:

    Patagonia Australia

    Alkaway

    The Sunglass Fix

    ...

    Get monthly musings and behind the scenes content from the podcast by subscribing to our newsletter.

    You'll get water-centric reading and listening recommendations, questions worth asking, and ways to take action for the wellbeing of Planet Ocean delivered straight to your inbox.

    You can stream every Waterpeople episode from your desk.

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    1 時間 5 分
  • John Peck: Rebirth
    2025/11/04

    What does it mean to live a life of service? Pipeline pioneer John Peck was devout to many things over this 81 years, and exploring this question was amongst them.

    In 2015, we hosted John for what was a precursor to this podcast - a storytelling evening in our local community hall. He was captivating - virtually no one moved for hours, as Dave's questions and John's stories interwove with improvisational tunes from The Babe Rainbow. Sipping chai and sitting on cushions in concentric circles, it felt like a gathering from a bygone era.

    In honour of John's metamorphosis, we share this snippet from that evening - an audio recording that was only re-discovered after his passing - thanks twice to Nathan Oldfield.

    We trace John Peck’s path from pioneering Pipeline to a life of service, music, and sobriety, and reflect on why elders’ stories matter to surf culture. The ocean rebirths us; our job is to carry that clarity home and be useful.

    On John Peck in the Encyclopedia of Surfing:

    "Peck placed fourth in the juniors division of the 1960 Makaha International, and returned the following year to finish third, but was virtually unknown in the surf world until New Year's Day, 1963, when he and California switchfooter Butch Van Artsdalen put on a fantastic display at Pipeline, with Peck spontaneously inventing a low-crouch stance, his right hand grabbing the rail of his board, that allowed him to ride high and tight to the curl. That summer, Peck's thrilling Pipeline rides were the highlight of three surf movies—Angry Sea, Gun Ho!, and Walk on the Wet Side—and earned the 18-year-old the first-ever SURFER foldout cover.

    Peck had meanwhile set out on a lengthy course of alcohol and drug abuse, including a seven-year LSD phase beginning in 1965. He was involved in the Brotherhood of Eternal Love, a Laguna Beach consciousness-raising group...".

    He gave up drugs and drinking in 1984, four years later began surfing again, and in the mid-'90s was reintroduced to the nostalgia-hungry surfing world" via Cyrus Sutton's Riding Waves. Peck died in 2025, of cancer, age 81."

    We will never forget the joy, wisdom, stoke and epic one liners John brought into our world.

    Send us a text

    ...

    Listen with Lauren L. Hill & Dave Rastovich

    Sound + Video Engineer: Ben J Alexander

    Theme song: Shannon Sol Carroll

    Additional music by Kai Mcgilvray + Ben J Alexander

    Join the conversation: @Waterpeoplepodcast

    ...

    Get monthly musings and behind the scenes content from the podcast by subscribing to our newsletter.

    You'll get water-centric reading and listening recommendations, questions worth asking, and ways to take action for the wellbeing of Planet Ocean delivered straight to your inbox.

    You can stream every Waterpeople episode from your desk.

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    39 分
  • Layne Beachley + Tess Brouwer: Mental Fitness
    2025/10/21

    Two friends chart a path from pain to agency: Layne Beachley examines the drive behind seven world titles and finds a search for self-worth, while Tess Brouwer turns a hidden spinal injury and a hospital-bed reckoning into a mental fitness toolkit.

    Together, Layne and Tess are the co-authors of the book Awake Academy, wherein they share the life altering changes that shook their respective senses of purpose.

    Layne details the comedown from her 19-year professional surfing career, and Tess, former head of partnerships for Virgin Australia, shares the tumultuous road to recovery after injury in frozen water.

    Their stories and friendship led to the creation of the Awake Academy workshop, and the book adaptation of that popular workshop features their personal stories, positive psychology principles and practical exercises to boost energy, emotional intelligence and empathy.

    They talk us through adoption, shame, midlife freedom, and why labels become lenses that shape every relationship and result. There’s no toxic positivity here, just candid stories and actionable tools for stress management, trauma recovery, and sustained success—at work, in sport, and at home.

    This episode is live from The Byron Writer’s Festival – a celebration of the act of creation, of writing and art making, community building, and the good, hard work of progress. Courtney Miller joins as cohost - she’s chair of the Byron Writer’s Festival, relentless advocate for art and community engagement and a veritable surf rat.

    If you’re curious about cultivating resilience, mental health, high performance, and the kind of friendship that tells the truth, this conversation will land.

    Send us a text

    ...

    Listen with Lauren L. Hill & Dave Rastovich

    Sound + Video Engineer: Ben J Alexander

    Theme song: Shannon Sol Carroll

    Additional music by Kai Mcgilvray + Ben J Alexander

    Join the conversation: @Waterpeoplepodcast

    ...

    Thanks to our generous sponsors this season:

    Patagonia Australia

    Alkaway

    The Sunglass Fix

    ...

    Get monthly musings and behind the scenes content from the podcast by subscribing to our newsletter.

    You'll get water-centric reading and listening recommendations, questions worth asking, and ways to take action for the wellbeing of Planet Ocean delivered straight to your inbox.

    You can stream every Waterpeople episode from your desk.

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    57 分
  • Brenden 'Margo' Margieson: Renaissance Man
    2025/09/23

    Every mid-aged Aussie bloke's favourite surfer? That's Margo.

    Widely recognised as the first paid freesurfer - Brenden 'Margo' Margieson is famed almost as much for his gentle demeanour as his explosive power surfing.

    We traced some of his undulating journey through a surfing life's highs and lows. From early days being propelled by legendary filmmaker Jack McCoy, to unexpectedly winning a major contest against World Tour pros, Brendan's career defied conventional paths. His distinctive "pendulum" surfing style - flowing with gravity rather than muscling through - contrasted dramatically with his contemporaries and continues to influence surfing aesthetics today.

    Perhaps most inspiring is Brendan's midlife renaissance. After stepping away from surfing for half a decade, he's back in the water fresh enthusiasm. Now in his fifties, Margo is experiencing an unlikely career resurgence: complete with new sponsorships and a growing social media presence. Throughout it all, his parallel passion for bird watching reveals a sensitive man who finds joy in careful observation, whether it's reading a wave or identifying rare species.

    Ready to hear how one of surfing's most beloved figures navigates the balance between risk, responsibility, and rediscovery? This episode offers wisdom for anyone seeking to maintain their passions through life's changing seasons.

    Send us a text

    ...

    Listen with Lauren L. Hill & Dave Rastovich

    Sound + Video Engineer: Ben J Alexander

    Theme song: Shannon Sol Carroll

    Additional music by Kai Mcgilvray + Ben J Alexander

    Join the conversation: @Waterpeoplepodcast

    ...

    Get monthly musings and behind the scenes content from the podcast by subscribing to our newsletter.

    You'll get water-centric reading and listening recommendations, questions worth asking, and ways to take action for the wellbeing of Planet Ocean delivered straight to your inbox.

    You can stream every Waterpeople episode from your desk.

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    1 時間 14 分
  • Theory of Change (pt. 1): Waterwomen Camp Out
    2025/09/01

    How does change happen when we, and the world, seem stuck in our ways?

    We’re curious about how change happens – and what people are doing on the ground, in our community, to create the causal pathways to shift social and environmental ideas, norms, and policy.

    Listen in for stories from the 2025 Waterwomen Camp Out put on by the NGO Surfers for Climate.

    The Waterwomen Camp is an annual weekend of women in nature coming together to help shape the future of surf culture and protect what we love. Through a series of workshops, wellness, connection and celebration we focus on educating and empowering women to own their place in and out of the water.

    We hear from a range of attendees - from twenty to seventy-somethings. From those new to environmental work, to those five or more decades into their activism. These are stories about women seeing needs in their community and rising to meet them – from climate policy, to first aid, cultural reconciliation, right to the hands-on nitty gritty of cleaning our local river water, so the waterways, and the surfspots that catch them, stay clean and healthy – so we can, too.

    One thing we know for sure about cultural change: it doesn't happen alone. We need each other, and we need strong communities.

    This episode is part of a two part mini-series exploring theories of change. Later this year, Dave will take us to a local River Festival involved in revitalising waterways.

    Thanks to Caitlin Fine, Nidala Barker, Zoe White, Lucy Ewing, Courtney Miller, Aunty Lois Cook, Emjay Freeman, Kate McMahon, Tilly Hiscock, Stella, Emily, Britney, Dianne Tucker, Aunty Leila, and everyone who shared stories at the Waterwomen Camp Out 2025.

    Send us a text

    ...

    Listen with Lauren L. Hill & Dave Rastovich

    Sound + Video Engineer: Ben J Alexander

    Theme song: Shannon Sol Carroll

    Additional music by Kai Mcgilvray + Ben J Alexander

    Join the conversation: @Waterpeoplepodcast

    ...

    Get monthly musings and behind the scenes content from the podcast by subscribing to our newsletter.

    You'll get water-centric reading and listening recommendations, questions worth asking, and ways to take action for the wellbeing of Planet Ocean delivered straight to your inbox.

    You can stream every Waterpeople episode from your desk.

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    1 時間 1 分
  • Holly Beck: Simplicity + Therapy
    2025/08/10

    Is there a particular fear that's still holding you back?

    Holistic surf therapist and coach Holly Beck talks us through the way she sees terrestrial life play out in the water - in terms of how we behave and how we engage with others and with the ocean.

    Holly spent 10 years as a professional surfer, where she pioneered new pathways for women in the industry as a competitor, savvy freesurfer and as president of International Women's Surfing, a largely forgotten union to push for equal pay and opportunity in the early 2000s.

    In the year 2000, Holly took home the Teen Choice award for Female Extreme Athlete. She was also one of surfing’s first reality TV stars: as one of seven pro surfers filmed and followed on Oahu’s North Shore during the 2002 Triple Crown of Surfing.

    Holly moved to Central America at age 30, eventually building a tiny off-grid home that pulled focus on her values.

    Holly has a degree in psychology, an MBA, and a master’s in counselling. She is the founder Surf With Amigas – an all-inclusive surf and yoga retreat for adventurous women – which she’s run for the last 15 years from her homebase in Central America.

    Today she is part of innovating the space of therapeutic surf coaching – a modality that combines experiential and talk therapy with surf coaching to elucidate clients mental wellbeing, while also improving their surfing.

    Send us a text

    ...

    Listen with Lauren L. Hill & Dave Rastovich

    Sound + Video Engineer: Ben J Alexander

    Theme song: Shannon Sol Carroll

    Additional music by Kai Mcgilvray + Ben J Alexander

    Join the conversation: @Waterpeoplepodcast

    ...

    Thanks to our generous sponsors this season:

    Patagonia Australia

    Alkaway

    The Sunglass Fix

    ...

    Get monthly musings and behind the scenes content from the podcast by subscribing to our newsletter.

    You'll get water-centric reading and listening recommendations, questions worth asking, and ways to take action for the wellbeing of Planet Ocean delivered straight to your inbox.

    You can stream every Waterpeople episode from your desk.

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    1 時間 30 分