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An Operator’s perspective
I am just in the door from Maverick’s. We had quite an adventure up there.
This trip I was a part of the K38 Mavericks Water Rescue Team.
I joined K38 long ago, on the heels of shooting the 2000 Tow Surfing Championships at Jaws. I realized in the course of my process, that I had a debt of responsibility to both my subjects, the sport, and myself, (being a sentient human being) to be prepared and accountable as a responsible participant in documenting and filming surfing.
My motivation in seeking out K38 training, was to be able to respond appropriately and professionally in an emergency.
One of my mentors taught me early on, that a photographer is responsible for what he creates. I looked on in horror after my tow surfing imagery helped Surfer, Billabong XXL, Towsurfer, etc…. launch the new sport into the main stream, and realized that what I had created, could potentially contribute to someone that I care about perishing.
My mentor explained that when you point a camera at someone, they may do things not ordinarily embarked upon, should the camera be absent. I felt responsible for what I helped to create. (Bruce Brown had told me that he felt the same way about Cape Saint Francis, after shooting Endless Summer.)
So I had eventually sought out Shawn Alladio, and K38 Rescue. Though I never gave her the entire story on my motivation, she graciously accepted me into her program. In the course of several years I have participated in her training programs on various levels and received certification as a Rescue Boat Operator.
Lately, I find Shawn and myself working shoulder to shoulder a lot. The message is always the same: educate, be prepared, no one dies. Being on a team is sort of a strange concept for me. Having been a competitive swimmer, cyclist, professional surfer et al (There are more solo sports on my list.) I found that my biggest challenge was to throttle down, or “stand down”, as they say in the military. After many years, I am finally beginning to “get” that concept.
K38 training exemplifies and endows discipline. So these days, I bite my tongue, hold my Hawaiian temper in check, do what I am told. I am learning to serve, at last. I have placed myself under another’s authority.
Mavericks Rescue Team Background Story, as provided by Shawn Alladio:

Shawn Alladio: K38 Rescue
“We were up at 4:20am getting ready for the 2009-2010 Mavericks Surf Contest the day of the historic event. We broke at midnight the evening prior after our PPE/gear checks and briefings.
The K38 crew provided the water rescue and assistance for the 24 athletes competing during the February 13, event. I’m very proud of the K38 Rescue team. They came together focused, did their job and did well. They took leadership values and incorporated them into a work ethic that produced results.
This was Ryan Augensteins’ first event. This team is committed to training and endorsing the K38 Way and standards for the future of water rescue during big wave events. I’ve had the honor of training a stellar team in South Africa who really set the bar professionally for big wave safety coverage. This team I am working with will have a minimum 3 year training timeline to perfect the necessary skills to be ‘rescue qualified’ on this level.
So K 38 was given the mission to assemble a team comprised of certified Rescue Boat operators and the local crew. An invitation to participate was sent out to a hand picked group of candidates. A select few people stepped forward.
The Mavericks K38 Rescue Team:
Vince Broglio (Captain)
Russell Smith
Garrett McNamara
Ryan Augenstein
Shawn Alladio
K38 Assistants/Patrol:
Ryan Levinson
Jonathan Cahill

K 38 Mavericks Ocean Rescue Team
Additional Support:
Kelli Rumore
Nicole Levinson
Joy Portelli
Photographer, Camera Operator:
David Pu’u
We used Kawasaki ULTRA LX models, K38 Rescue Boards and our K38 boats/helmets were outfitted with GoPro HD cameras.” Alladio
The new acting interim Harbormaster for Pillar Point is Mr. Robert Johnson. Deputy Harbor officer Cary Smith was the point of contact for the PPHD for the Mavericks Surf contest operations.
The Pillar Point Harbor Department offered generous and steady support.
Circling overhead was a USCG Helo and on the outskirts of the surf break, two fully manned USCG rescue vessels watched. The legendary 47 MLB, http://www.uscg.mil/datasheet/47mlb.asp and the 87 foot Rescue Class Cutter: Protector, the Pike.
Further peripheral support was provided by the HMB FD. I had the pleasure of working along side two of their men in the course of the event. Steady professionals.
It was an honor to be in the first line of defense, supported by various public safety agencies with men and women of this caliber. The large asset deployment at this event was primarily to manage the huge amount of boating and spectator traffic. NOAA had issued media warnings in an effort to cut down on traffic at the event this year.
It worked for the most part. Still, it was difficult not to notice things like an obviously out of place person aboard a PWC which was labeled with the name of a surfing publication and who, when questioned by authorities, could only keep repeating the words “I am with S— magazine”, as if that gave him license to have the PWC in the lineup.
What I saw this day:
A large, building, 290 degree NW primary swell, that peaked in the course of the day with 22 feet at 17 second buoy readings, and two other swells. The combination of swell size, angle, and interval created a unique top wave that allowed for the surfers to ramp up to speeds not normally possible, which assisted entry into an exceptionally clean and concave wave face.
The ocean conditions this event day are exceptionally rare to experience, and in my 42 years of surfing and ocean activities as a waterman, and 12 years as a photographer, I am shocked to see such a rare meteorologic occurrence happen on an event day.
What transpired, was a best case, designer conditions day. With superior competitor support, the measure of confidence on the part of the athletes, contributed to the establishing of a new bar in surfing performance at size.
So many athletes rose to the challenge this day, that I am a little dumbfounded. What I saw, exceeded anything prior in the context of my experience, in terms of ability, courage, bravado and success.
I used the Canon 5D Mark 2 system and the Go Pro HD system, and support was provided by Go Pro http://www.goprocamera.com/
I produced a detailed stills image list of iconic Surfing and Rescue Community support documentation, and shot 7 hours of motion and time lapse capture for a documentary that will focus on the event from a behind the scenes point of view.
The title of the film and the magazine feature that I am working on is “The Road Home.” It is a sequel to a piece I wrote, that was first Published by Alex Dick Read for The Surfers Path , which is a personal account of my coming to terms with the death of Mark Foo, who I had known from when I was first on the Professional Tour and in the many years which followed, spent time with when I would be in Hawaii.That story was entitled The Road To Half Moon Bay.
I did not return to Half Moon Bay to shoot surfing. I came to serve. But what I experienced, is one of the greatest gifts a Photographer and Journalist could have: being at a point in time where established paradigms shift with the tick of the clock.
Rigged to work Rescue, while holding a camera (well actually probably around 8 cameras, thanks to Go Pro) once more, the Canon 5D Mark 2 system allowed me to exceed all possible prior production potential for a single camera operator. We truly do live in the future. 24 surfers (and a LOT of support) just proved that.

David Pu'u and PPE
Here is a piece of music that is remarkably pertinent and descriptive for us. It was recorded a long time ago.
Below is the gallery. Click on the images for a full view and to read more about that image.
This edit contains a small cross section of a large file that is illustrative of the event safety coverage at Mavericks and a little bit of the day and night preparations the team endured, in order to be ready. We worked long hours. We all came back safe.
No one dies.
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- Modus
HMB, Mavericks. This departmental token carries an explanation that was illustrated in the course of the event by surfers, Event staff, and support personnel
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- K 38 Mavericks Ocean Rescue Team
Mavericks, Pillar Point, HMB, California
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- Shawn Alladio: K38 Rescue
Founder and team leader, Shawn Alladio at the helm of her Kawasaki at the 2010 Mavericks Challenge, Pillar Point, HMB, California. Semper Paratus.
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- David Pu'u and PPE
I had to shoot a port of everyone and do a shot of them with their personal equipment kit. So since I was the photographer, this is mine. PPHD staging area. What you do not see is the three cases of camera gear stored in the HD warehouse.
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- Twilight. Shawn and Ryan.
Prep starts days before the event. It never really feels like you are ever truly done.
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- Ryan Levinson
Steady Ryan. A man who is managing the physical challenges of Muscular Dystrophy and his passion for service. A former elite athlete in multiple sports and current EMT, he is awaterman and offshore racer, and my helmsman.
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- I am now an official Go Pro fan and addict.
Go Pro rocked the support for this event in generous and efficient fashion
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- A woman's work is never done.
Shawn Alladio. Prepping, never stopping.
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- Mavericks surfer, waterman, rescue trainee, Ryan Augustine
We all have high expectations for Ryan. He is the future. His demeanor and passion will serve him well as he adds to his skill set over the coming years.
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- Jonathan Cahill
One of the steadiest men I have met. Jonathan had a stroke recently due to an injury and was on blood thinners. He showed up. Did his job. His service level and commitment to his team is incredibly inspiring
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- Event Safety Briefing. Shawn Alladio
As head of Water Rescue, everything that goes down is on her head and shoulders. She is coordinator and builder of the front line of defense. It all starts from the top in an organization. Shawn leads by example.
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- The prize
For us the surfers and the event are all. Nothing will come between us and our goal to be where we need to be when they need us to be there.
Carlos Burle, center here. He is already surfing. Just not in the water. I can see his resolution. Carlos is K38 trained, and one of the best human beings I have met in the sport. Solid.
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- The trophy, and the Head Judge
A lot rests on Gary Linden's shoulders.
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- Kawasaki Ultras
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- The mighty Kawis
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- Vince Broglio, Team Captain
Steady, passionate, fast. Vince came to the came after dealing with a death in his family. Service and love for his fellow man a very obvious tenet.
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- GMAC and his kit
Garret! Wow, what can one say? A LOT.
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- Garrett MacNamara
Met this man at the 2000 World Tow in Championships at Jaws which he won. I have had the privilege and horror of watching him put himself at risk repeatedly over the years. When I heard that he had placed himself at K38 Rescue's disposal and was being considered as a trainee I was relieved and happy.
One of the all time greats in surfing, and a man who understands how to stay alive.
Skill level: high and growing.
Passion:high
Service level: high
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- Death Briefing
Yea. The last minute call to the team and inability to assemble and train in the area due to the Surfrider-NOAA collabration on implementing a PWC ban in the sanctuary, created a need to go over a LOT the night before the event with our green team. Managing body pickup and death issues was on the table. Not everyone who shows up is there to help the surfers. Our job description requires that we manage that. Life comes first in K38. No compromise allowed.
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- 12 am event day.
The empty Harbor lot. We work into the wee hours. Not even thinking about bed yet.
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- Nonstop drills, unending briefs
Shawn putting as much into us as we can hold. 12 am contest morning.
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- 8 am: Semper Paratus
Days of prep behind, a lung infection that wants to become pneumonia plaguing her, Shawn Alladio focuses, ready. Standing. Faithful. A warrior with ability, passion and a fierceness that I have only seen a few times in my life. One of my closest friends, she can even scare me. And I am pretty gnarly.
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- The Pitch
And the ones who catch
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- Larry Haynes: Event live vidographer
I love film maker Larry Haynes. I secretly call him my walking cartoon. If you need it, Larry will get it. He is part of a teensy and elite group of colleagues who have the skills and passion to get the job done no matter what goes down.
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- BANG!
His board chalks, a surfer goes down hard. All hands on deck and full alert. Seconds and feet. Rescue and life is all about seconds and feet.
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- Team Check
Shawn, Go Pro attached, is continually monitoring EVERYTHING and everyone. I thought that I saw everything. She has taught me to see more.
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- Predictable
Early on in the day, incoming tide, steadily rising swell. Just what my notes said it would be. Our main indicator buoys for swell are down. (Nice work NOAA) so one can either rely on computer animation models which also are missing that data or do the forcast ones self. highly recommend the latter.
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- Gmac on Point: Zone 1
Shawn had the lineup segmented. The outside was known as zone one.
Garrett was on deck when zone one got intense, as was Vince Broglio. Teamwork.
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- Incoming
The gallery could get a little crazy. Not being trained, some photographers and videographers unwittingly blocked rescue exits and entrances, sometimes even cutting off the rescue boats. I photographed it all and tried to keep moving.
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- Pitch
Crazy clean good perfect Northern California Perfection
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- Tracking
Gmac watching. We had a minimum of two sets of eyes on each rider whenever possible, with a third set in the background
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- What reefbreak?
Mavericks looking like a point break.
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- Perfect
Event morning. Approx 9 am. Mavericks dream.
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- Cary Smith PPHD
Our PPHD liason following up on the radio
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- Clean and Perfect
The pressure is really on when no one is out and the ocean delivers something no one is actually 100 perecent positive that they want. Been there. It is an aspect not many truly understand.
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- Hui Cat: press boat
For those that understand what huli means, this is truly a hilarious image. The local captains were outstanding!
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- Boom
When something explodes UP, that says a lot
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- On point
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- Spitting snarling, roaring
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- GMAC, Zone One
What this camera recorded will make some people cringe and enlighten others. We had cameras everywhere thanks to Go Pro. The information the captured will improve the level, by showing what went right AND wrong on the part of certain people who maybe should think twice about their job descriptions. Gmac doing his job well.
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- Liquid Militia Indeed
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- Early In
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- Rainbow Pit
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- Shane Desmond
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- Tracking
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- Perfect Peak
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- Grinder
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- Jeff Clark
I have known Jeff for 12 years. We have been in the trenches together a LOT in that time. Pioneer of Mavericks, event creator, and banned from the competition. His ex wife runs the event. His former trainer with whose assistance he started the Mavericks Water Patrol is running the event water safety. When I saw him throttle slowly onto the playing field this day it was a hard thing to view for me. Jeff and I have spent a lot of time alone. I would have liked to see him ride his wave this day. But in a way that not many will understand, he served instead.
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- Pensive
Waiting, watching: part of the process of riding a big wave well.
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- Anticipation
The most exciting feeling: the buildup, foreplay, whatever you want to call it.
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- Backside
Pretty heavy thing: back to the beast.
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- Always waiting, watching
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- Photographer Rob Brown and his mob
Rob is prepared. One of a few who really are. But what is wrong with this picture?
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- Dream Field
Yes it was this day.
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- Bigger better heavier
Than most you will ever get to see. Mavs with an extraordinarily accommodating cavern this day
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- Jeff Clark
Nearing AARP age, a living testimony to grit and tenacity. Bone spurs, broken back, the diverse number of people who would love to own his legacy: Jeff still floats it.
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- HMB FD
Great guys. Life vest equipped. But the jackets? Ummm....
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- Mid day Maverick
Yep, just another Maverick's moment. Great drop and part of a cool sequence. Canon 5DM2 and 24-70 f2.8 L series magic. The resolution is amazing.
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- The mighty 47 MLB
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- Surge
The swell peaking and going into the unrideable zone.
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- Shawn and Carlos
One of a big handful of truly valiant people this day, Carlos Burle post wash. Heavy. Charging back.
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- Shawn Alladio and Mavericks
Shawn likes big water. She has trained many people at Pillar Point, and survived a face off with possibly the largest breaking coastal wave in history here. How much she loves it is in her eyes.
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- Beauty
The selection of surfers to attack this venue proved to be a good one. What a gift. All the way around.
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- Motivation. Carlos Burle and Shawn Alladio
The reason any of us involves ourselves in ocean safety. We love our friends and want them to come home safe.
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- Gmac and Vince
One stays in Zone one the other heads Zone 2
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- GoPro Brad
Brad rocked support and tech and filming for the Mavericks event and K 38. Our uber talented nerd colleague with his huge contributions and teensy cameras and great mounts.
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- Team Brief. 5 am
Followed by a prayer and an oath. This is life and an affirmation to maintaining discipline, no matter what the cost. The goal? To not break our rules, so that no one dies.
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- K38, Mavericks Water Patrol
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- Brad's mighty Go Pro Rescue board mount
K38 mavericks water patrol
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- Days End, HMB Harbor, Pillar Point
Everybody is gone, and we are packed up and ready to roll downcoast towards home. A little music, a dinner packed into the truck, Shaniah in the backseat watching Scooby do, and we are off.
Nice.