2013 Rates


Like most people in today’s world, it’s getting harder and harder to keep up with the costs and expenses of daily life, as well as keeping a business thriving. The rate schedule I have used has remained the same since I began over a decade ago. That said, the decision has been made to increase fees.

I am confident that anyone who has already experienced education from myself or anyone affiliated with TSI knows that the level of instruction received is comparable to no other! I am equally secure that those who have not yet tried the TSI method will continued to be swayed to do so through all the amazing testimonials and referrals coming from YOU!

Thank you all for your loyalty, support, and understanding.

 

Sincerely,

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Carla Rowland
TSI Owner, Head Instructor

 

LOS ANGELES SESSIONS


SINGLE SESSIONS (one person, private lesson)

** Equipment, if needed, includes surfboard, wetsuit, & leash **

With equipment  =  $90/hour
WithOUT equipment    =  $75/hour


BULK BUY SESSIONS (one person, bulk of 3 or 6 single sessions)

3 Session Package*
(3) 2hrs w/ equipment  =  $510 …….  w/o equipment  =  $420
(3) 1hr w/ equipment    =  $240   …….  w/o equipment  =  $210

6 Session Package†
(6) 2hrs w/ equipment  =  $1,020 …….  w/o equipment  =  $840
(6) 1hr w/ equipment    =  $480   …….  w/o equipment  =  $420

*(must be used within 2 weeks)
†(must be used within 3 weeks)


INTERMEDIATE COACHING SESSIONS (NO EQUIPMENT)

*COACHING SESSIONS are for the surfer who wants to improve on style and technique &/or improve competitive skills and tactics. NOT for the surfer who still needs to be frequently pushed into waves!!!

2hrs (NO equip.)  =  $100

BULK BUY (3 sessions)* = $270
BULK BUY (6 sessions)† = $540

*(must be used within 2 weeks)
†(must be used within 3 weeks)

SHARE IT!! 2hrs, 2 people, NO equip. ($75 ea.)  =  $150


SPECIALS!! SPECIALS!! SPECIALS!!

2 for 2 for 2 – 2 people, 2 hrs  =  $220 (LA ONLY)

 

Kids Under 13 – 1hr (equip. optional)  =  $70

2hrs (equip. optional) =  $100

SHARE IT!! Kids Under 13 – 1hr ($50 ea.)  =  $100

2hrs ($75 ea.)  =  $150

 


PHILIPPINES SESSIONS


PINOY STARTER SESSIONS

SINGLE SESSION (one person, private lesson)

** Equipment, if needed, includes surfboard & leash **

SINGLE SESSION = P1,200/hour
BULK BUY (3 – 1hr – sessions)* = P3,300
BULK BUY (3 – 2hr – sessions)† = P6,900

*(must be used within 2 weeks)
†(must be used within 3 weeks)


PINOY PRO TRAINER SESSIONS

SINGLE SESSION (one person, private lesson)

** Equipment NOT included **

SINGLE SESSION = P1,000/hour
BULK BUY (3 – 1hr – sessions)* = P2,700
BULK BUY (3 – 2hr – sessions)† = P5,700

*(must be used within 2 weeks)
†(must be used within 3 weeks)


More info click here!!

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Los Angeles Surf Sessions


First Point Malibu

Private and small group surf instruction and coaching is generally given at First Point Malibu. The easy-going wave offers novice surfers a forgiving take-off and smooth ride, while giving intermediate to advanced surfers the perfect canvas to perfect style and technique. Other options in Los Angeles County include:

  • • Sunset
  • • Topanga
  • • Zuma Beach
  • • County Line

Instructors: Ben Thomson, Carla Rowland

(Contact us directly to schedule and confirm session date, time, & instructor.)



SINGLE SESSIONS (one person, private lesson)

** Equipment, if needed, includes surfboard, wetsuit, & leash **

WithOUT equipment = $75/hour … 2 hours = $130
With equipment = $90/hour … 2 hours = $160


BUY NOW



BULK BUY SESSIONS (one person, bulk of 3 or 6 single sessions)

3 Session Package*
(3) 2hrs w/ equipment = $450 ……. w/o equipment = $360
(3) 1hr w/ equipment = $240 ……. w/o equipment = $210

6 Session Package†
(6) 2hrs w/ equipment = $900 ……. w/o equipment = $720
(6) 1hr w/ equipment = $480 ……. w/o equipment = $420

*(must be used within 2 weeks)
†(must be used within 3 weeks)

BUY NOW



INTERMEDIATE COACHING SESSIONS (NO EQUIPMENT)

*COACHING SESSIONS are for the surfer who wants to improve on style and technique &/or improve competitive skills and tactics. NOT for the surfer who still needs help catching waves!!!

2hrs (NO equip.) = $90

BULK BUY (3 sessions) = $240
BULK BUY (6 sessions) = $480

SHARE IT!! 2hrs, 2 people, NO equip. ($75 ea.) = $150

BUY NOW



SPECIALS!! SPECIALS!! SPECIALS!!

2 for 2 for 2 – 2 people, 2 hrs = $220 (LA ONLY)

Kids Under 13 – 1hr (equip. optional) = $70

2hrs (equip. optional) = $100

SHARE IT!! Kids Under 13 – 1hr ($50 ea.) = $100

2hrs ($75 ea.) = $150

BUY NOW



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Goin’ Back to Cali…


Alrighty folks! My time in the Philippines is about to come to a close! Ian and I have had an amazing experience here and will miss all our friends that we have made along the way… But, oh to get back onto the California Gold will feel so good!

That said, it’s time start thinking about getting those coaching sessions back on the schedule! I will be back in full work mode on Saturday, April 27. Rumor has it that I’ll be quite the sight for sore eyes, so be sure to get your sessions booked at least a week in advance.

In the meantime, keep those gills wet!!! I look forward to reconnecting with everyone!

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The Most Fearless Surfer

The Most Fearless Surfer

Nassima, stoked. Photo: Heather Kessinger

I love the way stories spread in this era.  A couple of years ago, I flew to Bangladesh and reported a story for AFARMagazine about a homeless girl, Nassima Atker, who’d miraculously become one of the country’s best surfers. (Yes, there is surfing in Bangladesh.) Despite having to beg for survival, despite being constantly teased and taunted by men and women who say surfing is inappropriate for girls, despite living in a country where two million children suffer acute malnutrition, Nassima, at just 14, had managed to  beat all the local boys in an annual surf contest.

“When I surf,” Nassima told me, “I can finally just be happy and forget about all my problems on land.”

An incredibly talented filmmaker, Heather Kessinger, saw that story and we just returned to Bangladesh with cameraman Jordan Dozzi to make a documentary film about Nassima.  It’s not a fairy tale. At 16, Nassima is still struggling day-to-day to put food on the table. But even before the film is made, Nassima’s courage is spreading. Lakshmi Puri, the Deputy Executive Director of United Nations Women, gave  a speech including Nassima at the 2012 IOC World Conference on Women and Sport, saying:

“Just a year ago, more girls than boys belonged to the [Bangladesh Surf] club. But as surfing gained popularity, some community leaders felt that surfing was inappropriate for women and girls. Since then, almost every female club member has dropped. Nassima is the only one left.

Read more via The Most Fearless Surfer | The Inertia.

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Mission 2012 – Clean Drinking Water – Philippines


DONATE NOW!! DONATE NOW!! DONATE NOW!!

THE SURF INSTITUTE IS BRINGING CLEAN DRINKING WATER TO THE PHILIPPINES FOR THE SECOND YEAR IN A ROW

UPDATED VIDEO FROM OUR RETURN TO BALER…

UPDATED VIDEO FROM OUR LU DISTRIBUTION…

SEE OUR STORY…

For the second year in a row, The Surf Institute and Zamora Surf will make the journey to the Philippines to bring clean water filters to rustic communities who need it most, on the main island of Luzon in the Philippines.

This year, The Surf Institute, Zamora Surf and Waves for Water have been at it again, distributing clean drinking water filters across the Philippine island of Luzon, visiting areas like Baler, La Union, and Pagudpud. This year, the folks at Project Save Our Surf (PSOS) supplied the TSI team with 10 clean drinking water filters, which were distributed to various schools throughout La Union and Baler.

“No one should go without suitable drinking water in 2012,” says Carla Rowland, owner at The Surf Institute, who has made it her mission to do more with her travels than just surf.

“We really take for granted the most basic of needs here in the U.S. With nearly 16 million Filipinos living

WITHOUT clean drinking water, it’s my hope that we can affect the lives of many who struggle in obtaining this most fundamental life-sustaining requirement.” All who are interested in getting involved should contact Carla Rowland at TheSurfInstitue@gmail.com.

The team has been a leader in an important movement to educate and encourage the Filipino people to maintain adequate, clean drinking water.  Each person on this trip will empower multiple Filipino communities by passing on the tools to live easier with an independent and cost-effective source of drinking water.


WHERE YOUR DONATIONS WILL GO…

UPDATE – Thanks to the generous donation from one of our good friends, Christian rock singer, Brenton Brown, we were able to purchase our own vehicle. We have made the area of San Juan in La Union our home and have managed to secure filters to 2 schools in this area. We are set to head to Baler later this month. Because it took a bit of time to secure a vehicle, and becasue we are in the process of starting our own Philippine-based water filter project with local NGO, our mission has been extended into March, perhaps even into April!

That said, we are in desperate need of more assistance!! The car needs fuel, bellies need to be fed, rent must be paid, filter buckets must be bought!

PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE help us continue this incredible mission!!


WE NEED YOUR HELP… DONATE NOW!!

Show your support by offering a donation of any amount. Even the smallest contribution can help us reach our goal.

 

Special Thanks to our supporters!

          

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Surfer, 13, hasn’t missed a day in a year

There are the perfect, glassy sessions — like Christmas Day, when Meg Roh caught waves for six hours.

Then there are the stormy mornings, so messy that Meg would be the only one in the water, her stepfather, Sam Hann, watching and staying dry under the lifeguard tower with the family lab, Kona, in tow.

A few times the swells have been so big that her mom, Sue Hann, walks away with tears streaming down her face, scared for her daughters safety. Sue is no longer allowed to watch on big days.Still, Meg surfs. No matter how crummy, cold, stormy, windy, dirty, crowded, big, or flat.Four waves each day, thats the rule. Thats the goal the Dana Point resident set out to conquer 365 days ago today.”

For a girl that young to have that kind of dedication and fortitude, to come out here every day — good, bad, whatever — its phenomenal,” said her board maker, Dennis Kemp.”Theres a champ in that little body there just waiting to bust out.”

She took a few falls at first, but Meg will never forget her first wave, at age 4 at Doheny State Beach.”

I was hooked,” she recalled after surfing a recent day.

But the day Hann knew Meg had unbreakable determination was a few years back during a weeklong Josh Baxter surf camp, when the biggest swell of the year hit.

Fifteen-foot sets were rolling in at San O, and three-time US longboard champ Baxter told the kids it was too big and they couldnt go out that day.

Meg, then 10, whispered to Hann: “That doesnt mean me, right?”

Hann decided hed let her go and paddled out beside her, figuring shed get worn out in the whitewash and make her way in. She was half-way out when a big set with five waves was growing in the distance, and she decided to commit.

She made it past four waves when the last wave – the biggest of the set at about 15-feet – loomed above her. She scratched her way up the face, before free-falling downwards.

Hanns heart dropped.

“I thought, oh no, shes going to drown. What am I going to tell her mom?” Hann recalls. ”

She takes the tumble and I came up right next to her. She has a big smile and says Come on, lets go. Im fine.”

Later that night, over dinner, she tells her family that she didnt know it was possible to hit the bottom that far out, and found out first hand after landing on the sand deep down under the oceans surface.

“It was scary, but now that I think about it – it could have been worse,” Meg says, a big smile showing off her metal braces.

Continue reading via San Onofres surfing sweetheart | day, days, surf – Life – The Orange County Register.

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Mermaids: Fantasy or For Real?!

Okay, so this isn’t exactly surf related…but thought it would be an interesting discussion for all general ocean lovers. Did anyone else watch the special on Animal Planet about the Mermaid or “Aquatic Ape” theory last night? While I’m personally a skeptic of “mythical creature” theories and stories such as “Bigfoot” or the “Lochness Monster”… I actually found myself intrigued by this theory! Now, whether I’m intrigued because I think it would be super cool to be a mermaid, as someone who lives and works in, on, and around the Big Blue…or because I actually find some of their points plausible…I’m still deciding. I’d love to hear all of your thoughts….Do you think “Mermaids” exist? 

I believe it is airing again tonight on Animal Planet, but here’s an informative review of the episode if needed….

Mermaids: Fantasy or For Real?!

It’s a question that dogged filmmaker Charlie Foley when he started work on“Mermaid: The Body Found,” a speculative documentary airing May 27 and 28 on Animal Planet — from his own father, no less.

“It was the first thing my dad asked me when I told him about the special,” Foley laughed to The Huffington Post. “We had to think about this, and I assume that mermaid sex organs would evolve like those of whales, seals and porpoises. Their bodies are streamlined, but those parts ‘pop out’ when needed.”

Sorry, fish fetishists, the special doesn’t show mermaids and mermen splashing around in icthyological intercourse, but there is a scene of a CGI mermaid giving birth.

Foley isn’t saying that mermaids exist, but finds it fascinating that the comely sea creatures have been talked about for thousands of years and show up in the writings of numerous cultures — even among cultures that had no contact with each other.

There has never been a confirmed mermaid sighting, and some researchers speculate that people who’ve claimed to have seen one outside of a movie theatre actually saw creatures like manatees or dugongs.

However, some researchers have suggested the “Aquatic Ape Theory.” They claim that during a period of massive coastal flooding, some ancestors moved inland and others went into the ocean for food.

The theory forms the basis of the show and while the idea that mermaids might be real may sound absurd on the surface, filmmaker Charlie Foley says further study suggests it might not be all wet.

“There are cases of animals going from terrestrial to aquatic,” Foley told The Huffington Post. “And when you look at what makes humans unique among other terrestrial animals, it raises some interesting questions on whether mermaids might be plausible.”

Some of the evidence that Foley said could conceivably suggest a missing mermaid link include webbing between fingers, something other primates don’t have and the loss of body hair (which would create drag in water).

Other evolutionary steps that suggest a sea creature cousin include the fact that humans are the only land animal with subcutaneous fat, which helps insulate whales, seals and dolphins from the cold, and breath control.

“Humans can hold their breath up to 20 minutes, longer than any other terrestrial animal,” Foley said. “In fact, we’re the only land animal with an instinctive ability to swim.”

Read More… via Huffington Post

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After the Agony of Youth, the Ecstasy of Surfing

When I was 8, my parents divorced and my mother married a man whose career took us from Washington to Melbourne Beach, a town on the “Space Coast” of Central Florida, where I learned to surf.

The ocean proved a refuge from the new, volatile atmosphere at home. Surfing became my everything, with all matters weighed on the scales of its rigors and ecstasies. The surfers of Melbourne Beach made up a kind of tribal family, one whose values might come as a surprise. There was a tradition of taking a job as soon as possible, for instance, typically as a busboy or carpenter’s assistant. The point was to have pocket money and financing for trips to surf destinations like Barbados and Costa Rica. But underlying these expediencies was a belief, transmitted to me by the older boys who were my idols, in the nobility of labor. Working with your hands and living close to the land — or in this case, the sea — were the cardinal virtues.

But this surf family broke up, too — my idols left for college or California or Hawaii. A friend was wheelchair-bound after falling from a scaffold. And when it came time to attend the university where my father taught, back in Washington, I quit surfing as if I were quitting a drug. I was afraid that it would fatally distract me from my studies, and I didn’t want to be an occasional surfer. If I couldn’t do it every day, couldn’t reasonably aspire to be one of the best, then I wouldn’t do it all. I had always assumed I would make the pilgrimage to Hawaii, the birthplace of modern surfing, but this was a dream I would have to relinquish.

So I plunged into a life of books and cities, bars and galleries, endless graduate school. Of my previous life, I rarely spoke. There were too many clichés about surfing and surfers to overcome.

Then unexpectedly, when I was in my mid-30s and living in New York City, I took up surfing again. And as though I never abandoned it, surfing set about saving me once more, this time from bad habits accrued in adulthood. I could now afford to take the trips I never managed to save enough for as a teenager — to Puerto Rico, Mexico and, ultimately, Hawaii, where my girlfriend, Juliana, and I went to be married.

Hawaii is somewhat emptily called the Mecca of surfing, but there is truth in the name. On my first morning there, I dropped to my knees in the coarse yellow sand and, under cover of waxing my board, let out a sob of joy mixed with regret at not having made the pilgrimage sooner. It hardly mattered that the waves were only two feet high. By midafternoon that same day, they were 20 feet and flawlessly shaped. The idle fantasies I’d entertained of riding such surf melted away before its sublime, terrifying actuality.

One day, when the waves had dropped back down to mortal size, I came in to find Juliana being chatted up by a guy who seemed drunk, though perhaps he had a speech impediment. We were in the parking lot of Hanalei Bay, Kauai’s premier spot.

“I think he said he’s from Melbourne Beach,” she whispered. He was waxing his board with awkward sweeps of his arm.

“You’re from Melbourne Beach?” I asked him. He nodded. “So am I,” I said. “What’s your name?” He said something I couldn’t quite understand. “Pardon?”

“Joe. . . . ” he managed, then, as if I were hard of hearing, “Finley!”

Joe Finley. I stared at him. In his weathered features I could make out the face I remembered. Joe was the one who fell from the scaffold at 16, never to walk again, much less surf. But here he was in Kauai, where he’d been living for the past 10 years, he said, collecting disability — and surfing. “Best physical therapy,” he told me with a grin. Passers-by called out greetings. He was clearly a fixture, well known and well liked. He invited us to his house and pulled on a white helmet, suggesting with a wry smile that I wear one myself. He then walked disjointedly down the beach.

We watched as he paddled out and, some time later, caught a wave. He had been such a graceful surfer when I knew him. Now he didn’t manage to get to his feet until he reached the bottom. He looked like a newborn foal struggling to rise. But he was doing it, the thing they said he’d never do again.

via After the Agony of Youth, the Ecstasy of Surfing – NYTimes.com.

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Steph Gilmore En Vogue

I was a little thrown off when I saw that e-mail in my inbox. “Steph Gilmore in Vogue” the subject read.

“Who cares?” I thought.

But then the longer happy hour went on, the more it sunk in. This matters. This is no normal surf magazine, no usual picture of the Australian phenomenon, this is Vogue, the one and only. Quiksilver wasn’t kidding when they named her as a brand Ambassador. Because not only is she an Ambassador for them, but she is also one for the sport. Especially the women’s competitive realm. How the magazine chooses to portray her here is the one of the few glances most of the general public get into women’s surfing.

So on the way home from dinner when we stopped at the corner store for more drinks, I perused over to the magazine aisle, picked up a copy of Vogue and when the cashier gave me a funny look. I quickly placed a Hershey’s bar on the counter next to it and said, “My girlfriend had a bad day.” Psyche!

By now, my friends are interested. We get home, drinks are opened, so is the magazine, and after many flipped pages there she is…

Carefully poised, standing between the front two seats of a vintage Ford Bronco, Stephanie Gilmore stands with one hand on the roll-bar, the other in her hair. A board and wetsuit stuffed in the backseat. The caption lists of all things, the type of make up she is wearing, shampoo in her hair and the prices of the swimwear she dons. Roughly $217 worth.

We are accustomed to seeing the 24-year-old, four-time World Champion carving across Gold Coast faces, but this two page feature shows her softer side. Discussing everything from her love for collecting vintage stringed instruments to her work for the Quiksilver Foundation.

“Thats not so bad,” I thought to myself.

A little femininity in our sport never hurt anyone. After all, is it not a beautiful dance with nature?

And Gilmore is nothing if not living proof that this combination is a working one. Currently she sits atop the World Tour rankings, hunting for her fifth World Title, with two event wins and top five finishes at the other four events. She is no stranger to the podium, with 20 World Tour event wins.

Poised atop a Ford Bronco or standing proudly on the podium Steph Gilmore not only wins us over, but sells the rest of the world on women’s surfing.

via Steph Gilmore En Vogue | The Inertia.

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San Onofre’s future relies on finding cause of abnormal tube wear

On Jan. 31, alarms alerted the control room at the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station that a radiation leak was occurring in one of the nearly 39,000 tubes that carry radioactive water in the steam generators.

That failure led to an unparalleled shutdown of one of California’s two nuclear power plants and triggered more than three months of detective work by Southern California Edison officials and federal nuclear regulators that has yet to determine the problem’s root cause or when San Onofre will reopen.

Since then, the outlook for the plant has gotten worse.

Now, about 1,300 tubes — more than 3% of all the plant’s tubes — have been taken out of service because of unexpected wear. And Edison has said that even when San Onofre reopens, it probably won’t run at full capacity.

Figuring out the exact cause of the wear is crucial.

Edison finished installation of the $671-million steam generators less than two years ago, promising customers they would create major energy savings. Now, officials estimate it will cost as much as $65 million to fix the problems and tens of millions more to replace the lost power.

Officials said the investigation has yielded a better understanding about why the tubes are wearing down. When the plant is running at full power, the rate of steam flow is causing the tubes to vibrate, much like a guitar string being plucked. Some tubes vibrated enough that they rubbed against each other, causing the tube walls to wear down much faster than expected.

This is a potential danger because tube ruptures could release radiation and in extreme cases compromise the reactors’ cooling system.

But officials have not yet pinpointed what missteps led to the problem.

via San Onofre’s future relies on finding cause of abnormal tube wear – latimes.com.

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