They got here from everywhere in the world to this distant stretch of Colombia’s Caribbean coast. Two hailed from India. Two traveled from Switzerland. One from the Netherlands. One other from Seattle. All of them wished to be taught by Beto Gomez, knowledgeable kite surfer, within the spot the place he first discovered the game.
La Guajira Peninsula is good for kite browsing. In Cabo de la Vela, Mr. Gomez’s hometown, with almost 1,000 residents and desert terrain, the windy season lasts 9 months and the waves are flat.
So for 5 days this 12 months, novice kite surfers — drawn by Mr. Gomez’s social media and competitions broadcast on-line — traveled right here for his courses.
“In India, we have been actually cheering for him,” mentioned Shyam Rao, 33, who arrived together with his spouse.
Kite browsing, utilizing a kite to propel a rider throughout the water and thru the air, shouldn’t be native to this a part of the world or to the Wayuu, Colombia’s largest Indigenous group, which governs the realm.
It was delivered to Cabo de la Vela almost 20 years in the past by visiting foreigners or arijuna, a time period within the Wayuu Indigenous language that features Colombians who aren’t Wayuu.
Not everybody in the neighborhood, whose leaders have fought to protect their land and traditions, has embraced a sport that has introduced development and alter.
However kite browsing has undoubtedly turned Cabo de la Vela right into a budding vacation spot. Mr. Gomez’s household discovered a supply of revenue past the standard fishing or artisan crafts in one in all Colombia’s poorest and most malnourished areas. And Mr. Gomez, 24, earned a ticket out, turning into the world’s solely skilled Wayuu kite surfer.
“Kite browsing has been a present for us as a result of it opened the door for our city; it allowed me to go away and to fly everywhere in the world,” Mr. Gomez mentioned, on the kite browsing faculty he owns together with his older brother. “I need others right here to do the identical.”
Mr. Gomez was 7 the primary time he noticed kite browsing.He watched in awe as visiting kite surfers soared by means of the air.
“We had that emotion of, ‘Wow, one thing new got here and we wish to study it,’” he mentioned. However he realized “that we have been by no means going to study it as a result of that’s not for us. ”
Again then, Cabo de la Vela was a lot smaller, mentioned Margarita Epieyu, Mr. Gomez’s mom, made up of roughly six prolonged households, which is how Wayuu communities are organized.
Tour buses arrived possibly each different month, just for fast journeys to the seaside, Mr. Gomez mentioned.
To get by, his father delivered water, his mom bought conventional Wayuu baggage and hammocks, and he hawked bracelets. His household typically ate one meal a day, normally fish donated by the group’s fishermen.
“There was no tourism,” Ms. Epieyu, 49, mentioned, “so right here there weren’t jobs.”
However that started altering in 2009, when Martin Vega, a Colombian kite browsing teacher, introduced college students from a kite browsing faculty close to Barranquilla. “The wind was excellent,” he mentioned.
Mr. Vega, together with a pal, quickly determined to remain; they established the city’s first kite browsing faculty on land owned by an area Wayuu resident.
In the future, he mentioned, a boy intrigued by visiting kite surfers raced after his automotive. It was Mr. Gomez’s older brother Nelson, who already earned suggestions serving to vacationers and discovered the fundamentals of navigating on the water.
Mr. Vega quickly met Beto Gomez, who was then 10. Underneath Mr. Vega’s watch and with their mom’s permission, the boys educated after faculty and on weekends — if their homework and chores have been executed.
“We have been like fish,” Nelson Gomez, 25, mentioned. “We may go in at 9 a.m. and go away at 6 p.m.”
Added Mr. Vega, 41, “The concept was for locals to assist us and are available and study, and that’s what occurred.”
Nelson Gomez was a pure expertise, however his aggressive profession ended when his leg was significantly injured in 2017, whereas he educated in Brazil. Beto Gomez, although, developed his skills. At 13, he completed second in his first competitors — a regional one three hours away.
“That was my first connection to the world, with a metropolis, with escalators, elevators, site visitors lights,” mentioned Mr. Gomez, who discovered English from vacationers.
Three years later, Mr. Gomez received his first competitors, and in 2017, counting on donations, he left Colombia for the primary time, to compete within the Dominican Republic.
Each time he left, he mentioned, the Wayuu authority, the group of elders who run Cabo de la Vela, needed to grant permission, as a result of the rule was “we can’t have contact with the skin world.”
However when he was 18 and competing in Brazil, the Wayuu elders denied his request to remain and work as a kite browsing teacher. He did anyway.
As punishment, he mentioned he was advised to remain away for 2 years.
His mom, who had married younger and later divorced Mr. Gomez’s father, mentioned she defended her son and inspired her kids to pursue “alternatives I didn’t have.”
His mom, Mr. Gomez mentioned, “at all times wished us to observe our goals and to go and dwell away from right here.” She additionally urged them to go to school and date individuals who weren’t Wayuu.
He adopted her recommendation, transferring to Argentina in 2020 after a contest there and falling in love with an Argentine lady. This previous March, his mom, who had by no means flown earlier than, took off with him from Bogotá for a go to to his dwelling in Argentina.
As kite browsing grew in Cabo de la Vela, extra vacationers, eating places, hostels and cash arrived. Some Wayuu have welcomed the adjustments, however others are cautious.
“Right here in Cabo, the adverse has been very minimal,” mentioned Edwin Salgado, 29, who owns a kite browsing faculty. “It’s not a large tourism, and the Wayuu tradition remains to be felt and represented.”
Ms. Epieyu, who receives cash each month from her son’s skilled earnings, mentioned seven of her 10 kids now kite surf.
“Despite the fact that folks might not need it, kite browsing has modified Cabo,” she mentioned.
However some residents mentioned extra guests has meant extra alcohol, medication, events and outdoors affect.
The Wayuu contemplate Cabo de le Vela to be on sacred floor as a result of, they consider, souls come to relaxation there and if they permit outsiders to “invade,” they are going to “find yourself with out our territory,” mentioned Elba Gomez, 73, Beto’s paternal aunt and a member of the Wayuu authority.
Citing “dysfunction” and other people “not pleasant to their tradition and territory,” the Wayuu authority, in a 2018 crackdown, pushed out international homeowners of companies as a result of it believed these needs to be operated by Wayuu folks.
Mr. Vega was one in all two international homeowners of kite browsing colleges. (4 colleges stay in the present day.) He bought the college to the Gomez brothers, and he and his spouse moved to Riohacha, a metropolis three hours away. There, he mentioned, it was simpler to lift their first baby and begin a brand new faculty close by.
“I clearly respect the group, its customs and guidelines,” Mr. Gomez mentioned. “It’ll change sooner or later, and I wish to be a part of that course of, as a result of this modified my life.”
Each winter, Mr. Gomez returns dwelling to Cabo de la Vela to go to household, give native kids free kite browsing classes and host a paid camp.
For paying visitors, Mr. Gomez’s mom lately made a dinner of grilled goat and arepas.
The household wore conventional outfits, Mr. Gomez and his sisters carried out a dance round a bonfire and defined their tradition and language. Whether or not he’s in Argentina or competing all over the world, Mr. Gomez mentioned he’ll at all times trumpet his Wayuu roots.
“I wish to promote Cabo somewhat extra so folks come go to and luxuriate in our tradition,” he mentioned, “to not change us and do what’s at all times executed in all places, colonize.”