Subject: [December newsletter] Photos from Caribbean & Arizona camps // Featured Globetrotter // Playa Coronado BJJ

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BJJ Globetrotters Newsletter // December 2021
Dear Globetrotters,

Two more camps in the books! Arizona last month was a huge success with more than 200 people on the mats for a full week of classes, open mats, workshops and barbecues. Loved it so much that we already decided to return in March for another round 🙂 

I was home in Saint Barth only for a few days of rest before people started arriving for the next camp. What a week that was. It's been a while since we've been able to host a proper camp here at the BJJ Globetrotters HQ so I was happy to see so many people on our island and mats again. We're doing it again in a few months!

Next up is Winter Camp (sold out) and the whole 2022 camp schedule is generally looking really, really good. It seems like optimism is back and we will be having a very busy year of full camps. Hope to see you at one of them!

Have a fantastic day,

What you'll find in this month's newsletter:

  • Photos from Caribbean Island Camp in St. BarthĂ©lemy last week
  • Featured Globetrotter: Mike Barr
  • Photos from Arizona Camp last month
  • Globetrotters Academy in Focus: Playa Coronado BJJ
Watch now: The BJJ Globetrotters documentary
The Gentle Art of Travel is following the BJJ Globetrotters camps behind the scenes over the course of one full year and 12 training camps around the world.
Use coupon "LAUNCH" for 20% off on "The BJJ Globetrotter" audiobook
10th anniversary special edition!
Half of tickets for booked for beautiful Tallinn in the Spring!
* From April 25th to 30th, 2022 *
* In Tallinn, Estonia *
* Less than 20 minutes from Tallinn airport *
* Huge mat space in a beautiful medieval town *
* Six-day training camp *
* Gi and no-gi classes all day long *
* High-level international instructors *
* Yoga every morning *
* All experience levels and affiliations welcome! *

Photos from Caribbean Island Camp in St. Barth this month
Taken by talented JitzPix on Instagram - go follow him!!
More than half of tickets already sold
* From June 13th to 18th, 2022 *
* In ReykjavĂ­k, Iceland *
* Six-day training camp in the largest grappling and MMA gym in the world *
* Classes all day long *
* Full use of all sauna, hot tub and weight-lifting facilities *
* 45 minutes from Keflavik international airport *
* Vikings vs. Intruders Icelandic wrestling competition *
* Optional half day Golden Circle sightseeing trip *
* Camp party in Viking bar *
* Everyone welcome, regardless of experience or affiliation *

Featured Globetrotter: Mike Barr
Age: 26

Belt: Brown

Profession: Freelance photographer

How many years in BJJ: 8

Other martial arts: None!

Where do you live: Currently living in a tent while travelling around the world on my motorcycle.

Where are you from: Westchester County, New York, USA.

Other fun or curious information you would like to share: I’d be remiss NOT to mention my website, www.mikebarrphotography.com, which is where I write about my journey and sell my photography prints!
Tell us what inspired you to travel and train? 
So this trip - and I say this trip because I actually did another BJJ Globetrotters trip back in 2017 - has been in the works since February/March of 2018.

I graduated from college in May 2017, did a 7-week road trip around the US, and then immediately dove into my first “big boy job”. I was a property manager at a real estate company near where I grew up. It wasn’t a job I’d ever pictured myself doing, but for a 21-year-old kid with student loan payments starting, I couldn’t complain. For the first time in my life, I had a large amount of disposable income, so I went out and bought my first motorcycle - just in time for winter to hit New York. I put the bike into storage for the winter, and pulled it back out of storage the first warm weekend in 2018.

The idea to do a RTW trip (round-the-world) didn’t really come from anywhere special - the idea wasn’t there, and then it was. I’ve come to realize in the last few years during the planning stage that there’s a number of deep-seated reasons for this trip, but they all come back to the same thing: I want to live a life that I’ll be proud to look back on when I’m older. I want to be able to sit my kids down one day and tell them about the crazy journey I experienced when I was in my twenties, and I want to do that journey now, BEFORE I settle down and start a family of my own.

Tell us about your most recent travel and your upcoming travel – where have you been and where are you going?
At the time of writing this, I’ve been on the road for a day shy of two months. I left my hometown in New York on September 10th, and immediately headed up to the Adirondack Mountains for a weekend wedding. I spent a few weeks in the northeast, cutting across Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine. While in Maine, I spent four days sleeping on the mats and teaching classes at Acadia Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, an awesome school just outside Acadia National Park run by Kris Douglas, a brown belt under the MassBJJ Banner.

After my time there, I started south, ultimately spending a week in Virginia with my older brother. I had to take a two week intermission for his wedding (which is a whole story in its own right that involved flying to Oklahoma, driving back to New Jersey for the wedding with my father, then driving my father down to Florida, all before flying BACK to Virginia to get my motorcycle.)

After flying back to Virginia, I spent a few days there before riding south. I hit the Blue Ridge Parkway during peak fall foliage, which was AWESOME. These last few days have been spent at Open Source Jiu Jitsu, a small Jiu Jitsu “compound” just outside of Asheville, North Carolina run by Bobby McMasters. It’s the closest thing I’ve ever experienced to a Jiu Jitsu hostel. I love it here!

As for future travels, there’s a really long-winded answer, but ultimately it’s a true “round the world” journey; I’m riding from Alaska to Patagonia in 2022, then from Australia to Portugal in 2023. The entire route is outlined on my website, www.mikebarrphotography.com (shameless plug!)

What are the things you enjoy about traveling?
Oof. That’s such a hard question to answer. I really love the freedom of being able to wake up every day and live my life. It’s kind of selfish, but I love not having to wake up and report to a job I hate, working for a boss who doesn’t like me all that much, and with people I don’t particularly see eye-to-eye with.

On the road, I just get to wake up in the morning, pack up camp, look at a map, and think, “Okay Mike, what are we doing today? Where are we going?” It’s unbelievably freeing, and it's the first time in my life where I feel like I’m doing exactly what I’m supposed to be doing at exactly this point in time.

There’s also the classic answers: seeing new places, collecting experiences, meeting all sorts of new and fun people, etc.

Can you give us some examples of experiences you had that makes it worth traveling and training? 
Training up in Maine was a big one for me. I’d been on the road for about two weeks at that point, and I’d only trained once at a small gym in Concord, New Hampshire. I hadn’t even called ahead like I usually do - I was literally riding down the road, saw a sign that said “Acadia BJJ”, and pulled into the parking lot on a whim.

I walked into the gym, and was greeted by Kris, the owner. He was so unbelievably kind and welcoming, and didn’t even mind that I hadn’t arranged to pop in beforehand. He’s since been promoted to brown belt, but he was only a purple belt when I visited. I only bring this up because after warming up for class with some light rounds, he asked me to teach some of the aspects of my passing game that he wanted more details on. I was surprised by the request, but I was more than happy to oblige and share some knowledge. At the end of class, Kris and I were talking shop - all about Jiu Jitsu, and about my travels. He asked where I was staying, and I told him that I wasn’t all that sure, that I was probably just going to put my tent up somewhere nearby. He didn’t even hesitate - he offered me a corner of the mats to sleep on while I was in town.

I had just met this guy. We only trained for an hour, and he barely knew anything about me, but he was willing to let this total stranger into his home away from home. It’s experiences like that - the ones that totally depend on the kindness of strangers - that make all of the hard travel days worth it.

What has so far been the most surprising experience for you when traveling?
Just like I said above: the complete kindness of strangers, and their willingness to help out. This surprised me a lot, and I was kind of shell shocked the first few times it happened. With how divided the world seems to be these days, it’s always really refreshing to have total strangers come into my life to lend a hand.

I’ve had people offer spare beds in their house for me to rest for the night; I stayed with a really kind gentleman named Tom while up in Maine for three days waiting for a motorcycle part to be delivered, and he helped me out of a bind when they sent the wrong part.

Christian G. messaged me after announcing my trip completely unprompted that he’d send me a free gi for my trip, telling me that it made him nostalgic about his trip.

Heck, I met an older guy just two days ago. I was packing up camp when he came up to the bike while walking his dog. He must’ve been in his 60s. We got to talking about my trip, and he wished me luck before continuing on with his dog walking. Five minutes later, he came back and told me that I was welcome to follow him back to his house where I could shower, wash some clothes, all while his wife would cook me some breakfast.

I’ve got a link on my website where people can donate money to keep me on the road - I say that “$15 gets me 200 miles further down the road.” I’ve had total strangers send me $20, $40, $100 here and there. It’s insane to me sometimes, and I find it hard to express how appreciated those little things all are.

Are you a budget traveller – and if so how do you plan for a cheap trip? 
I’m absolutely a budget traveller. I camp out almost every night - I’ve only paid for two nights accommodation in these first two months: every other night was either spent camped out in a tent, or on someone else’s couch (and/or Jiu Jitsu mats). There’s even been two nights so far where, not being able to find a campsite, I literally threw a tarp down next to my bike and went to sleep on the ground. I’m the definition of “houseless and unemployed.” As for food, I try and cook for myself as much as I can with my camp stove, not to mention some trade-secrets for on-the-road cuisines (e.g. 3/$3 taquitos from 7/11. No, I’m not ashamed. Yes, I do have heartburn sometimes.)

As far as planning for the trip itself, I spent about three years saving up as much money as I could. I’d say the biggest tip I figured out in that time is this: stop focusing on accruing more, and instead focus on spending less.

I realized about a year into my savings journey that by paring my spending down to just a few categories, I could readily be saving $1k a month for my trip. So outside of my living expenses, I only spent money on four things: Jiu Jitsu, my motorcycle, photography gear, and rock climbing.

Part of that comes from also making the decision to go after your dreams. Once you decide that something is GOING to happen, rather than thinking it COULD happen, your brain starts conjuring all sorts of ways to make that thing possible. You stop eating out as much. You stop buying stuff you don’t NEED. You stop buying things to impress other people.

Overall, you stop spending money on THINGS, and start spending money on EXPERIENCES.

If you were to pass on travel advice to your fellow Globetrotters, what would it be? 
Just go for it. Do it. YOLO.

I’m kidding, kind of. This whole experience has taught me that living your dreams is absolutely possible as long as you’re willing to work hard, and work through the hard days. Not every day on the road has been easy; I destroyed my MacBook Pro on the first real day of my trip, and nearly lost $6,000 worth of camera gear in the process. That was hard. But waking up to a misty Adirondack sunrise the next morning made it totally worth it. Swimming in a natural stream the next day made it totally worth it. Seeing the sunset over Acadia National Park made it worth it.

Furthermore, go into every day on the road with an open mind. Slow down. Take the road less travelled (seriously: I avoid interstates like the plague.)

Beyond that, I’d caution everyone to realize this: time is the one thing we never get back. Never. Death doesn’t show up at the end of your life and go, “So I see you worked 30 years at that job you desperately hated: here’s a voucher for 30 more years. Go cuddle some puppies.” No - our clocks are all ticking, and one day they’re going to run out. You don’t want to wake up one day and realize that you let life pass you by because you were afraid to try for what you really wanted.

Join us for a full week of classes, open mats, workshops and barbecues!
* March 7th to 12th in Tempe, Arizona *
* 15 minutes from Phoenix International Airport *
* Now FULL WEEK of training *
* Gi and no-gi classes all day long *
* Daily workshops and lectures *
* Outdoor BBQ in gym’s back yard *
* Yoga classes *
* Extra mat space for all-day open mat / drilling *
* Free professional portrait service/photo booth *
* All experience levels and affiliations welcome! *

Photos from Arizona Camp last month
Our mega summer camp in Heidelberg is back!
* From July 25th to 30th, 2022 *
* In Heidelberg, Germany *
* Our biggest camp of the year *
* One hour from Frankfurt am Main airport *
* Huge mat space in a beautiful old university town *
* Six-day training camp *
* 15+ black belt instructors *
* 30+ gi and nogi classes *
* 20+ hours of open mats *
* 10+ hours of workshops and lectures *
* High-level international instructors *
* Yoga sessions every morning *
* On-site accommodation available *
* Free professional portrait service/photo booth *
* Free beer at final open mat *
* All experience levels and affiliations welcome! *

BJJ Globetrotters Academy in Focus: 
Playa Coronado BJJ
Where is the gym located?
Our gym is located in Nueva Gorgona, a small coastal town approximately one hour away from Panama City.

How many people train there?
We are a small group of about 12 to 15 kids depending on the day.

Is the gym growing - if so by how many new members each month or year?
We have been slowly growing after the lockdowns. We get one or two new kids every month.

What are the highest and lowest belt grades training?
My son and I are the only blue belts left. The kids are white, gray, and yellow belts. We did have three brown belts and three blue belts before, but Covid lockdowns, change in migrations laws in Panama, injuries, and a promotion to blue belt brought about the perfect storm that decimated our club.

When did the gym open?
Our gym originally opened four years ago.

Some facts about you:

Name: Leonardo Espinoza
Age: 43
Belt: Blue
Profession: Teacher
Years in BJJ: 3
Other martial arts: None
Currently living in: Panama
Originally from: Venuzuela
Please tell us the story of how your gym came into existence
Three years ago, my kids and I started training under coach Thiago Silva, a purple belt from Brazil. It was a nice little academy
with children and adult classes. We fell in love with Jiu Jitsu and we were training 4 or 5 times a week. A couple of months after I got my blue belt, Covid hit, and the coach had to close the academy and move away. 

Nik Long from New Jersey stepped up and bought the mats from coach Thiago so we could keep training. We moved our mats to a friend’s watermelon factory where we trained during lockdowns, without getting any new members of course. Six months ago, we rented a new place where we have been trying to grow our club. One month ago, coach Nik Long moved to Mexico and it was my turn to step up and buy the mats from him and keep the gym going. 

The first week that I’m running classes by myself, we get two visitors, and I tell everyone that we were going to do something new that I thought it was very important to add to our game and I start showing them the Panda, Running Man, Turtle, Hawking, and Baby Bridge. One of the visitors was kind of laughing at me and I was thinking to myself this guy is going to tell me that I’m exposing my back, but what he said was “It’s so funny you’re showing that, I was going through those last week with my coach Chris Paines, who is a black belt under Priit.” The visitor was Andy Gerrard. (Hi Andy, hope you’re doing well). 

We rolled and we talked and when Andy found out that I was sponsoring 5 kids from the community to take Jiu Jitsu classes he even made a donation to the club. On top of that, I ended up meeting Chris on a Zoom meeting and he showed me a little bit more about those positions from his living room. I loved BJJ Globetrotters before, but after that I love them even more.

Tell us about the people that train in the gym – who are they?
Our younger students are two girls that are both 8: Amber and Mitchel. Then we have crazy Joe and his brother Jose. Then we have even crazier Ian, Tyler, and Evan. We have siblings Louis and Marion, and the older students are Jordan, Luis, and Darley. My kids Sebastian and Ivana help me teach. Approximately half the kids are foreign and the other half are local kids.

Why do they train?
These kids train because they like it and they have fun training.

What are some of the challenges of running a BJJ gym in general, and in your area specifically?
Covid still worries a lot of people. As those fears fade away I think more people will show up to our gym.

How do you see the future for BJJ in your area?
I hope it grows. I hope it grows the way BJJ Globetrotters are proposing - where BJJ practitioners don’t impose restrictions on themselves about where or with whom to train.

What’s the best thing about your gym?
Great atmosphere! It’s always fun. Nobody fears or worries about rolling with each other. It’s a great option for training except if you want to be a world champion.

What would you recommend Globetrotters to see in your area apart from the inside of your gym?
The beaches nearby are not super pretty but the surfing is good.

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Thanks for sharing! If you'd like to visit Playa Coronado BJJ, you can find them here.
 
 
 
Make your custom gis, patches and rashguards at our dedicated BJJ Globetrotters factory
It can be a mess to try and find a manufacturer of BJJ gear that you can trust on quality, delivery and attention to detail. 

You can burn a lot of money going through samples from the many thousands of factories in Asia, trying to find one that will provide you with the product as you’ve imagined it. We know, because we’ve been through it all, ourselves!
In memory of Mike Katz