Bruno Pesca and Marcelo Trekinho stay at the only Surf Ashram in India, in Mangalore, where they are received by the president of the country's Surfing Association and the biggest supporter of the sport in the region, Kishore Kumar.
After three days and two nights traveling on a ship, Bruno Pesca and Marcelo Trekinho finally arrive at the wave that motivated the whole trip to India.
Após 3 dias viajando de navio, Bruno Pesca e Marcelo Trekinho chegam ao pico que motivou toda a viagem pela Índia.
Bruno Pesca and Marcelo Trekinho are still in India enjoying the wave that motivated the trip: a long, tubular right that was once the scene of a surfing film.
Bruno Pesca and Marcelo Trekinho travel to Hawaii in search of a different experience. Instead of going to Oahu, as 99% of surfers do, they left for Big Island, the largest of the islands in the Hawaiian archipelogo.
Marcelo Trekinho and Bruno Pesca continue on Big Island, where they meet a Brazilian diver who takes the pair to surf on a secret peak in the region.
Bruno Pesca and Marcelo Trekinho go to Big Island, in Hawaii, to enjoy less common, even secret peaks. In addition, they explore Hawaiian beauty up close, with a visit to the most active volcano in the world, the Kilauea, and the Waipio valley.
Bruno Pesca and Marcelo Trekinho have their last session on Big Island, Hawaii. Then they take a long trip towards Pohnpei, Micronesia, for the first swell day, where the waves are already incredible.
Bruno Pesca and Marcelo Trekinho are in P-Pass, Micronesia, to catch the best waves of their lives and witness the beauty of Pohnpei Island.
In Pohnpei, Micronesia, Bruno Pesca and Marcelo Trekinho surf high waves and discover the ruins of Nam Madol, a species of Machu Picchu in the Pacific. On the P-Pass farewell, although small, his last waves there were still perfect.
Pesca and Trekinho bid farewell to Micronesia on their way to California and, despite the cold weather, catch a sunny day in Blacks Beach where Pesca takes his first lessons on how to surf with Alaia, a wooden board used by the ancient Hawaiians.