
How a drug smuggler and his mysterious death put Siargao surfing on the map
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In January 1989, Boyum arrived on
Siargao , a small island in the southeastern Philippines, via ferry. Using the alias Max Walker, he introduced himself in the island's largest town, General Luna. Eventually, he built a hut of woven nipa palm fronds on a desolate sandy point about a 40-minute walk outside town. For the next six months, until his death, he lived a solitary life there, gazing out upon what would later be recognised as one of
Asia's most perfect surf breaks , Cloud 9.
Boyum was not the first to hang 10 in Siargao; a trickle of surf adventurers had been coming to the island since at least the early 1980s. But as one of the pre-eminent surf explorers of the 70s, Boyum had helped to pioneer several of Indonesia's most famous wave destinations, including Grajagan, or G-Land, and the
Mentawais , and his mysterious death on Siargao has embedded itself in the mythology of a Philippine island that was, until recently, largely unknown.
A sign sets the scene at Ilakai Hostel in General Luna. Photo: David Frazier
It's only in the past decade that Siargao has gone viral in travellers' social media feeds as the 'next Bali' or the 'new Boracay', and legacy media has reacted with a landslide of coverage. Last July, Lonely Planet listed Siargao as the first of its seven 'best places to visit in Southeast Asia'. In October, Travel and Leisure declared it 'the last remaining paradise'. In December, The New York Times ran a story under the headline, 'The Under-the-Radar Filipino Island That Evokes 1970s Bali' as part of its 'Flocking To' series.
On Siargao, this manifests as hyper-tourism, as the island is hit with a sudden and potentially damaging deluge of visitors. Local business owners say Siargao has really only been developing in the past 10 to 15 years, and this has accelerated sharply since Covid-19. Development is mainly driven by outside investors, especially wealthy Filipinos from
Manila , Cebu and
Boracay , as well as a diverse collection of expats.
'This is a magical place,' says John Carby, a 43-year-old Australian missionary and surfer who has called Siargao home for 15 years. 'So many people come here, and then the second day they ask, 'Where can I buy land?''
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The influx has produced the paradox of an island with laughable infrastructure yet all the world's viral trends. There are skate parks, and padel and pickleball courts, wellness centres offering ice baths, and restaurants serving adaptogen mushroom chai, green earth smoothies and ethnic cuisine choices worthy of any foodie neighbourhood in New York. But brownouts are a near daily occurrence, and sometimes the water shuts off. The best internet comes via Starlink antennas, and there are almost no street lights.
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