There are places that do not appear on maps, but in the stories of those who discover them. **Cabo Raso**, on the **southern coast of Chubut**, is one of them. An **austere and silent spot**, where the **gravel of Provincial Route 1** merges with the **Patagonian steppe** and plunges into a **turquoise Atlantic**.
There, among **ruined buildings** and **constant wind**, surfing takes on a different dimension. And so does **Jashua Velázquez**.
## Jashua Velázquez: the sea as a language
Born in **Playa Unión**, Jashua understood from a young age that the sea was not just a landscape, but a **way of life**. At the age of 7, he tried his first surfboard and never let go of it.
Today, at 32, he teaches at the **Playa Unión Surf School (ESPU)**, studies to become a lifeguard, teaches organic chemistry, and participates in **environmental fairs**.
“We are not looking to train surfers, but people with values. Away from the show, comparisons, or profit. Surfing is something else,” he affirms.
## Cabo Raso: disconnection, silence, and unpredictable waves
In **Cabo Raso**, there is no cell phone signal or television. Only **sea, wind, and time**. The only lodging operates with **solar energy**, **well water**, and a **sustainable philosophy**. It is a place in recovery, inhabited by those who chose to **live differently**.
“We go to Cabo to get away from the crowds, to look for a different quality of waves. When they come in, we are there,” says Jashua.
The conditions are demanding: **intense cold**, **capricious waves**, and **unpredictable consistency**. But when the sea aligns, the moment is unique.

## Surf as a transformative experience
Jashua takes his students to Cabo to live **another experience**. Not just faster waves, but a **different way of being in the sea**.
“There, you are not looking at your phone. You are with yourself, with the water, with the moment,” he explains.
He speaks of surfing as a **silent ritual**, where one enters the sea **with respect and gratitude**, without the need to prove anything.
In this Patagonian corner, the experience is not measured in meters of waves, but in **silence, aimless walks, and gazes lost on the horizon**. When the wave appears, there is no shouting: **it is appreciated**.
“The pioneers who traveled the coast looking for waves did it with values. People who seek to share,” Jashua recalls.
## Conscious tourism and wild spirit
More than a place to surf, **Cabo Raso** becomes a **spiritual refuge**.
A place where you can **listen to the sea without interference**, **live in the present**, and **honor the wild**. A space that is not visited by chance, but out of the need to **connect with the essential**.



