The Arizona Republic

Flake takes tech executives on Pacific isle survivalis­t trip

- Jeannette Hinkle

Jeff Flake had a fish on the end of a spear, and the sharks circling him in the blue waters of the Pacific knew it.

The former Republican senator from Arizona was on his fourth survivalis­t expedition, this time with a group of tech executives from Utah-based Podium, which offers cloud-based software for businesses.

While a member of Congress, Flake became known for his quirky, “Robinson Crusoe”-style trips to the remote Marshall Islands, starting in 2009. He even participat­ed in a 2014 Discovery Channel show there with fellow Sen. Martin Heinrich, D-N.M.

Flake said the shark moment was one of many that stood out from his most recent trip to Jabonwod, a deserted spate of land that is part of the islands.

The group arrived on the island with few supplies. They had desalinati­on pumps to purify seawater to drink, pole spears and snorkel gear to catch fish, a magnifying glass to start fires, and some machetes, which they used to hack open green coconuts for their milk and meat. They each had a hammock.

Flake said the group spent their days in the water catching fish, and, at night, they trekked into the island’s jungle interior, hunting and trapping massive coconut crabs.

On the first day, the group caught a sizable grouper, one of the most substantia­l meals they had during their five days on the remote island. By about the third day, the low-calorie count started to wear on the group, Flake said, but testing limits is part of the allure of a survivalis­t trip.

“You’re weak and hungry, but you’re all sitting around the fire splitting up what small fish you’re able to spear or what crab you’re able to catch or the coconuts and it is a true team-building exercise,” he said. “You find out what you’re made of.”

Flake said he wondered how the tech executives would fare as survivalis­ts going into the trip, but each person quickly found a way to contribute.

“I worried that there would be one or two that might not want to really participat­e, might want to stay in the hammock all day or not pull their weight, but everybody seemed to find something that they were best at and do it well,” Flake said.

The trip functioned as more than an extreme attempt at team building. Flake said the executives at Podium were interested in assisting residents of the Marshall Islands, who are at risk of being displaced by rising sea levels associated with climate change.

“They said, we do technology. We can’t do much about climate change, our little company, but we can help the population be prepared for life elsewhere,” Flake said.

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