Featured Camp Instructor: Daniël Bertina – BJJ Globetrotters

Daniël Bertina BJJ

Daniël Bertina – BJJ Globetrotters

Age: 44
Belt: Black belt, third degree
Profession: Journalist, creative translator, teacher, dad

Started training (year): I think around 2000
City/country: Vietnamsterdam / Culemborg, The Netherlands

 

Main achievements in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu:

Mostly bronze & the occasional silver at a few comps here and there. I’m the first black belt awarded by Marcos ‘Flexa’ Neves, which I guess makes me the first Dutch black belt in the Carlson Gracie lineage.

 

Which Globetrotters camps have you attended:

I’ve been involved with BJJ Globetrotters since pretty much its inception, and usually I teach at one camp a year – because I have a life. So multiple visits to Copenhagen, Leuven, Heidelberg, Tallinn, Pärnu.

 

Which camp has been your favorite so far?

They’ve all been wonderful. It’s the people that make the camps great. Doesn’t really matter where we end up. Could be a shack in Zimbabwe & we’d make it a fun time.

 

Favorite stories/moments from the camps?

The surreal heat of the Leuven Sauna Bunker combined with free camp kimonos with faulty blue dye, that everyone who wore one into smurfs. Glorious, gluttonous meals in Heidelberg & Estonia with good folks. Building long-lasting friendships with people from all walks of life. Realizing jiu-jitsu can be a great tool for self-improvement and building a positive community.

 

Your favorite class/classes to teach at camp? 

Anything that involves maximum efficiency, minimal effort for mutual welfare & benefit. And massive, ungodly pressure.

 

Anything else you want to add to your profile:

I enjoy sport climbing, ecstatic dance and yoga. My aim is to be able to train until the day I die.

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Daniël Bertina – BJJ Globetrotters instructor

Summer Camp 2024: Nogi Dela riva with Nigel Heylen

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Summer Camp 2024: Shotgun armbars with Michael Currier

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Summer Camp 2024: Armbars on autofire with Christian Graugart

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Summer Camp 2024: Mastering the Russian 2-on-1: Control and Takedowns for BJJ with Bernie Antle

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Summer Camp 2024: Darce Attacks: A variety of setups and transitions using the Darce Choke with Scot Tudhope

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Featured affiliated academy: Hold Fast Grappling, Alaska

Hold Fast Grappling, Alaska

Where is the gym located?
Homer, Alaska, USA.

How many people train there?
Currently about 60 students.

Is the gym growing – if so by how many new members each month or year?
We get 4-5 new members each month

What are the highest and lowest belt grades training?
Currently we have white through brown belts training with us.

When did Hold Fast Grappling, Alaska open?
We opened June 2024.

Some facts about you:

Name: Jordan Kontra
Age: 43
Belt: 3rd degree Black Belt
Profession: Jiu Jitsu instructor
Years in BJJ: 18 years
Other martial arts: Sankyu in Judo, casual May Thai practitioner
Currently living in: Homer, Alaska
Originally from: Willow, Alaska

 

Please tell us the story of how your gym came into existence
A group of Jiu Jitsu enthusiasts approached us to help start a gym in Homer. After checking out the community we decided to take a leap of faith and make the move!

Tell us about the people that train in the gym – who are they?
We are the “bad news bears” at Hold Fast Grappling. Everything from fisherman, to policeman, to welders, to plastic surgeons, to authors.

Why do they train in Hold Fast Grappling, Alaska?
For community, health, and therapy.

What are some of the challenges of running a BJJ gym in general, and in your area specifically?
Generally the most difficult thing is realizing that I can’t save everyone with Jiu Jitsu the way Jiu Jitsu saved me. The best I can do is expose people to the sport, my passion for it, and the community.

Specifically: essentially the entire community is comprised of seasonal workers (fishing and tourism based) and we lose almost our entire student base for the summer months.

How do you see the future for BJJ in your area?
There’s a significant wrestling community in the area and with time I see a healthy crossover between the two.

What’s the best thing about Hold Fast Grappling, Alaska?
The best thing about our gym is the individuals within it. The group we have in the gym so far is ecstatic to have jiu jitsu available in their area. They’re hungry for it and clearly desire to share it with everyone they come across.

What would you recommend Globetrotters to see in your area apart from the inside of your gym?
It’s Alaska. Experience as much of it as possible while visiting. All things any outdoor enthusiast could ever desire and the beauty is never ending. Witness the majesty of mountains erupting directly from the ocean floor, wildlife directly outside your doorstep and as much adventure you can handle.

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Thanks for sharing! If you’d like to visit Hold Fast Grappling, Alaska you can contact them here.

Summer Camp 2024: Basic chain wrestling with Dustin Stoltzfus

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Featured traveller: MJ De Vega Föhr – BJJ Globetrotters

MJ De Vega Föhr - BJJ Globetrotters

Age: “One should never trust a woman who tells one her real age. A woman who would tell one that would tell one anything.” -Oscar Wilde

Belt: Blue (BJJ) and Brown (Judo)

Profession: I’m a practicing CPA in the state of Pennsylvania, specializing in corporate tax.

How many years in BJJ: My BJJ journey has been a rollercoaster, but I suppose everyone can say the same when COVID lockdowns threw a wrench on all our training lives. I started BJJ in 2013, training inconsistently, and stopped in 2016 to focus all my martial arts efforts on Judo.

Other martial arts: Judo.

Where do you live: Currently in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania since December 2023.

Where are you from: I was born in Manila, Philippines where I also spent my childhood. I moved to Los Angeles, California with my family when I was 14 years old.

Other fun or curious information you would like to share: My other passions in life are cooking and classic literature. If you’re a fan of classic literature, I’d love to hear your favorites!

MJ De Vega Föhr – BJJ Globetrotters

Tell us what inspired you to travel and train?
In 2012, I was stationed in Naples, Italy while serving on active duty in the US Navy. I was not a fan of running but because I needed to be able to pass a bi-annual physical test that included a timed 1.5 mile run, I needed to do some sort of cardio that I enjoyed. At an acquaintance’s recommendation, I tried BJJ. I was addicted.

In the first year, I trained BJJ almost daily. Sometimes, twice a day. Also in the first year, my beloved instructor, Marco Galzenati, passed away. I then turned to bodybuilding, something I can do in solitude. I grieved. I lost the fire that I had when I first fell in love with BJJ. A year after his death, I decided to travel around Europe and train at different gyms while also exploring the area’s culture, history, and culinary scenery. Sometime in 2013, I stumbled upon CSA in Copenhagen, and wrote to one of the instructors (at the time, our venerable Christian Graugart) to ask if I can drop in for a class — at the time. It also turned out to be the same week that he was hosting a multi-day-training event with different instructors. That, my friends, was the very first BJJ Globetrotter Camp. I started to enjoy BJJ again and this began a series of introductions to so many new, lifelong friends made at subsequent camps.

Tell us about your most recent travel and your upcoming travel – where have you been and where are you going?
Exactly a year ago, I spent a month in the Philippines to do some island hopping. El Nido is my favorite place for snorkeling. While Sardinia has pristine, emerald blue waters, El Nido has vibrant, colorful corals teeming with a variety of fishes.

A more recent trip was a week-long, summer road trip and camping through the Adirondacks. We stayed around the areas of Lake George and Lake Placid, host of the 1980 Winter Olympic Games.

In January, I’ll be in Hawaii for a week with my family. I no longer train martial arts when I’m on vacation with my family because I want to maximize the limited quality time we have.

MJ De Vega Föhr – BJJ Globetrotters

What are the things you enjoy about travelling?
My favorite aspect of traveling is the discovery and experience of something new.

Can you give us some examples of experiences you had that make it worth traveling and training?
What makes it worthwhile to both travel and train are the lifelong friendships I made along the way. Other than that, I don’t think too much of it anymore and I just enjoy the present.

MJ De Vega Föhr – BJJ Globetrotters

Are you a budget traveller – and if so how do you plan for a cheap trip?
I am a budget traveler in the sense that I plan my trip within the bounds of set financial constraints, which doesn’t always necessarily mean the trip will be cheap. There’s a Swabian saying: “The cheapest thing is the one you don’t buy.”

I think that if you would like to go on a cheap trip, then you have to go to cheap destinations or places where your currency has strong purchasing power. This will minimize the risk of finding yourself on social media with the captions “Destitute Foreigner Stranded In [Insert Southeast Asian country].” Jokes aside, luxurious or modest, I think it behooves anyone to set a budget for any trip, or any expense for that matter, to avoid a snowball of debt because interest makes everything more expensive.

If you were to pass on travel advice to your fellow Globetrotters, what would it be?
I don’t like to give advice because I think people should do whatever they want to do, but I’ll say that years ago, I used to travel and train both Judo and Jiu Jitsu when I visit a new place. Now, if I travel with friends and family, I don’t train at all. I spend all that quality time with my loved ones. I used to be selfish and plan trips with friends and family, fly halfway across the globe, only to let them know I’m stepping out for a Jiu Jitsu session. Obviously, this is something I can do at home so I realized it was selfish of me to have people fly halfway across the globe only for me to miss out on potentially the best memories we could have together. While Jiu Jitsu is great, it’s only just one of many aspects of our lives.

Thank you to MJ De Vega Föhr – BJJ Globetrotters for making this interview!

Summer Camp 2024: Empty half guard with Michael Currier

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Summer Camp 2024: Wrestling Up Warriors: Elevate your game by wrestling up from the bottom with Hillary Puentes-Witt

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USA Camp 2024: Turtle top strangulations with Sigurgeir Heiðarsson

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USA Camp 2024: Half-back 101: How and why we’re not using both hooks with Ryan Fennelly

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