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Related: About this forumPlease keep this going around the world..
Denmark is a big shame.The sea is stained in red and in the meanwhile its not because of the climate effects of nature.
http://mp.weixin.qq.com/s?__biz=MjM5NDM0NTA2Mg%3D%3D&mid=10100142&idx=7&sn=2338d5d305296bc264ba02c8620c3c69&scene=4#rd
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Please keep this going around the world.. (Original Post)
hue
Jan 2014
OP
Scuba
(53,475 posts)1. That is indeed shameful. Thanks hue.
Lilyhoney
(1,985 posts)2. You need to put a graphic warning.
I agree everyone should know about this. It is so important.
I am angry that I had to see that image.
Put up the warning.
polly7
(20,582 posts)3. As much as I agree that these hunts are barbaric, just as the seal hunts
are here in Canada, as well as the millions/billions? of cattle, pigs and chickens raised and killed in horrible ways all around the planet, a small quibble ..... the Faroe Islands are an autonomous province of Denmark and not a part of Denmark itself, and a bit more information:
Origins: We don't exactly when and where the photographs displayed above were taken, but they're consistent with other documentation of the hunting of long-finned pilot whales (not dolphins) by residents of the Faroe Islands (which are an autonomous province of Denmark), a subject that has long been a subject of controversy.
The whale hunt has been a part of the Faroe Island culture for hundreds of years, but in recent decades the practice has increasingly become the subject of international protest and condemnation. Supporters of the hunt maintain that the killing of pilot whales is "an age-old communal, noncommercial hunt aimed at meeting the community's need for whale meat and blubber," that the animals are dealt with so quickly that their pain is brief, and that whale meat accounts for a quarter of the Faroe islanders' annual meat consumption. Conservationists charge that the hunts, which may take hundreds of whales at a time, are barbaric and pointless, that "the practice is outdated, cruel and unnecessary for a place with one of the highest standards of living in Europe," and that most of the whales go to waste (either being left on the beach to rot or thrown back to sea after they are killed.
Read more at http://www.snopes.com/photos/hunting/dolphinhunt.asp#cUIrZA7kRCSwk0kV.99
The whale hunt has been a part of the Faroe Island culture for hundreds of years, but in recent decades the practice has increasingly become the subject of international protest and condemnation. Supporters of the hunt maintain that the killing of pilot whales is "an age-old communal, noncommercial hunt aimed at meeting the community's need for whale meat and blubber," that the animals are dealt with so quickly that their pain is brief, and that whale meat accounts for a quarter of the Faroe islanders' annual meat consumption. Conservationists charge that the hunts, which may take hundreds of whales at a time, are barbaric and pointless, that "the practice is outdated, cruel and unnecessary for a place with one of the highest standards of living in Europe," and that most of the whales go to waste (either being left on the beach to rot or thrown back to sea after they are killed.
Read more at http://www.snopes.com/photos/hunting/dolphinhunt.asp#cUIrZA7kRCSwk0kV.99
According to a Faroe Islands whaling site, such hunts unfold as follows:
Whale drives only take place when a school of pilot whales is sighted close to land, which is most often from a local fishing boat or ferry, and when sea and weather conditions make it possible. This can take place at any time of the year, but catches are most common in July and August when the days are long and the weather is more stable. Notice of the school is sent to the elected whaling officials and to the district administrator (sýslumaður) responsible for the whale drive, and is spread as widely and quickly as possible in the local community so that enough people and boats can join in the drive. Employers usually make allowances for members of their staff to take time off during whale drives.
Faroese animal welfare legislation, which also applies to whaling, requires that animals are killed as quickly and with as little suffering as possible. Whales are killed on the shore and in the shallows of bays especially authorised for the purpose. A regulation spinal lance must be used to sever the spinal cord, which also severs the major blood supply to the brain, ensuring both loss of consciousness and death within seconds. This, in addition to the supplementary use of the traditional whaling knife, if necessary, is the most efficient and humane means of killing beached pilot whales safely, with many participants involved at the same time.
Whale drives only take place when a school of pilot whales is sighted close to land, which is most often from a local fishing boat or ferry, and when sea and weather conditions make it possible. This can take place at any time of the year, but catches are most common in July and August when the days are long and the weather is more stable. Notice of the school is sent to the elected whaling officials and to the district administrator (sýslumaður) responsible for the whale drive, and is spread as widely and quickly as possible in the local community so that enough people and boats can join in the drive. Employers usually make allowances for members of their staff to take time off during whale drives.
Faroese animal welfare legislation, which also applies to whaling, requires that animals are killed as quickly and with as little suffering as possible. Whales are killed on the shore and in the shallows of bays especially authorised for the purpose. A regulation spinal lance must be used to sever the spinal cord, which also severs the major blood supply to the brain, ensuring both loss of consciousness and death within seconds. This, in addition to the supplementary use of the traditional whaling knife, if necessary, is the most efficient and humane means of killing beached pilot whales safely, with many participants involved at the same time.
Read more at http://www.snopes.com/photos/hunting/dolphinhunt.asp#cUIrZA7kRCSwk0kV.99