Search
Become a Subscriber

Receive YourLifeIsATrip by Email

Enter your email address:

Preview | Powered by FeedBlitz

Bookmark and Share

Subscribe via RSS feed

Catch up with us on:
Support This Site
Please visit our sponsors

Russian River Cruise

Prague Apartment Accommodation

Visit The Post Office for foreign currency exchange and American Express Travellers Cheques at 0% commission

Access to over 600 airport lounges worldwide with Priority Pass

Traveling to a particular country? Make the most of your trip with Lonely Planet Country Guides.

Priceline.com Airfare - Choose your EXACT flight & time!

Save up to 25% on Last Minute Adventure Travel Packages GAdventures

Travel Insurance: Simple & Flexible WorldNomads.com

ReboundTag.com: Microchip your possession. 

Advertisement

Read More By Our Contributors

Savings from our partners

 

 

 
 
 

You can always extend your policy while you are away.

 

 

Visit Our Sister Sites

Navigation
Powered by Squarespace

Sure, it's difficult. Sure there are obstacles and setbacks. Sometimes it's crazy, astounding, amazing, funny, frustrating, and exasperating, but no matter what happens...life is always a trip! 

Entries in ban whale watching (1)

Monday
Aug032009

Killing whales loudly, with their song

by Eric Lucas

If it’s August, whales are suffering.

I live on America’s Pacific Coast, a world-famous summertime visitor destination where hordes of ordinary, well-meaning people harass, torment and torture some of the world’s most charismatic wild creatures. The whales that ply our seas—especially the breathtaking, much-loved orcas of inland Northwest waters—wake up each morning, June through September, to the approaching howl of boat engines. They spend their days dodging a huge fleet of boats packed with googoo-eyed tourists who think they are at a Roller Derby match, an impression exacerbated by tour-boat operators who “honor” their so-called voluntary guidelines just like athletes do steroids prohibitions.

There are less than 100 Puget Sound orcas left. Holdovers from the days this inland sea wasn’t an exurban pond, they forage in waters fouled with urban runoff and toxic contaminants; they chase down remnants of our once-massive salmon runs, now reduced to trickles of minnows; they come up for air amid the whale-watch hordes to breathe clouds of engine exhaust.

And, underwater, all day, they listen to unspeakable nonstop caterwauling.

“Like a rocket ship taking off,” reports a Canadian scientific researcher who studied the noise impacts of whale-watching on the industry’s victims. He hung a hydrophone in the water and measured the decibels.

Try to imagine life, 10 hours a day, with a hundred or so helicopters buzzing a few feet overhead. That’s what it’s like for Puget Sound orcas.

Click to read more ...

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...