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Skipjack, seiners, and the sea - Week 3: Signs of life

This article continues from a previous post.

Come together, right now... under me

Come together, right now... under me

So another week has passed, and life aboard the Esperanza goes on relatively unchanged.  The air is muggy and heavy, tempered only by an ephemeral breeze, weak to the point of being almost imaginary.  The furious equatorial sun rises above the bow and slices the bridge open in the morning, spends the day beating its chest high in the sky, and finally tires itself out, slipping astern, red and exhausted beneath the indigo sea.

We still press on eastward, slowly gobbling up the massive distance between us and our final port, keeping watch for the purse seiners that ply these waters.  We also have daily watches that consist of various crew members staring at the sea, searching desperately for fish aggregating devices (FADs) — small rafts or buoys used by skipjack seiners that draw many different kinds of fish together, causing the bycatch problems that brought us out to the middle of the Pacific Ocean in the first place.

The problem is, we haven’t been able to find any of these things.  At least, not until a few days ago.

Ghost ship

Ghost ship

On Wednesday night, a blip appeared on the Esperanza radar screen.  It was over twenty miles out, moving quickly, and in completely the wrong direction, so direct confrontation was out of the question.  Still, we were able to raise the ship on the radio.  A short conversation confirmed that we had indeed found a purse seine vessel.  It was steaming northwest, off to find FADs that it had deposited earlier.

Since we were not going to be able to intercept it, we elected to use some subterfuge.  Without disclosing who we were, we mined the seiner’s radio operator for information.  A cordial discussion yielded some excellent direction about where we could go to “find some fish,” and where a “private vessel” such as ourselves could reasonably expect to find “productive fishing grounds.”

We cross-referenced the information we got from the seiner with our charts.  Everything was matching up — climactic anomalies, plankton blooms, underwater topography — and it all highlighted one particular area as a potential magnet for neighborhood skipjack poachers.  Luckily, this target zone was directly on our course, about a week away at full steam.

What're you looking at?

Aww.. you say such nice things

At present, we’re only about three days away.  The crew is energetic, and standard watches on the bridge have been augmented with volunteer labor by officers and deckhands that are eager to see some action.  We’ve seen increased signs of life as well in recent days, with pods of spinner dolphins cavorting off the bow and innumerable birds circling off the foredeck.  Flying fish continue to provide a beautiful distraction, especially when entire shoals of the delicate little creatures rise from the waves in unison, hundreds of  glimmering pairs of wings stretched akimbo, tiny shining bodies gliding effortlessly into the air as the ship splits the water just behind them.

More next week.  At the risk of being overconfident, I’m quite certain that I’ll have something more substantial to report by the time next Monday rolls around.

This article continues in a subsequent post.

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The Cove

Posted by Casson on Aug 14, 2009 in News and Announcements, Photos and Video

One of the most important things that we can do for the planet this weekend is as simple as treating ourselves to a movie.

The United States is dotted with parks and facilities that ostensibly exist to celebrate the beauty of the ocean and its inhabitants.  While I won’t name names, I’m talking about those grandiose, concrete-bunker tourist abominations that allow patrons contrived splash-zone experiences with kidnapped cetaceans.  Porpoises, dolphins, and even orca are included in these marine circus acts.  We watch the animals leaping through hoops and frantically clicking for their daily mackerel fix, all the while remaining blissfully ignorant of how these animals came to arrive in their current situation.

There is a ghastly, bloodthirsty force behind this calliope-and-carousel facade:  the dolphin capture industry.  It operates in a small, hidden bay outside Taiji, Japan, and it has finally been exposed for the monstrosity that it is by Louis Psihoyos’ new crime flick-cum-documentary, The Cove.

Winner of numerous Audiences Awards around the world, including the 2009 Sundance Film Festival, Silver Docs and Hot Docs, The Cove follows an Ocean’s Eleven-style team of underwater sound and camera experts, special effects artists, marine explorers, adrenaline junkies and world-class free divers as they carry out an undercover operation to expose unspeakable cruelties that, in this tiny Japanese bay, have become a way of life.

Utilizing state-of-the art techniques, including hidden microphones and cameras couched in fake rocks, the team uncovers how this small seaside village serves as a horrifying microcosm of massive ecological crimes happening worldwide. The Cove is the result of the team’s journey to Taiji: a provocative mix of investigative journalism, eco-adventure and arresting imagery that adds up to an urgent plea for hope.

I urge all readers of this blog to see what the New York Times calls “one of the most audacious and perilous operations in the history of the conservation movement,” and what Rolling Stone describes as “a cross between Flipper and The Bourne Identity.”

Witness the truth behind dolphin captivity, and help us bring this reprehensible, barbaric industry to its knees.

For a complete listing of showtimes and locations, please click here.

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