And all of us who continue to eat fish are complicit in allowing over 650,000 marine animals, including whales, dolphins, seals and turtles to be accidently killed in fishing nets each year. But there is nothing accidental about it.
People change. We can change. Adopting a plant-based diet is an act of love. It’s an easy way to make a big difference for the oceans.
It started with an announcement last night on social media.
HELP.
A Gray whale is entangled in fishing gear. The post appeared on our
community page. The whale was dragging two buoys with a net wrapped
around his body. He was just off shore from Los Barriles at dusk. So
far, some men in a boat were able to remove only minimal netting
before dark. Now at dawn, at first light I set out on my SUP with a
knife and my cell phone. The phone, to call friends to share
location, to summon others by boat to help, the knife, to cut the
whale free of the fishing net.
I’m going to stop you here. The story doesn’t end well, but wait,
nor does it end badly. It’s just that the story isn’t over yet. It
has yet to be written.
Out on my SUP, a couple of miles offshore, while searching for the
entangled whale I saw a sea lion and a green turtle as they extended
their heads like periscopes out of the water for a breath of air. I
saw one puffer fish struggling mightily, presumably dying from
abrasions most likely from the recent shrimp trawling vessels and
dozens of flying fish alive and well, but no Gray whale. The Gray
whale is one of the largest creatures on the planet, one of the most
beautiful, social, intelligent, graceful, and is a keystone species
for the survival of our oceans.
For 50 million years, the Humpback and Gray whales have migrated
6,000 miles along the western coast of North America from their
summer feeding grounds in the icy, fertile waters of the Bering Sea
to their winter birthing lagoons and playgrounds here in Baja,
México. Twice they’ve been hunted to the brink of extinction.
It’s difficult to imagine how or why, more than 120 pregnant whales
were killed recently along with 213 other whales during a hunt off
the coast of Antarctica. To have such little compassion is
astonishing. Japan seems determined to live in the Dark Ages by
continuing to kill and consume these awe-inspiring animals,
including pregnant females.
And all of us who continue to eat fish are complicit in allowing
over 650,000 marine animals, including whales, dolphins, seals and
turtles to be accidently killed in fishing nets each year. But there
is nothing accidental about it. Routinely, this kind of harm occurs
year after year. With numbers like those, killing whales and other
marine life is a part of doing business; it's just baked into the
product. Dead whales in fishing nets are just as much a part of
fish-tacos as are the dead whales of Japan’s whale hunts.
Here is where the story begins. Here is where the plot may turn and
twist. It’s up to us. You and I. We can write a new story with a
different ending. Sure, we don’t know where this entangled whale off
our coast is right now, but there are good people doing daring
interventions in order to cut the net and free the whale. It might
work. I have hope. But the real story, the untold story, the story
that has yet to be written is a love story. Whales (and fish) are
worth more alive in the ocean than dead in fishing nets or on our
dinner plates.
People change. We can change. Adopting a plant-based diet is an act
of love. It’s an easy way to make a big difference for the oceans.
Cultures, like our own that once hunted whales no longer do. We
don’t have to settle for over a half a million marine animals a year
dying from fishing gear entanglements. For far too long we’ve
treated the oceans as a free grocery store with little respect for
the wild animals trapped in our nets.
This is the beginning of the story. It starts with an announcement.
HELP. This new story of relating to the oceans with more respect and
kindness begins with one person. YOU.