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Doe mee met de Cove Guardians en help de zinloze slachting van dolfijnen in Taiji, Japan te stoppen!Taiji, Japan

** View our Impressions from the Front Lines **
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Ieder jaar worden in Japan 20.000 dolfijnen, bruinvissen en kleine walvissen afgeslacht. Van 1 september tot meestal ver in maart van het volgende jaar drijven vissers hele scholen kleine walvisachtigen een ondiepe baai in, waarna ze ze genadeloos neersteken en verdrinken.

Deze jaarlijkse slachting van dolfijnen was tot 2003 vrijwel onbekend, tot Sea Shepherd heimelijk verkregen film’s en foto’s van de inmiddels beruchte bloederige “Cove” in het dorp Taiji wereldkundig maakte.

Vanaf 2010 staan er vrijwilligers van Sea Shepherd permanent op wacht bij de Cove.
Dit zijn de Cove Guardians.

Met uw hulp zullen we doorgaan met het onder druk zetten van Japan om deze wrede en vernietigende slachting van dolfijnen te beëindigen.

Omdat we gepassioneerd, trouw en toegewijd zijn kan het misschien enige tijd duren, maar uiteindelijk zal volharding overwinnen voor de dolfijnen in Taiji. Wij nodigen u uit om deze website te verkennen en ons te steunen!

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Impressions from the Front Lines

Operation Infinite Patience 2011-2012 saw volunteers from across the globe travel to Taiji at their own expense to participate as Cove Guardians. This international crew included volunteers from the US, South Africa, Australia, Germany, Mexico, Brazil, Ecuador, Canada, UK, Italy, France, Belgium, Switzerland, Netherlands, and Japan. Members of this campaign have selected images that are particularly meaningful to each of them. These words and images are personal accounts of these brave volunteers' experiences in Taiji as Cove Guardians.

 

Adriane Bhattarai, Canada

Though my time in Taiji was short, fit between my wedding and honeymoon, and I was so grateful that during this time all the pods found managed to evade capture, watching the process after capture has continued to weigh heavily on my heart and spirit. Hour after hour, day after day sitting in silence; watching, filming, photographing. Seeing them all fade away so quickly. Seeing the ones that give up right away, breaking my heart at every glance. The first time at the Dolphin Resort I stood watching the pens, counting. Counting in my mind the measurements of the pens, counting and wondering how many people have the numb conscience to work there, counting how many fins broke through the water's surface. As the fins kept coming I thought there could not possibly be anymore dolphins in a single pen, then one more would show up until it seemed as though there was more body than water.  Upon arrival I was told that there were two dolphins who had managed to escape their pen but were still circling the floating enclosures. They do tricks, flips, head bobbing, and high jumps for the attention of the trainers. They were begging to be fed and though they were free from the pens they were trapped in their bonds with the other pod members and the formation of the land around them. I do not know how long that had gone without food inside the pens but the difference of only a few days without showed their skeletal structure. They were wasting away and those responsible would not care.

The day they were recaptured, lured in by food with the wall of nets dropping behind them, that day haunts me. The morning after, they were free once more and the elation from us all was outstanding to feel. The next evening we sat on the stones waiting, hoping to see those flukes pop up on the free side of the nets. At first there was hope they had found their way to open waters. An hour of counting fins and waiting, hoping to not see any more in that far rear enclosure crashed down us. There was no denying they had been captured for yet a third time in their lives. Staying with them until the sun began to set that evening I snapped this photo. They were jumping so far and so high at times I thought for sure this leap would be the leap of escape, ending always in a splash on the wrong side of the pen. In this photo walls cannot be seen, nets cannot be felt, and hands cannot hold down.  When I see this photo now all I want to say is, "if you will not let them swim, just please let them fly."

Upon my arrival in Taiji, I was told that there were two dolphins who had managed to escape their pen but were still circling the floating enclosures. They were begging to be fed and though they were free from the pens they were trapped in a bond with their other pod members and the formation of the land around them. I do not know how long they had gone without food inside the pens, but the difference of only a few days without showed their skeletal structure. They were wasting away and those responsible would not care. The day they were recaptured, lured in by food with the wall of nets dropping behind them, that day haunts me. They were able to get free once again and again were captured. Staying with them until the sun began to set that evening I snapped this photo. They were jumping so far and so high at times I thought for sure this leap would be the leap of escape, ending always in a splash on the wrong side of the pen. In this photo walls cannot be seen, nets cannot be felt, and hands cannot hold down.  When I see this photo now all I want to say is, "if you will not let them swim, just please let them fly."

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