Archive for the 'Whales' Category

Whales and 2012

Sunday, February 7th, 2010

Our world has been shaken by big changes in these last years, financial, social environmental and political changes.

And not only in the last couple of years. Since World War 2 one may say we live on another planet. It looks more and more as if two forces were tearing in opposite directions in the different parts of the world; progress versus clinging to dogmas; opening versus shutting down.

Scientists search for the reasons of the global warming, governments try to impose regulations while big industries continue to exploit and destroy the last wildlife spaces.

For thousands of years, wise people from all parts of the planet have warned that this time would come. In different pictures, different stories, native shamans, healers and priests wrote down what they read in the stars and what they had learned from their forefathers.

The Maya called it ‘The End of Time’ and we know now that it will happen in the year 2012.

Many people want to press the lemon and make their fortune with it. In horror pictures and fantastic projections they paint the end of the world, while scientists with open hearts and open minds begin to see another reality.

We are not facing “the End of the World” but the “End of a World Age”

We change from Pisces to Aquarius in the 25624-year long voyage through the signs, and the old cultures knew about this as one can see on the famous disc of the zodiac signs in the Hathor Temple of Dendera in Egypt. (I’ve just been there, splendid!)

Now we not only enter a new Zodiac sign, we are at the end of a 5125-year cycle and at the same time at the most distant point of our solar system from the center of our Galaxy. In ancient scriptures this was called the Kali Yuga, the dark time, where we lose the connection to the Central Energy.*

But what is the importance of the whales in this?

The whales are the biggest still living mammals on our planet. They have been here before us and are said to have access to the akashic records.

All other animals of this size, the dinosaurs for example, have disappeared by natural catastrophes or simply because they could not adapt to the changes quickly enough.

Whales are highly conscious beings and able to communicate on a conscious level, like the dolphins. Research shows, that they have a language and communicate all over the globe. They have important things to tell us, if only we would listen. Mankind has killed them for survival, with equal chances for both.  Then industrial demands augmented and with it the number of whaling ships and almost no one who used the products, knew where they came from or lost any thoughts about the atrocious death pains of the victims.

 

Whales are protected now by law, but not all Nations see the absolute necessity to adhere to this convention. Three Nations still continue the cruel trade of whaling, hidden under the name of “Scientific Research” in Japan, in Norway they say that whales and dolphins eat too much fish, Iceland may be just to make money.

There is no scientific research! Except perhaps to determine how long a person can eat whale before showing empoisoning symptoms with mercury and other toxic chemicals our oceans, and thus the beings at the top of the food-chain, are polluted with.  The same is valid for the military research of Ultra Low Sonar waves to detect submarines; how many whales have to die from loss of their orientation systems before the first enemy vessel is detected?

We need the whales and all still naturally living animals, all the last pristine untouched spaces on this planet to give our planet the chance to cross this challenging time-limit of December 21 in the year 2012, to give us the chance to enter into the Golden Age, a higher level of consciousness and give humanity the chance to use the technical and scientific discoveries for what humanity was made to become:

The conscious connection between Matter and Energy,

Brain and Heart,

 To make our world a better place to live on.

 

*see Fractal Times, Gregg Braden

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Politics and Whales

Saturday, July 18th, 2009

How can politics have a positive impact on the survival of the whales? 

I do not watch TV-news very often; there are too much negative affirmations and too few search for positive solutions in my opinion. It’s as if good news did not raise the same interest from the public.

But yesterday I switched on TV just in time to hear that Iceland, this northern country known for her volcanoes, her hot springs and her recent financial breakdown, had decided to apply for the admission into the European Union. Another one, I thought, for even though I had been a fervent supporter of the EU in the beginning, feeling the effects of it in our daily life I have cooled off a bit. It will take some more time and lots of talking until Europe will be really One and yet allowing each member to maintain its unique customs and qualities.

And now Iceland wants to join the big family. As we all know, Iceland has started whaling again last year. The big EU-countries Germany, France, Italy, Netherlands, Austria, are strictly against whaling. So it would be impossible to allow a country into the Union that still practices this cruel and completely unnecessary industry, especially as it is for purely financial gain of some shortsighted and unscrupulous individuals and the indigene people do not depend on the flesh to survive. Iceland is a modern country and it’s not to her favor to continue slaughtering already endangered species. The EU could never admit a new country as a full member that does not respect certain essential conditions for the protection of the environment. So there is hope that soon, even before the admission is legal, Iceland will have to stop whaling.

Welcome Iceland and thank you for saving the lives of the whales.

Hopefully the time will come when the last two whaling nations Norway and Japan might be brought to revise their politics concerning whaling, dolphin slaughter and fishery practices, maybe by the power of economic pressure: cars, TVs and other products against the life of marine mammals …

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Dolphins and the „Flipper – Syndrome”

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

Dolphins – the word alone brings a bright shimmer in the eyes of children and a nostalgic smile on the lips of adults. For decades now, our daily life has been accompanied by the image of this intelligent and so friendly, playful hero of TV-serials, named Flipper. Through him, we think we know all about dolphins and all dolphins must be like he was.

It was the same with this famous dog “Lassie”, so famous that suddenly a race of dogs changed name from Collie to Lassie, which simply means little girl in Scottish. I had a Collie, a big beautiful male named Prince and whenever crossing children on the street, the call of “Lassie, Lassie” followed us.

The children growing up with these images often are so programmed that they carry on this image into their adult life and then behave in the same way; for example when having the opportunity to swim with dolphins in the ocean, if by chance or by organized boat-trips.

There is a deep desire to touch; to cling to the dorsal fin and ride the waves … living a little bit of magic and be the hero!

The dolphin called Flipper was, as all the film-animals, a captive, trained animal and had a role to play, rewarded with fish. He died in the arms of his trainer, having shut his blowhole and thus stopped respiration, willing to die. He was not sick, he was just tired, tired of the captive life.

When swimming with dolphins and whales, we are strangers in their element and should behave exactly as we would like strangers to behave in our homes: friendly and with respect and not trampling around and spreading havoc.

Dolphins as other marine mammals have very sensitive perceptions; with their sonar they scan you and detect your feelings towards them. The simple thought of “I want to touch” makes a dolphin swim away. Or he stays out of sight, almost laughing at you. Quite often I have experiences this when swimming with a group of people that the dolphin swam behind a person for some time without being seen but observing the man or woman very carefully. So how is it that some people meet dolphins easily and others can’t catch an eyeful of them?

Well, as I said before, dolphins can read your feelings. They not only know you by the way you come to meet them, for example over-arm swimming is felt as threatening by them, but they sense your heart and through this organ you can communicate with them. The old Egyptians knew it and the heart was the organ to be finally weighed to judge the person. The brain was scraped out of the scull as useless … that should make us think – with the heart!

And it is amazing what communications can take place between man and dolphin. One day I had a woman in my group who could not swim but her greatest wish was to meet the dolphins in the ocean and it took a lot of courage from her to come on the boat and even more to get into the water. Even though she had a life-jacket and an experienced swimming instructor at her side, she felt very insecure and could not enjoy the experiment. I swam some yards behind her when a dolphin came up close to me, looking at me as if asking what the poor woman was doing there. So I told him in my heart that she could not swim and was very afraid in the water but that she wanted so much to see a dolphin swimming in the sea, at least once.

He understood and slowly, as not to frighten her, swam up to her, looking at her and turning around her at just arm-length and then saying good bye and disappearing in the blue depth. For her it was the ultimate realization of her desire, this alone had been worth the whole voyage.

We know so little of this hidden underwater world and yet destroy it without even thinking about. It’s still time to change …. Who knows for how long?

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Man, Whales and Money.

Saturday, March 28th, 2009

In the beginning of humanity men were hunters and gatherers.  They lived from what nature offered and adapted their lifestyle to the conditions around them. They took what they needed to sustain the clan, hunting and collecting fruit and grain in summer to survive the long hard winter if ever they did not move with the seasons to avoid the hardship of ice and snow.

They started using clumsy tools of their own making, inventing new ones and improving them, learning from life.

These times have long passed. We live in abundance, everything is obtainable,   there are all kinds of products on the shelves of the super markets and yet, the hunter still lives in the memory of the cells of man.

Some kill for sport, some say nature needs help to regulate itself, some don’t even think about what they are doing.

And some do it for profit. They disguise it with a scientific name so it becomes acceptable to the public opinion.

These are only mice, rats, rabbits, monkeys or… whales?

This year the Japanese Government has announced that nine hundred whales are going to be killed for their Scientific Research Program. Norway and Iceland are opening their whaling season in the beginning of May, as soon as the waters are free from ice. These two countries do not really consume whale flesh as a base of their nutrition like Japanese people do where whaling has a long tradition there. They slaughter whales for money and because they pretend whales eat too much fish so there is not enough left to feed the people.

Millions of dollars are made every year with the slaughter of whales. What the men responsible for this kind of industry seem to forget is that whales can’t be raised like cattle. They have their migration routes, their mating and birthing places and the moment the whales are extinguished at one place, the chance that others fill the gap is very thin.

There are many whale species just at the limit of survival because the population is so low that the natural laws of procreation are not guaranteed. And they are still hunted and slaughtered in the most horrible way.

It is as if mankind was blinded by the glitter of gold not to see the beauty and majesty of these noble beings and the important role they play in the balance of the life on this planet.

What will our children’s children tell their children when being asked: ”Mum, what is a whale? Where does he live? Can we go and see one?” They will have to tell them that their ancestors have killed all, up to the last one – for money that is long gone.  

 

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