Day 273 3/26/14: Consider the Lobster (and the Crab!)

10153885_10151908464905895_386163572_nAlthough lobsters look like alien beings and live in a world, that despite all of our exploration and exploitation of it, remains “other” to us, science has proven that these strange and humble animals do indeed feel pain in ways quite similar to the ways we do. If you have never read David Foster Wallace’s essay Consider the Lobster, please do. Assigned to cover the Maine Lobster Festival for Gourmet magazine, DFW’s exploration of the orgy of butter and cracking claws and kitsch, becomes about something much more profound.

Day 272 3/25/14: An Artist of the Endangered

“Obviously great whites have a nasty reputation,” says artist Dave White. “But in actual fact they’re fragile and beautiful.  I want people to look at how rare they are–that’s the crux of it all.”

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Day 270 3/23/14: Shark Surrealism: Artist Unknown

Don’t know the provenance of this nightmarish painting, but I like the colors. It seems that these pickled specimens  have come alive in their floating jars, seeking escape and revenge. As much as I want to get lost in the weird, dream-like imagery, I can’t stop thinking about how buying shark pups in jars (like purchasing shark jaws or teeth) encourages the slaughter of these already beleaguered fish. Maybe that’s what these angry little babies have come back to tell us. (Thanks, Helen!)Image

Day 269 3/22/14: Shark Fin Soup: Agony in a Bowl

I’m always thrilled and inspired by the endlessly creative ways one can be an activist.

(Thanks Jennifer Argenti for sending me this inventive short! )

Day 268: 3/21/14: Stop Rhode Island’s Shark Hunting Tournament

Dear Shark Friends,

It’s easy to get petition fatigue these days, but please speak out against this utterly pointless “monster” shark tournament.

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The picture says it all.

Sign and share and help this petition get 1,000 signatures.

Many thanks!

Day 267 3/20/14: Shark Dreams & Devil’s Teeth

If you love great white sharks, and haven’t read Susan Casey’s book “The Devil’s Teeth” a riveting account of studying white sharks in the Farrallon  Islands a place thirty miles west of San Francisco where “thirty knot winds, blanketing fog and fifteen-foot seas are standard,” do yourself a favor for GOD’S SAKE and order a copy!

You’ll uncover the fascinating history of this stark, forbidding island of stone, and learn all kinds of odd, fascinating facts (white sharks can actually get sun tans). You’ll meet sharks like Cuttail and 17-foot fish like Betty, Mama and Cadillac (collectively known as the Sisterhood)  and cranky 5,000 pound Stumpy who doesn’t like decoys.  Living in the rugged isolation of the Farallons, the logbooks that the researchers keep–records of feeding events, shark encounters, birds and other wildlife observed on the islands  “are the closest things the islands [have] to a native religion.”

The logbook also serves as a kind of dream diary.  51JVGXKEJHL._SY344_PJlook-inside-v2,TopRight,1,0_SH20_BO1,204,203,200_

“For years, I had a recurring dream—actually it hovered on the edge of nightmare territory—in which I floated at night, surrounded by large, unearthly fish. I could never see them clearly, but I knew the water was alive with them, all these hidden creatures, sweeping and circling. When I saw the Farrallones…the memory of these phantoms vaulted out of semi-retirement and into my consciousness. This was some weird water. What was going on beneath the surface?”

After Casey sees sharks for the first time at the Farallons, her dream phantoms appear again:

“That night the water dream returned, but this time the image was clearer. I recognized the sharks gliding by: Stumpy, Cuttail and the unknown Sister with her monstrous tail. For once, though, the dream didn’t strike me as strange. Out here shark dreams were so vivid there was a section in the logbook devoted to recounting them;  Scot had confessed that he still had them every night. In my dream it was dark, and I was alone, drifting in a small boat. Once again, I looked down as shadowy creatures swam beneath me, just barely visible by moonlight. And all night, majestic and terrible fish cruised through the…bedroom in otherworldly silence.”

Day 266 3/19/14: California’s Vanishing White Sharks

While I strive for at least some shred of originality in this blog, I wanted to ask again that you sign the gill net petition. Juvenile white sharks are getting caught in these underwater “walls of death” along with dolphins, whales, turtles and countless other species. 15,000 more signatures are needed so please share! safe_image.php

Day 265 3/18/14: Take Action: Ban Gill Nets in California

200024639-001Please sign Oceana’s petition to ban gill nets in California. Endangered whales, sea turtles, dolphins, sharks and other wildlife are caught in these nets that are meant to catch swordfish. You can see victims of California’s gill nets here. Warning: these are graphic images.