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	<title><![CDATA[Grist - Comment Feed for A five part journey to protect the oceans]]></title>
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            <title>Comment #1 by caniscandida</title>
			<link>http://www.grist.org/article/ocean-voyager/</link>
			<pubDate>Wed, 07 Jun 2006 23:27:06 -0700</pubDate>
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				<p><strong>wonderful site</strong></p><p>Thanks for posting this, Andrew, it is fascinating and very well done.</p><p>
(Even if they mis-identify the WWF as "World Wildlife Federation." &nbsp;But it is hard to get the WWF right; nowadays they seem to be calling themselves "WWF, formerly known as the World Wildlife Fund." &nbsp;That sort of thing may, or may not, have worked for Prince ... )</p><p>
I hear what you are saying about "not playing favorites," and I agree that that is a good thing and that the Oceana site does it very well. &nbsp;Still, it helps to be photogenic.</p><p>
E.g., one of their featured projects is the work of Ken Balcomb and the Center for Whale Research with the San Juan orcas off Washington. &nbsp;Balcomb is fortunate to have been joined by the cetacean-loving activist-photographer Hardy Jones, who was featured in a recently aired episode of Nature; and so the Oceana site has up on view some remarkable orca video material, including a live birth, and a few seconds showing the mother pushing her new-born to the surface. &nbsp;Meanwhile, here in the Northeast, the Provincetown Center for Coastal Studies has been doing important work with cetaceans, including a whale-rescue program, and with the entire ecosystem round about Cape Cod, for years. &nbsp;And they are just one of several serious research centers working around the Gulf of Maine.</p><p>
Ken Balcomb likes to bring his dog Tsuchi, an Irish setter I think, on board his boat, because the orcas poke their heads up out of the water to look at the dog. &nbsp;Balcomb says, they are curious, and want to examine this strange new creature. &nbsp;That could be. &nbsp;It could also be that the dog and the orcas are communicating on some level beyond our understanding. &nbsp;And it could also be that, since orcas famously have a sweet tooth for members of the Order Carnivora, especially Pinnipedidae but also Mustelidae -- sea otters -- , they might be eager to have a taste of Canidae, and are saying to themselves, "I hope that nice human being will just drop that little treat into the water near me."<br>
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				<p><strong>wonderful site</strong></p><p>Thanks for posting this, Andrew, it is fascinating and very well done.</p><p>
(Even if they mis-identify the WWF as "World Wildlife Federation." &nbsp;But it is hard to get the WWF right; nowadays they seem to be calling themselves "WWF, formerly known as the World Wildlife Fund." &nbsp;That sort of thing may, or may not, have worked for Prince ... )</p><p>
I hear what you are saying about "not playing favorites," and I agree that that is a good thing and that the Oceana site does it very well. &nbsp;Still, it helps to be photogenic.</p><p>
E.g., one of their featured projects is the work of Ken Balcomb and the Center for Whale Research with the San Juan orcas off Washington. &nbsp;Balcomb is fortunate to have been joined by the cetacean-loving activist-photographer Hardy Jones, who was featured in a recently aired episode of Nature; and so the Oceana site has up on view some remarkable orca video material, including a live birth, and a few seconds showing the mother pushing her new-born to the surface. &nbsp;Meanwhile, here in the Northeast, the Provincetown Center for Coastal Studies has been doing important work with cetaceans, including a whale-rescue program, and with the entire ecosystem round about Cape Cod, for years. &nbsp;And they are just one of several serious research centers working around the Gulf of Maine.</p><p>
Ken Balcomb likes to bring his dog Tsuchi, an Irish setter I think, on board his boat, because the orcas poke their heads up out of the water to look at the dog. &nbsp;Balcomb says, they are curious, and want to examine this strange new creature. &nbsp;That could be. &nbsp;It could also be that the dog and the orcas are communicating on some level beyond our understanding. &nbsp;And it could also be that, since orcas famously have a sweet tooth for members of the Order Carnivora, especially Pinnipedidae but also Mustelidae -- sea otters -- , they might be eager to have a taste of Canidae, and are saying to themselves, "I hope that nice human being will just drop that little treat into the water near me."<br>
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