Info take from Sea Shepherds' livestream website:  http://taiji.ezearth.tv/
 

The dolphin drive hunts in Taiji do not just end in the killing of the 
dolphins.  Taiji is “ground zero” for international trade in live dolphins.  
There is money – big money – in the captive dolphin entertainment industry.  
Without the money the FU makes from the live trade business, it is doubtful 
that the Taiji FU would be able to sustain the killing of dolphins.  The 
operation is expensive.  We understand that the FU makes about $32,000 USD for 
each live dolphin it captures.  Trained dolphins sell for much, much more.  
There is a direct link between the captive dolphin entertainment industry and 
the bloody waters of the Cove in Taiji.  Supporting a live dolphin show or 
participating in a confined swim-with-dolphin program anywhere in the world is 
the same as slicing open a dolphin in Taiji.  The dolphin entertainment 
industry drives the hunt.  The killing of the dolphins follows in its wake.  
Well-intentioned marine mammal trainers
 and the dolphin-show-viewing public all have the blood of innocent dolphins on 
their hands.

For the dolphins pulled from their families and sold into captivity, life is 
beyond horrible.  Even those dolphins born in captivity exist in prison-like 
conditions.  It is now illegal in the United States to import a dolphin which 
has been caught in the wild, so there is a big business in captive-bred 
dolphins.  One wonders though how many of the so-called captive bred dolphins 
imported into the US each year are actually wild-caught.  Even the captive-bred 
dolphins most likely have ancestors who were captured in Taiji.  The link to 
the killing in Taiji is undeniable, and unavoidable.
Banger Boats

Taiji is located in a protected nook off of a bay.  The rocky land soars up 
from the water along the coast there.  The water in the bay is shallow and 
there are many rock spurs and islets.  Near the entrance to Taiji harbor is the 
entrance to the infamous Cove.  The rock spurs, islets, and shallows create a 
natural funnel right into the entrance of the Cove.

There are a dozen small fishing boats in Taiji equipped with metal poles on 
their sides.  These boats go out into the ocean off the Wakayama coast each 
morning at first light.  They fan out and start patrolling in the known dolphin 
migratory routes looking for pods of dolphins or small whales.  They often go 
over the horizon.  They also look for seabirds because the birds will follow 
the dolphins looking for an easy meal from the fish the dolphins chase.  Once a 
hunting boat finds a pod, the operator will radio to the other boats.  While 
the others are racing to that location, the first boat will follow the pod.  
Once there are five or more hunting boats on the scene, they will herd the 
dolphins using their boats and by banging with a hammer on a flange on top of 
the poles. We call them “banger boats” because of these poles.  This banging 
creates a wall of sound from which the dolphins and small whales swim away.  
This is the “drive
 hunt.”  The banger boats next drive the pod into the bay, along the coast past 
the entrance to Taiji harbor and then into the entrance to the Cove.  Once the 
dolphins are past the entrance, other dolphin hunters close off the entrance 
with nets.
Death Row


Entire extended family units – pods – are caught this way.  Elders, reproducing 
age adults, pregnant females, adolescents, and babies are all driven into the 
Cove.  Sometimes, the pod will slip away from the boats or the pod will get 
separated, but more often than not, the entire pod is driven into the Cove.

The Cove is a public beach.  There is a parking apron up on the road.  There 
are stairs down to the beach with inviting rock paved walking paths along the 
edges.  There is even a well-maintained public restroom there.  Above the steep 
sides of the Cove are public vistas which double as tsunami escape locations.  
Most of the walkways and “vistas” have been barricaded to keep folks from 
viewing what happens to the dolphins.  It is now a criminal offense to cross 
these barricades.

Once the dolphins are driven into the Cove area, they are then herded into a 
southern finger off of the Cove.  This is a narrow and shallow beach area and 
the site of the slaughter.  It is also the site of the documentary film, The 
Cove.  The barricades keep the activities of the killers from view.  Often, 
marine mammal trainers from the nearby Dolphin Base (swim-with-dolphin program) 
and from the Taiji Whale Museum (and live dolphin show) will move among the 
captured dolphins and select individuals for the captive entertainment 
industry.  Sometimes, the others will be released, but more often than not, 
they are all killed.  Grandparents, parents, pregnant females, and babies are 
all killed.  When the movie was made, they were killed by spear thrusts.  This 
created a lot of blood in water.  Now, in an effort to reduce the amount of 
blood, the hunters push a metal rod into their spinal cords.  Once the rod is 
removed, a wooden plug is then
 hammered into the hole.  The insertion of the rod sometimes causes death, but 
mostly causes paralysis.  The dolphins are still alive and very much aware of 
what is happening to them and to their family members.

A rope is tied around their tails and they are hauled out to the waiting 
gutting barge by small skiffs.  Most of them slowly drown and die during this 
towing activity.  For those that do not die with the insertion of the rod or by 
drowning on the way to the gutting barge, their deaths come when they are cut 
open and their entrails and organs are removed on the gutting barge.  There, 
the massive amounts of blood are unavoidable.

The dolphins chosen for the entertainment industry are taken by skiff/sling to 
pens in Taiji Harbor.  The gutted dolphins are towed to the butcher shop in 
Taiji Harbor.

Please join with the Cove Guardians and help end this death-or-prison process 
today!
 
 


 
 
 
 

Reply via email to