The Norwegian name is "Vågehval", and in latin  "Balaenoptera  
acutorostrata".  I´m not sure what it is called in English but  
according to the International Whaling Commission there were about  
180000 of them in 2004.  Not exactly extinct, and this is the type  
that Norwegians are hunting.

As we say in Norway: "Intelligent people eat intelligent food".   
Actually it tastes very good when prepared in the right way .-)

DagT

Den 22. jul. 2006 kl. 00.29 skrev John Forbes:

> Which whale species are "too numerous"?
>
> John
>
> On Fri, 21 Jul 2006 22:58:02 +0100, DagT <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> Den 21. jul. 2006 kl. 23.45 skrev Cotty:
>>
>>> On 21/7/06, DagT, discombobulated, unleashed:
>>>
>>>> The
>>>> advice to citizens in some countries should be: "Don´t follow any
>>>> link if you do not know the content in advance".
>>>
>>> Agreed!
>>>
>>> <http://tinyurl.com/r7aho>
>>>
>>> (Office friendly)
>>>
>>
>> Yeah, sure, scare sperm whales to death with motor boat chasing them
>> in stead of killing off some whales from  the whales species that are
>> too numerous.
>>
>> :-}
>>
>> DagT
>
>
>
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