Friday, August 28, 2015

World Wide Protest

The worst part about not being on campaign is being here. Watching my friends get attacked, beaten, held down by multiple police officers, as they point them towards the massacre and force them to watch. Knowing that entire pods of whales are dying and although we are over there, fighting for the; we don't always succeed.


When you are over there, at least you feel like you are helping. Everyday that you return to base and a pod wasn't driven onto the beach is a day you can celebrate. I was lucky, we always had a reason to celebrate. But organizing this protest was the best thing i could do from a distance. After the double grind massacre we all united. I contacted leaders from all over the world, London, Germany, Luxembourg, Costa Rica, Mexico, Columbia, Australia. Together we decided that we would stand up against the injustice and make sure that the world knew what was happening in the Faroe Islands. I know it seems silly, standing on a street corner yelling phrases. But having everyone thank you me for my service overseas, for my dedication, and passion was the most amazing feeling. I have spent 5 years of my life fighting for these causes. I can't imagine doing anything else for the rest of my life. 

Thursday, July 23, 2015

A second grind takes place today

Faroese Update 2315 Hours (Faroese Time)

Between 50 and 75 Pilot whales have been driven onto the beach near Torshaven, the capital of the Faroe Islands. The whales were driven onto the beach by about 40 boats. They are being viciously slaughtered as I post this update.

Sea Shepherd has about a dozen people on sight. The BRIGITTE BARDOT is three hours away on the other side of the islands. The SAM SIMON was forced to go to the Shetlands yesterday to get supplies, most importantly fuel for the small boats that they could not get in the Faroes.

Thanks to the Danish Navy the Faroese are able to kill whales with impunity this year. The blood of these whales dying today in on the head of the Danish people.


Sea Shepherd Leader arrested as killing begins



The whales are being killed now. The whales are dying on the beach at Borg, it is a horrific sight.

Sea Shepherd Team Leader Rosie Kunneke of South Africa and Christophe Bondue of France have been arrested for on the beach by Faroese police. Two other Sea Shepherd crew have been arrested at sea by the Danish Navy.
They were tackled and beaten to the ground before being hauled off by the Faroese police

The latest report from the beach describes men shouting obscenities at Sea Shepherd as they slash, stab and spear these wonderful animals. The sea is running red with blood

It is horrific,sickly horrific and it is frustrating that the full might of the Danish Navy is defending these psychotic butchers.

Large pod being driven towards Bour

The large pod is still fighting but more and more boats have arrived. T

The Danish Navy ship RASMUSSEN has blocked the BRIGITTE BARDOT. The pod appears to be between 100 and 200 Pilot Whales. Numerous people are gathering on the beach near Bour ready to spill hot blood into the sea.

The whales have little chance to avoid death at the hands of these killers who are armed with such traditional advantages as motorized boats, cellphones, sonar, radar and radios and of course with the traditional Naval warships standing guard in defense of the serial killers of the Ferocious Isles.

Another proud day for Denmark and the Danish Navy as the barbarian hordes prepare once again to display their vile viciousness to the world.

Saturday, June 6, 2015

Start of the Season turns Bloody


Last summer I stood watch at this killing beach almost everyday, if I wasn't there one of my teammates were. Perched on a cliff, watching, waiting. The boat team was always nearby, and we were prepared to stop this. This slaughter from these bastards. Today we weren't there, and a large pod of 150 plus whales are now dead, murdered and tortured for their meat. Meat that many locals throw out because they have been warned it's too toxic to eat. Meat that isn't necessary when they're lands are filled with grocery stores. These people don't kill for tradition, don't kill for food, they kill for pleasure. They are basically barbarians holding large knifes just waiting for an animal to harm. 

They kill puffins, seagulls, so why would pilot whales be any different. They view them as having no feelings, and believe them to be killed quickly by severing their spinal cord. But these whales feel pain, they scream out as they are being murdered. These pods aren't just their families it's entire generations of mother, daughters, and grandfathers. The Faroese are killing the existence of these whales, and the environment will not recover.

When I think of what is happening, I get so angry there are no words. I just wish I was there standing watch so I could've helped those poor whales. They had no idea what was coming, and now the water runs red, and the people of the Faroes will celebrate yet another murder. Drinking and driving and doing what they're best at, being obnoxious fisherman. Tomorrow when the sun rises they'll continue looking for more pods, because greed is a foreign concept to them. But not as foreign as their inability to care for animals or for the environment. 

If this is not stopped, the pilot whales will someday not exist. Not because of pollution, although it does play a small factor, but because of this country who continues to slaughter it's way through pods for nothing but pure pleasure to feed their barbaric needs. I'm glad Sea Shepherd is returning because it is the only hope these whales have for survival. 


June 6 2015




Once again, another cruel summer opens to the horror show of evil that the Faroese call The grindadráp which translated means “the murder of whales.”

This year the Faroese not only have the Faroese Coast Guard and the Danish Navy to defend these brutal and pitiless killers, the whalers also have the services of the Faroese Coast Guard to find the pods of whales so they can be slain.

This is the lunacy of our times. Military assets being used to help kill innocent whales in order to secure whale meat that is inedible because of the toxic levels of mercury in the bodies of the whales.They kill to feed poison to their children. These thugs certainly do look like they have severe cranial degeneration, the kind caused when mercury literally eats away the tissues in the brain.

It is amazing that in the year 2015 with the diminishment of biodiversity, and with species after species going extinct, that there are still people so alienated from reality that they continue to engage in contributing to the death of the Ocean.We humans are literally killing the ocean by diminishment of the life within. Many Faroese overfish, they slaughter puffins and other sea-birds and they murder whales and dolphins. These are the kind of people that future generations in a world devoid of so many species, will look back upon with utter disgust.

The Faroese enjoy one of the highest standards of living in the world with the highest income per capita in all of Europe. Their supermarkets are well stocked with anything that can be bought in Copenhagen, London or Paris. They all drive cars, own computers and enjoy the luxuries of modern industrialized society yet many claim they need to kill pilot whales and dolphins for meat.

The truth is that some of them simply like to kill. They enjoy it. They need to see the blood spurting into the water. They need to smell and wallow in the blood and the shit of the dying animals. They need to hear their pitiful screams because these are the needs of sadistic psychopaths. Not all Faroese are cruel and not all participate in this foul obscenity. Both for those who do and for the politicians that support these despicable act of slaughter, the evidence is that there is a rotten stench of death associated with these islands that will be angrily remembered when the pilot whales and the dolphins are no more.


Saturday, May 9, 2015


Anti-whaling activists Sea Shepherd will be sending ships to Iceland, Norway and the Faroe Islands in the weeks to come, as minke whaling prepares to begin.

The organisation has already declared victory over Japan in the southern hemisphere, RÚV reports, and will now be turning their attention to the North Atlantic.

Adam Meyerson, captain of the Sea Shepherd ship Bob Barker (shown above), says it has not yet been decided how many ships will be sent into the region, nor what kind of actions they will be taking, as this is decided on a case-by-case basis. In the southern hemisphere, Sea Shepherd emphasised direct interference with whaling vessels as their primary method.

The announcement comes as the hunting of minke whales is set to begin. A whaling captain MBL spoke to said he expects to begin his hunt this weekend or early next week. More whaling vessels can be expected to follow suit over the coming weeks.



Monday, November 3, 2014

INTERVIEW WITH MAGGY GSCHNITZER!


NEW VIDEO: Maggy Gschnitzer was one of 14 Sea Shepherd crewmembers arrested in the only Pilot Whale slaughter during Operation Grindstop. See new, NEVER-BEFORE-SEEN footage from that day, and hear Maggy talk about the determination of the Sea Shepherds who bravely took risks to stop the Grind.

Please share this video widely.

Also please Like and support Sea Shepherd Conservation Society and their work to keep the oceans healthy.

‪#‎OpGrindStop‬ ‪#‎SeaShepherd‬ ‪#‎OperationGrindStop‬ ‪#‎GrindStop‬

Kelly X Oaks and Lars, excellent work on this video and thank you so much for helping to get the word out about the atrocity that took place in Sandoy this summer.

INTERVIEW WITH MAGGY GSCHNITZER!


Sunday, September 28, 2014

I had the pleasure and honor of being featured on the Sea Shepherd facebook page as a off-shore volunteer for grindstop 2014. Not a lot of people are chosen to be recognized so it felt incredible that they took the time to write a little blurb about me for the world to see. I'm just one little person trying to make a difference, and it's incredible to see how many other people out there are also trying to make a difference! 


visit this link to see the page :) Grindstop 2014

Volunteer Voices: A glimpse into the hearts and minds of our passionate, dedicated Operation GrindStop 2014 volunteers. Meet Linda from the United States. She's one of hundreds of volunteers from more than 30 nations spending part of her summer in the Faroe Islands defending pilot whales from the grind.

"Being in the Faroe Islands felt like living in a dream. You're surrounded by beautiful scenery, but dreadful traditions. The people I've met from Sea Shepherd have changed my life. They are the most generous, warm-hearted, brave volunteers, and it was an honor to stand by and protect the pilot whales with them. Together we fight for the future, and I look forward to the day when this tradition ends and pilot whales swim happy and carefree."
~Linda / Team Torshavn

Monday, September 22, 2014

Crew of 3 saves pod of 100!

FOOTAGE OF CREW GETTING ARRESTED SAVING POD OF 100 DOLPHINS


They are being held as evidence awaiting the trial of eight Sea Shepherd crew from those boats. Along with the small boat crew, 6 members of Sea Shepherd’s onshore team were also arrested for attempting to prevent the brutal slaughter of a pod of 33 pilot whales on August 30.

“Though three volunteers have been arrested and the Danish Navy has once again acted in defense of the brutal grind by seizing one of our boats, Sea Shepherd considers this a victory. Hundreds of dolphins are still swimming safely as a family because of our brave volunteers, and Sea Shepherd will continue to act in defense of its clients,” said Lamya Essemlali, President of Sea Shepherd France and GrindStop 2014 Offshore Leader.

There are two Sea Shepherd vessels currently operating in the Faroes — the Spitfire, and the Clementine, from France. Thor had to be removed from the water earlier today, as foreign vessels can only be in Faroese waters for a maximum of three months.

Sea Shepherd has led the opposition to the mass slaughter of cetaceans in the Faroe Islands since the 1980s. Operation GrindStop 2014 is Sea Shepherd’s largest Faroese campaign to date, and a multi-national team of Sea Shepherd volunteers has been patrolling land and sea in the islands since mid-June. Sea Shepherd will remain in the Faroes until the beginning of October. The campaign spans the typically bloodiest months of the grindadrap hunt season, in an effort to save as many lives as possible.

Saturday, September 13, 2014

33 Hearts for 33 Souls



Not too long ago this beach was stained red as 33 whales fought for their lives against the merciless whalers of the Faroe Islands, above Sea Shepherd takes a moment to remember those who were lost and for the hard fight we deal with everyday. Although there was lives lost, we prevail on knowing that because of us more pilot whales swim free, and someday there will be no slaughtering on these islands.


Friday, September 12, 2014








A pictures worth a thousand words...

September 11th, 2014

Beautifully tragic.


that's how my best friend described the above picture, although i think of different words bloody hell.

While I was in the Faroes I had the pleasure of meeting people from many different backgrounds and cultures, and with that came learning many different words. Such as: bloody hell, buggery tits, chips, crisp, hench, etc.

The more I learned the more I emerged into the world outside of American culture, but even with all these different cultures came one mutual thought, what's happening in the Faroes must be stopped. So even if we were from Canada, Australia, Scotland, Sweden, France, etc. We were united as one, united as Sea Shepherd fighting for the oceans.



Monday, September 8, 2014

September 8th, 2014

GREAT NEWS!!
SEA SHEPHERD WHALE DEFENDERS FOUND GUILTY OF DEFENDING WHALES
The Sea Shepherd Volunteers who intervened against the whale killers of Sandoy on August 30th have been found guilty of trying to protect pilot whales.
Well, that is why they are in the Faroe Islands and what they are there for – to protect pilot whales and dolphins.
And so far this Operation Grindstop has been a huge success. Last year the total kills for 2013 to today’s date in September, over 1,186 cetaceans were slain including 455 dolphins.
This year the count is 33 murdered pilot whales on August 30th and 5 defenseless Bottlenose whales cowardly slaughtered after being beached by the psychopath of Sandoy. 13 whales were killed in May prior to the arrival of the Sea Shepherd volunteers for a total of 51.
2013: 1,186 killed 2014: 51 killed
Charges and verdict:
1. Charge: Disturbing public order. Verdict: All 6 guilty
By intervening against a mob of killers disturbing the natural order.
2. Charge: Hindering the hunt of pilot whales: Verdict: All 6 guilty
That was the intent.
3. Charge: Ignoring police orders to leave the area. Verdict: 3 guilty (Sergio, Rodrigio and Alexandra) and 3 not guilty (Nikki, Maggy and Monique)
The crew in the water were found not guilty
Sentence: As imposed by Danish Judge Lisbeth Bugel Madsen.
1) 1000kr for a total of 6000 thousand kroner (approximately $1200 total)
The fines are all equal despite the fact that three were found not guilty on charge #3.
None of the six however will pay the fine because they do not acknowledge that attempting to prevent a murder is a crime. Paying a fine would be an acknowledgement that their activities are a crime and would lend legitimacy to the killers.

1. Maggie Gschnitzer (Italy)

2. Rorigio Gilkuri (Mexico)
3. Nikki Botha (South Africa)
4. Monnique Rossouw (South Africa)
5. Sergio Toribio (Spain)
6. Alexandra Sellet (France)


“We are proud that we made every effort to disrupt the murder of the pilot whales on Sandoy. Of course the judge found us guilty. We would have been very disappointed if she had found us not guilty. We were not on that beach for the surf and sun, we were there in cold water and dangerous conditions to intervene against a mob of killers and their defenseless victims.” Said Maggie Gschnitzer.
I think it is good for him to mention something if everybody is ok with that. The 6 is not ashamed to have been found guilty and very proud of it because in the verdict it stated that the judge agrees that they hindered the hunt of the pilot whales – exactly what they were trying to do and the reason we are here
Deportation? A request for deportation has been sent to Denmark. Not sure why if the Faroese insist they run their own country. It will be interesting to see what the Danes say especially about how they will go about deporting the three European from Europe. A decision on deportation will be made on Wednesday.
Of the six only Maggie Gschnitzer from Italy and Sergio Toribio from Spain are still in the Faroe Islands. How will they deport two Europeans from Europe? It should be an interesting decision and it is a question we can all ask the Danish Ministry of Foreign Affiars
Since the arrests were made, forty new volunteers have arrived to carry on with the Grindstop 2014. Today there are 75 volunteers on land, 20 volunteers with the offshore team and 4 on the Brigitte Bardot for a total of 99 volunteers.
If nothing else the arrests of the volunteers on August 30th have invigorated the support base.
Operation Grindstop 2014 is stronger than ever
E-mails can be sent to the Danish Foreign Ministry at: um@um.dk
Ask them how can they deport European from Europe for defending whales in accordance with European regulations that prohibit the killing of whales?


Real Men Don't Whale




The heroes


The Numbers Tell the Story of Sea Shepherd's Successful Summer in the Faroe Islands
Commentary by Captain Paul Watson

The men and woman volunteers for Grindstop 2014 have done an incredible job this summer and their success and effectiveness can be measured in numbers.

A quick review of the kill records will illustrate just how effective they have been.
These are the kill figures for the last five years (Taken directly from official Faroese records)
- 2009 (June - September): 180
- 2010 (June - September): 964
- 2011 (June - September): 103
- 2012 (June - September): 338
- 2013 (June - September): 1360

The Kill figures for 2014 (June1st – September 1st): 33 Pilot whales and 5 beached Beak Whales. Total 38

The last time that Sea Shepherd was in the Faroese was the summer of 2011. The total kill during that period was 103 and the kill took place only a couple of days after the Sea Shepherd crews left. No whales were killed in July and August while the Sea Shepherd ships and crew were in the islands. We did not cover the area for the month of September.

Last summer (s2013) the kills between June 1st and September 1st were 1136
21/07/13 Viðvík: Long-finned pilot whale: 125
30/07/13 Fuglafjørður: Long-finned pilot whale: 267
08/08/13 Sandavágur: Long-finned pilot whale: 107
11/08/13 Leynar : Long-finned pilot whale: 21
13/08/13 Húsavík: Long-finned pilot whale: 135
13/08/13 Hvalba : White-sided dolphin: 430
27/08/13 Hvalvík/Streymnes: Long-finned pilot whale: 51

This summer Sea Shepherd diverted four pods of whales away from the Islands. The first pod involved going out to divert a pod the whalers had spotted but did not pursue because of the bad weather. Sea Shepherd boats drove the whales out of the fjord despite the weather. That pod was estimated at about 100 whales.

The next three pods that were diverted were done before the whalers became aware of them and from offshore. As the whales approached they were spotted by the land based look-out. Sea Shepherd boats intercepted them and drove them back out to sea.

The first of the three pods were 80 pilot whales driven away from Harraldsund on July 30th.
The second pod of around 30 were driven out from east of Gota on Eysturoy Island on August 24th.
The third pod of about 30 driven away from and area east of Vagur on Suduroy Island on August 26th.

So potentially the Sea shepherd crew were able to keep 240 pilot whales away from the islands.
Would they have been killed? Maybe yes, maybe no, but Sea Shepherd made sure they absolutely would not be killed. In the case of the initial pod of 100 that the whalers knew about, Sea Shepherd is quite certain those whales would have died and the Grind foreman was extremely angry the next day when they were deprived of their “kill.”

No one has ever been charged with interrupting a whale kill in the Faroes. The new law has never been tested. The six land based crew will test it tomorrow in court. They will not make a plea bargain, they will not attempt to defend their intervention by saying anything but the truth, and the truth is they were there to do what they could to stop the slaughter of a pod of pilot whales.
Since the arrests, a good number of applications have been received from people wanting to join Grindstop 2014. Compassionate people are never deterred, and the people on the ground and on the boats have had their commitment reinvigorated by what they saw and heard yesterday. 

They saw and smelt the hot blood of an entire family of whales and they heard the screams as they saw the bodies thrashing about in unimaginable agony, they endured the hostility, the threats, the insults and they were physically revolted by the obscene sight of men, women and children cheering as they witnessed the life blood of the whales spurting out and oozing onto the sand of an island seemingly devoid of empathy, compassion and kindness.

Last night as Rosie Kunneke and some of her team were returning on the ferry from Sandoy to Torshaven, they had smirking Faorese citizens in their faces, taking close-up of pictures of them, giving them the finger and laughing. Rosie and her team said nothing, just smiled.

Later she told me, “They really thought they had won and they took the opportunity to vent against us. We said nothing and just smiled. I was proud of what my crew had done, proud of their courage and their dedication and although the whalers managed to kill 33 whales with the support of the Danish Navy, we had saved many more this summer and we knew that, and they did not, and it did not matter if they did or not, because our satisfaction is in knowing that there are whales out there that they did not get, because we have been here all summer.”

Photo: Sea Shepherd land and boat teams after being released from jail in Torshaven, Faroe Islands.

September 1st, 2014


33 pilot whales died yesterday on Sandoy. Today Sea Shepherd discovered a very interesting place on this island, the same island where the Mayor is obsessed with toilet paper shortages. It's the place where islanders bring discarded whale meat. You see many people accept their allotment of whale meat but simply do not eat it. Why? Because it is socially unacceptable to not accept it. There is this annoying thing called "tradition." 



The problem is that many people also realize that the meat is contaminated with methyl-mercury and thus it is poison, the kind of poison that eats away at the tissue of the human brain. Nasty stuff, and many people whose brains remain relatively unaffected are smart enough to know that whale meat is simply not healthy. And some people oppose the killing, after all not everyone in the Faroe Islands is a blood-thirsty heartless brute.

So after accepting their "share", they quietly sneak away and dump it. Sea Shepherd volunteers observed this only a few days ago with meat from the beached Bottlenose whales. Nearby the meat dump shoot, our photographer found a little pile of dorsal fins so small that they appear to have been cut from baby whales or unborn whales like the ones we have seen from other Grinds where the fetuses have been ripped from their mother's body. I simply cannot fathom the type of sick individual that would slice off dorsal fins from baby whales or unborn baby whales. The more we investigate this strange cultural aberration the more we seem to be descending into deeper levels of hell.

August 31st, Part 2




The world banned together to try to get our members freed from Jail. They were in jail for one night then let go with a future court date. But that didn't stop us from blowing up every news stand and media outlet possible! The world has to know what Denmark and the Faroe Islands are doing! THIS SLAUGHTER HAS TO STOP.





All 14 Sea Shepherd crew have been released. The six volunteers from the land team must return to court tomorrow. The eight from the boat team have been told to return to court on September 25th. The reason for this is that it allows the police to hold the three Sea Shepherd boats until the end of September because they are being held for "evidence."


August 31, 2014

The Day After the Slaughter- Commentary by Paul Watson

Sea Shepherd volunteers woke up to a bag of dead birds tossed on their doorstep and it is now quite clear that the Danish government has thrown their cards on the table in support of cruelty and slaughter.
During the last 85 days, the Sea Shepherd look-outs on land and the Sea Shepherd boats on the water were able to divert back to sea, three large pods of pilot whales, and for 85 days not a single whale or dolphin was slain.
However we all knew that eventually the logistics and the geography would allow for a breach for the whalers to seize their opportunity.
Yesterday the six-person team on Sandoy Island at Sandur spotted six boats leaving the harbor. They immediately informed the closest Sea Shepherd boat crew, the nearest being Bastien Boudoire from France and his crew on the Mike Galesi.
A small pod of 33 pilot whales had been spotted by residents of the small island of Skuvoy, not far from the island of Sandoy.
The whales unfortunately had passed very close and there was little time to divert them.
As the Mike Galesi raced to the scene, the Loki and the B.S. Sheen were called in from their patrols off the island of Suduroy.
The Brigitte Bardot was 52 kilometers to the North and hours away.
The Sandoy team made it to the beach before the whalers arrived. Meanwhile the police at Torshaven scrambled to board Royal Danish Navy helicopters to rush to Sandoy. The Danish Navy dispatched high-speed ridged hulled inflatables to Sandoy in what must have been one of the proudest moments in Danish Naval history. I mean what was the battle of Copenhagen where they lost to Nelson, compared to this valiant and strategically important race to support the whale killers of Sandoy?
As men, women and children flocked to the beach, laughing and cheering as if they were at a birthday party, eager to see and smell the spurting blood, the whales were driven to within 200 metres off the beach.
When the Mike Galesi arrived, the Danish Navy ordered the crew to back off. The same order was given to the arriving Loki and B.S. Sheen. Australian Krystal Keynes in command of the B.S. Sheen did not hear the warning and moved in close to film what was happening with the land crew.
From the time the whales were spotted to the time the whales were driven onto the beach was 25 minutes.
As the land volunteers waded into the water to defend the whales they were tackled and arrested by the police. The boat-crews were chased down by the “brave and illustrious” Danish Navy. In all, fourteen Sea Shepherd volunteers were arrested and transported by Royal Danish Naval helicopters to Torshaven and detained. No report on charges have been released. All Sea Shepherd cameras have been seized.
There is no disgrace in a group of unarmed compassionate conservationists being overtaken and captured by a member nation of NATO. They have the guns, the machines, the money and the men to do it of course. It is in fact an act of profound courage that they waded into the fray in the face of such a frenzy of anger and such a force of arms.
The image taken by Sea Shepherd photographer Nils Greskewitz of three Sea Shepherd volunteers forced to their knees before a Danish Military helicopter will be iconic.
Sea Shepherd is proud of each and every volunteer on the Faroe Islands.
According to the new rules no unauthorized people may approach the killing area.
Section 11, Paragraph 1: that an area also on land may be considered as grind herding area. The magistrate has resolved, that no unauthorized people may come closer than 1 mile from the grind. From land is grind-area where unauthorized persons must stay away. On shore, the police will cordon off the grind area with strips, so that only people, who participate in the catch, may enter. Catching men has to be able to work undisturbed by unauthorized persons.
On the killing beach were numerous children. When Sea Shepherd land crew leader Rosie Kunneke inquired as to why they were there and asked if the Grind Master has authorized that children be allowed on the beach, the police said that the only unauthorized people are Sea Shepherd crew. All others are authorized. The police appeared to not have cordoned off the grind area prior to the arrests.
Apparently in the Faroe Islands, the whalers get to dictate the laws that the police are obliged to enforce.
The confirmed 14 people (8 men and 6 women) arrested are:
Six Nationalities
8 French, 2 South Africans, 1 Spanish, 1 Italian, 1 Australian and 1 Mexican
Sea Shepherd Boat Crew
1. Bastien Boudoire (French)(Offshore Leader)
2. Jérôme Veegaert (French)
3. Guido Capezzoli (French)
4. Tiphaine Blot (French)
5. Baptiste Brebel (French)
6. Antoine Le Dref (French)
7. Céline Le Dourion (French)
8. Krystal Keynes (Australian)
Sea Shepherd Land Crew
9. Maggie Gschnitzer (Italy)(Sandoy Island Leader)
10. Rorigio Gilkuri (Mexico)
11. Nikki Botha (South Africa)
12. Monnique Rossouw (South Africa)
13. Sergio Toribio (Spain)
14. Alexandra Sellet (France)
The Land and boat crew heard the whales screaming in agony which certainly contradicts the Faroese claim that the slaughter is painless despite even the stress of the drive.
An entire family group of pilot whales was massacred on that beach at Sandur and Denmark has exposed the fact that the Danish government is collaborating with the whalers. Denmark is prohibited by European Union regulations from supporting whaling. This incident gives Sea Shepherd plenty of evidence to push for action from the European Parliament. The Faroes receive massive EU subsidies through Denmark, the only place in Europe subsided by the European Union that does not have to abide by European law because although Denmark is part of the EU, the Faroes claim to be independent of Denmark and thus not part of the EU.
According to the European postal services, the Faroes are indeed a part of Denmark because they will not allow letters addressed to the Faroes unless the country name of Denmark is written on the envelope.
The Faroes are to Denmark what bogus scientific research is to Japan, simply a loophole to get around conservation law.
Many Danes continue to argue that Denmark is not a whaling nation. It appears that the actions of the Danish Navy and the Danish police demonstrate that Denmark is very much a whaling nation.
Last night a bag of dead birds was thrown at the door of one of the houses rented by Sea Shepherd in the Faroe Islands.
The disrespect that this island of dolphin, whale, puffin, and fulmar killers has for marine wildlife is horrendous. When they say that this is all part of their “culture” we should stop and think for a moment just where this word “culture” comes from.
A culture is an environment from which things grow and like cultures of bacteria it is not always a good thing. In fact what is occurring in the Faroese can be viewed as a cult of killing and cruelty.
The Sea Shepherd Conservation Society is dedicated to eradicating such despicable and obscene cults. Unfortunately in today’s world, opposition to cruelty and slaughter is considered criminal in cultures that condone such evils like bull-fighting, dog-fighting, seal-clubbing, dolphin killing and this particular bizarre and odious Faroese activity that they call the Grindadrap which literally translates as whale murder.
The Sea Shepherd volunteers on the Faroes are dedicated and compassionate people who have traveled to these remote islands at the own expense to oppose an evil that should no longer exist on this planet.
Tomorrow more volunteers will travel to the only other place on the planet where such a horrendous slaughter takes place – Taiji, Japan.
These are the two most savage places in the world for dolphins and whales and when you consider that of seven billion people in the world, there are less than 60,000 living in these two different places where such agonizing cruelty is inflicted against species that the rest of the world loves and cares for, it can certainly be seen that the cult of pain and death that is the foundation of these two perverse cultures is an aberration and thus a disgrace to the human race.

August 30th, 2014

GRIND HAPPENING RIGHT NOW!!
3 SEA SHEPHERD BOATS IN THE WATER

100 WHALES

SS FILMING FROM BEACH

ONE FAST BOAT ON HAND. SPITFIRE


 DOWN BRIGITTE BARDOT FAR TO THE 


NORTH OF ISLANDS



So what happens when a grind actually takes place....

live footage


14 Sea Shepherd crew members have now been arrested for trying to intervene and save 33 pilot whales from being slaughtered in the Faroe Islands


14 SEA SHEPHERD CREW MEMBERS HAVE BEEN ARRESTED









my reaction to the grind news.....