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This
summer, Australian television star Isabel
Lucas joined Whaleman Foundation’s Jeff
Pantukhoff, Director of the “Save the Whales
Again!” Campaign, to bring much needed awareness to
the plight of the minke whale, the smallest of
the great whales, who has the dubious distinction of being the
most targeted whale by Japanese, Norwegian, and Icelandic
whalers.
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Since the inception of the so-called worldwide whaling
moratorium, over 25,000 whales have been killed, the majority
of them being minke whales.
This year, the
whalers are going to kill over 3,000 of these beautiful,
intelligent, and defenseless whales. |
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Australia’s
Great Barrier Reef is the world’s premier location to get to meet
minke whales up-close and in person, on their terms, in their
environment, in the warm, azure waters of the Coral Sea and the
minke whale research team of the Undersea Explorer provide the
expertise and ultimate platform for this amazing
adventure.
The following
is from the article that is now featured in New Idea
Magazine.
Isabel
Lucas’ New Love…
When she first
joined the cast of Seven's popular Home and Away series three years
ago, teenage blonde beauty Isabel Lucas admits she was pretty much
thrown in at the deep end.
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Joining
the hit series straight from school, Isabel found herself on a
steep learning curve. But she quickly established herself as
one of the series' most popular stars with her character Tasha
Andrews falling in love, eloping, marrying, getting pregnant
and then finding herself torn in her affections after she
narrowly escaped death in a plane crash.
Along the
way, Isabel picked up a Logie award for the Best New Talent as
she adjusted to life on her own after she moved from Cairns to
Sydney.
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And Isabel also
found love in the arms of another Home and Away cast member Chris
Hemsworth before the couple decided to go their separate ways, then
got back together again before deciding to call it quits.
But with her
latest love Isabel has found herself in really deep water. For the
first time Isabel went diving off the coast of far north Queensland
with Jeff Pantukhoff, founder of the Maui-based Whaleman Foundation
and the minke whale research team of The Undersea
Explorer.
``It was so
amazing - a truly magical experience,'' Isabel told New Idea of her
days spent swimming with the friendly minke whales, in what is one
of the largest breeding grounds for these mammals off the coast from
Port Douglas. ``One minute we were keeping our eyes peeled and
seeing nothing, then they'll just pop up alongside the boat, when
you least expect it,'' Isabel says. ``They are such remarkable,
beautiful creatures - and so gentle.''
For Isabel the
opportunity to share the waters with these highly intelligent
creatures and see close hand the interaction they have with each
other was an unforgettable experience ``They're very curious. You
have to respect their environment and let the whales initiate any
encounter.''
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Isabel
was fascinated by the sounds - the three rapid pulses followed
by a longer trailing note - that the whales make under the
water and the explosive bubble blasts the whales release from
their blowholes as they're surging through the ocean in bursts
anything up to 12 knots.
The dwarf
minke whale can jump from the water, like a dolphin. With
their white shoulders and flipper base, the dwarf minke whales
have a distinctive dark grey patch on their throat which is
visible when they surface with a smooth arching of their back
before diving down into the deep for up to 12
minutes. |
One of the
delights of her time out with The Whaleman
Foundation for Isabel was swimming with the dolphins.
``They are so playful - you really feel at one with them,'' the
beautiful blonde Home and Away star maintains.
But Isabel says
the discussions she had with Jeff and the rest of the team made her
aware that as powerful and gentle as these great mammals are they
are still under great threat.
"In the US
everyone thinks the whales have been saved after the success of the
“Save The Whales” Movement of the 70's. But now
dolphins and whales are even more at risk from toxic pollutants such
as DDT, dioxin, and mercury; deadly high intensity sounds produced
by military sonars and airguns; overfishing, with some 300,000
dolphins and whales lost every year - drowned after they become
entangled in fishing nets. Jeff explained. "And now we have an
expanding whaling industry with pro-whaling nations making up the
majority of nations at the International Whaling
Commission for the first time in decades threatening to
overturn the moratorium on whaling.”
While it is the
humpback whale that's the poster child, the minke whale is the
primary whale that is now being hunted by Japanese, Norwegian and
Icelandic whalers. Since the worldwide whaling moratorium went into
effect back in 1986, over 25,000 whales, mostly minkes, have been
killed.
"The whalers
see them as the cockroaches of the sea,'' says Jeff who remembers
being hooked on his fascination with whales and dolphins from the
time he saw his first whale pod off the Californian coast, when he
was only six years old. ``They claim they're reproducing at such a
rate they're overrunning the oceans and eating all the fish. But
it's just not true, our government (US) used to be one of the most
ardent defenders of the whales - but now our current administration
is actually negotiating with the pro whaling nations, The Australian
government has been more consistent in their opposition to
commercial whaling. But the message we're trying to get across is if
you think whales are being saved, nothing could be further from the
truth."
The big issue
for Australia is that Japan has announced they're going to start
hunting the humpback whale later this year - the very same one you
could be seeing along the Australian and New Zealand coastline. The
same goes for the minke whales off Port Douglas.
"It's a very
precarious situation which is why we're mounting a large worldwide
campaign called “Save the Whales
Again!”says jeff, "It's the Minke whales
who are the main target of Japanese, Norwegian and Icelandic
whalers. Last year they announced they were doubling their quotas
which mean they will now slaughter over 3,000 minke whales a year".
On top of that Japan announced it would start killing endangered fin
and humpback whales in the Southern Ocean whale sanctuary.There's a
real fear that the world may be on the brink of the end of the
whaling moratorium and a return to large scale commercial
whaling."
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Isabel says she finds it ``very disturbing that the
slaughter of whales is still happening. `If more people would
take the opportunity to see how magnificent these creatures
are - they wouldn't be able to shut out that this is
happening".
"I was simply transfixed when I was out
there. It's a whole other
world".
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“When you look at the size of these whales - and they
are so calming – and curious. It’s hard to imagine why anyone
would want to harm them”. Isabel remarks.
For someone who
had never gone snorkeling or scuba diving before Isabel says
she is now a total convert and has been enthusiastically
relating her experience to her fellow Home and Away
castmates.
"I have a pretty
full on schedule at the moment so I don't know when I'll get
the chance to do it again.'' |
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But Isabel has
a message for the scriptwriters should anyone contemplate a
storyline that has Tasha, once she's escaped the clutches of the
cult that has her somewhat preoccupied right now and anyone else
from Summer Bay venturing up to the Barrier Reef or further north
and taking time out to swim with the whales and dolphins.
``I'll be the
first with my hand up for that script,'' Isabel says,
happily
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