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PostPosted: Sun Mar 26, 2006 11:36 am
 


Before I even start, I do NOT want this to stop. I want to learn more about it. I was wondering why we actually do it? I know there is a good reason, and I thought it was because of overpopulation with not enough food. Is this correct?


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PostPosted: Sun Mar 26, 2006 12:19 pm
 


I think this is the 5th or 6th thread on this in the last month.


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PostPosted: Sun Mar 26, 2006 12:20 pm
 


I know. Tricks I suggest you go back into the Archives or do a google search :lol:


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PostPosted: Sun Mar 26, 2006 12:28 pm
 


I have read all those threads, and I didn't find anything, though I could have easily missed something so I will go back and read it again.


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PostPosted: Sun Mar 26, 2006 12:45 pm
 


We do it to piss off washed up has-been celebrities!!!!!!!!!! :D


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PostPosted: Sun Mar 26, 2006 12:58 pm
 


LABBATTS50 LABBATTS50:
We do it to piss off washed up has-been celebrities!!!!!!!!!! :D
reason enough for me :D ;)


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PostPosted: Sun Mar 26, 2006 2:09 pm
 


Tricks, I lived with some northerners in Labrador one summer. They live on the stuff.(seals)
I'm not into eating raw dried seal but they could not live without it. When it got low they went Whaling. They ate that dried and raw too.
Heck, they seemed to like everything dried and raw.
Not for the squeemish.


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PostPosted: Sun Mar 26, 2006 2:10 pm
 


Yeah I went back and read the other threads, and got basically without they go hungry 8O


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PostPosted: Sun Mar 26, 2006 2:13 pm
 


A big reason is economic, at least that's the way I understand it. A lot of the sealers are fisherman who do this to supplement their income in the off season. The seal oil an can be used in various ways as can seal pelts.


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PostPosted: Sun Mar 26, 2006 2:19 pm
 


How about because it is a sustainable natural resource ...and we leave it at that...explains the protesters to.


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PostPosted: Sun Mar 26, 2006 2:21 pm
 


fatbasturd fatbasturd:
How about because it is a sustainable natural resource ...and we leave it at that...explains the protesters to.
okay :)


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PostPosted: Sun Mar 26, 2006 3:02 pm
 


LABBATTS50 LABBATTS50:
We do it to piss off washed up has-been celebrities!!!!!!!!!! :D


Probably the best reason and don't forget the shrill responses from their wives, always fun to watch. The other is they are furry, cute RODENTS. AKA Tribbles. They have lost all their natural predators that used to keep their numbers in check. Their numbers are exploding and they feed on the cod stocks we so dearly need to return to healthy numbers. That isn't going to happen when we have millions of vermin feeding on them.


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PostPosted: Sat Apr 15, 2006 5:50 pm
 


$1:
Meanwhile, members of the International Fund for Animal Welfare ended their vigil and went home on Friday, a day after a confrontation with sealers in the Labrador community of Cartwright.

Members of the Humane Society of the United States had a similar confrontation on Wednesday, but spokeswoman Rebecca Aldworth said that wouldn't stop her group from filming the hunt by helicopter.

"Just because some people choose to view an activity as acceptable and humane does not make it so," said Aldworth.

Aldworth vowed to take legal action against the hunt supporters in Cartwright and against a group of residents in the eastern Quebec community of Blanc-Sablon who surrounded a small hotel where her group was staying on Thursday.

Quebec provincial police officers escorted the activists, reporters and photographers to a nearby airport.

link

LOL...had to get a police escort.....oh man that does my heart good. :lol: Well what do they expect when they fuck with a peoples way of life....three cheers?


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PostPosted: Wed Apr 19, 2006 6:43 am
 


Tricks Tricks:
Before I even start, I do NOT want this to stop. I want to learn more about it. I was wondering why we actually do it? I know there is a good reason, and I thought it was because of overpopulation with not enough food. Is this correct?

Some more information for you tricks.
Fishermen call for seal cull
Population overrunning fish stocks, group tells MLAs
By STEVE BRUCEStaff Reporter

Nova Scotia’s grey seal population needs to be cut in half over the next five years while there is still a fishing industry to protect, advocates of a commercial seal hunt told the legislature’s resources committee Tuesday in Halifax.

Members of the Grey Seal Research and Development Society, formed in 2003 by fishermen and fish processors from across the province, told MLAs that an estimated 350,000 grey seals are overrunning the coastline and threatening fragile fish stocks.

"While the grey seal population has increased more than tenfold since 1980, our cod and other groundfish populations continue to decline or disappear off of eastern Nova Scotia and Cape Breton," said Denny Morrow, secretary-treasurer of the society and executive director of the Nova Scotia Fish Packers Association.

"The decline in cod and some other commercial groundfish stocks is spreading westward to areas where fishing and fish processing has until now been able to survive."

The politicians were told an adult grey seal can exceed 500 kilograms in weight and consume more than 20 kilograms of fish a day.

John Levy, a fisherman from Chester Basin, said he salvaged just one fish from more than 150 kilograms of cod, pollock and white hake caught in his gillnets off Yarmouth on March 19.

The rest of the fish had had their stomachs torn out by grey seals, Mr. Levy said.

Robert Courtney, who fishes in the Cape North area of Cape Breton, said grey seals follow lobster boats in search of the small lobsters that fishermen are required to put back in the water.

Fish processors regularly find fish infested with seal worm parasites, making it uneconomical to process and export, Mr. Morrow said.

The society requested a grey seal quota from the federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans in 2003 and received a two-year allocation of 10,000 animals. The quota, which has hardly been used, has been extended until the end of 2006.

Fishermen from the society shot 460 juvenile grey seals in 2005 and have harvested about 800 so far this year, Mr. Morrow said. The pelts sold for an average price of $37 last year and $50 this year. Samples of meat from adult carcasses were well-received by an Asian importer who wants more.

Mr. Morrow called on the province to help the society expand its meat harvest. The society needs engineering and financial assistance in fitting boats to handle large carcasses destined for processing and export.

People in the fishing industry were pleased to see a pair of Canadian political leaders recently stand up to visiting celebrities opposed to the annual harp seal hunt in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, Mr. Morrow said. Newfoundland Premier Danny Williams debated Paul and Heather McCartney on U.S. television and Prime Minister Stephen Harper refused to meet with Pamela Anderson.

Digby-Annapolis MLA Harold (Junior) Theriault, a former lobsterman, called on the other members of the resources committee to support the fishermen and ignore the hype that surrounds the killing of seals.

"I love animals," Mr. Theriault said. "I have two animals at home, Molly my dog and my cat Chico. I love them very much. They sleep in bed with me at night sometimes. . . . But if I ever wake up some morning and there’s 150 Mollys in my bedroom and 150 Chicos, and the fridge is upset and bare and empty and I can’t get to the breakfast table, I’ve got to do something.

"Today, what’s going on in the seal herds of Atlantic Canada is not normal."

The committee wants to hear what officials from DFO and the provincial Fisheries Department have to say about a commercial grey seal hunt.


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PostPosted: Wed Apr 19, 2006 7:53 am
 


Why do we kill cows?

Why do we kill fish?

Why do we kill chickens?

Why do we chop down trees?

Why do we blast holes in the ground and mine?

All to produce a produt that we can sell and trade for other goods and services.

If you see a way to make money and support your family, you do it. Especially if you live in a place like Newfoundland where it is hard to make money.


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