Beyond the sandy beaches and coconut palms lining the western shores of the Oahu community of Waianae, Hawaii, is one of the most fertile areas for marine life in the State.
This 20 mile stretch of coastline is still thankfully host to spinner, bottlenose, spotted and rough-toothed dolphins. Also, small and large dolphins called whales, including pygmy killers, false killers, pilot and melon-headed whales. On a good day of sailing on these waters, a person may enjoy the spectacle of dozens, if not hundreds of dolphins dancing in the boat’s wake.
Hawaiian
ancestors lived deeply interconnected to each other, the land,
and the sea. Dolphins (Nai`a) were considered by some to be
one form of the spiritual manifestation of the god, Kanaloa.
Humans are terrestrial animals, and our capacity to see and
understand the importance and vulnerability of life in the sea
has trailed our growing ability to harm it. Our very existence
depends upon healthy oceans; dolphins and other cetaceans represent
a critical piece to this huge ecosystem and in a world where so much that is wild and free has already been lost to us, we must leave these beautiful mammals free to swim as they will and must.
The Wild Dolphin Foundation is a Hawaii-based grassroots
NPO, whose mission is protecting and restoring the natural habitats of dolphins
through research, advocacy, public education and conservation and to create culturally-sustainable change in
human behaviors which continue to threaten the well-being
of dolphins and their host communities worldwide.
"To cherish what remains of the Earth and to foster its
renewal is our only legitimate hope of survival."
Wendell Berry