Went for a nice long walk today and got these pictures. They are with my phone but not bad. Can't believe what the storm did to the beach but it was beautiful out.
Tuesday, March 4, 2014
Thursday, January 23, 2014
Bookends Sun
Morning Sun - Shoreline Park Santa Barbara CA 2014.01.22
Sunset - Sandpiper Golf Course Goleta CA 2014.01.22
Monday, January 20, 2014
Below are the other video's we got while on our trip. We enjoyed our time down there and the kids(and let's face it, so am I) are excited to go back when we can. I think on the next trip I may have them do some research about an animal and come home and give a presentation on that animal. Make it even more educational for them!
Sea Lions Live 2013.12.27
Blue Horizons 2013.12.27
Sunday, January 19, 2014
Shamu's Christmas
We started and ended our trip with Shamu's Christmas. Below are those two videos. Sorry for the shakiness.
Thursday, December 26, 2013
Saturday, December 28, 2013
Saturday, January 18, 2014
One Ocean SWSD 2013.12.27
Some Controversy
I posted this to Facebook not that long ago but wanted to add it here so others could read it. These are my thoughts on the controversial topic of SeaWorld and Blackfish. I have seen Blackfish, messaged with former trainers, read interviews on both sides of the topic and my family currently has annual passes to SeaWorld. I feel there is a middle road that is starting to be forged with the truth and this is where I feel I am. Below is why I feel this way. Again, I am open to debate but please keep it clean.
Well, here they are, my thoughts on SeaWorld and
"Blackfish." I am going to preface this by saying that I have two
kids who very much want to work at SeaWorld and help create change from the
inside and that Leya has seen "Blackfish." I am also going to say
that I am starting to believe that there is a middle ground that needs to be
forged in this debate where both sides come together and realize that they both
are right in certain aspects and wrong in others. It is in this middle ground
where you will find me. While I agree with certain trainers in “Blackfish,” I
do not agree with others and am trying to figure out what is truth, what is a
flat out lie and what is someone’s hidden agenda and their modified truth. The
same goes for what I heard and saw on our recent trip to SeaWorld. While I
believe in giving people the benefit of the doubt and want to believe what I
heard and saw, only time will tell what is truth and what is crap!
In July, we went to SeaWorld and actually bought annual
passes knowing we wanted to go back at Christmas time. It was a good trip(the
July trip), I did feel like some of the education people didn’t know what they
were talking about and in my opinion had no business answering questions about
animals they clearly knew little about, but overall we learned some new things
about the animals. After that trip I heard about "Blackfish" and
started doing research to learn about this documentary that was about a park
that I love and my kids want to work at one day.
On August 11th, I went and saw "Blackfish." I left
with many more questions than answers so I took to social media to get answers.
Luckily, a former trainer involved in the film, was on twitter and answering
questions and I got some answers. Through this person I found other former
trainers who were also speaking out. It was refreshing to be able to get
questions answered and to not feel stupid for asking them. When
"Blackfish" aired on CNN in October, my family sat down to watch it
and luckily for them, I was able to answer questions they asked because of
following the debate so closely. It was during that time that Leya made a
comment that took me by surprise – she said she wanted to help from the inside;
that she thought things needed to be different but still wanted to go to SeaWorld
to see the animals she was falling in love with. So even after hearing people
tell me not to take my family back to SeaWorld until changes were made, off we
went in December, but with a different point of view.
I wanted to see firsthand what changes, if any, had been
made since the film came out. It is one thing to hear about possible changes
that are or not being made and to actually go and see what exactly is going on.
I was pleasantly surprised at what I saw and heard while on our visit. So much so
that I wanted to jump on Twitter and Facebook to share them, but have waited
until I could fully gather my thoughts and share them all at once.
1.
Educators were better educated and more readily
available to answer questions
a.
Thursday night I had the opportunity to talk
with an education supervisor who shared the following things with me
i.
A false bottom had gone into B pool, causing the
depth of the pool to go from 16 feet to 12 feet (rough numbers as they put it)
and the trainers were looking into how to compensate for it. C pool was next
and they weren’t sure of the Show pool or Underwater Viewing pool were going to
be included because of the engineering that was needed to make that happen.
ii.
They shared with me how they were trying to keep
the family (Kasatka, Nakai, Kalia and Makani) together as much as possible and
not separate them whenever possible.
iii.
Through the construction and closure of B pool
they worked on the bonds between the whales and have done a really good job of
figuring out who does better with whom and that they actually have a really
good pod at that park
iv.
We talked about Orlando and what they are doing
in the show pool. How they are replacing all the glass and refinishing and
repainting the pool and making some much needed repairs.
v.
When asked who the father to Makani was they
confirmed it was Kshamenk and that he is in Argentina. It was the first time I
had heard someone from SeaWorld say who his father was. They also knew who
sired some of the other whales born at SeaWorld San Diego.
vi.
They also told me that they are trying to keep
gates open more so whales can swim a little more freely between pools and get
away from other whales when needed.
b.
While at Underwater Viewing on Saturday, I had
an educator tell me who was in the pool at the time and how to identify each
whale. They later shared with me some of the whales habits and where to look
for specific whales.
c.
At the same time, I heard someone ask the
educator how old do whales live to be, while I didn’t hear the full response, I
heard them answer that Corky is the oldest at roughly 48 years of age. They
know they can live up to 50, if not longer, but there was no concrete evidence
as to how old a killer whale can live to their knowledge. They also said that
they are hoping to learn more as Corky gets older and lives out her life at
SeaWorld San Diego.
d.
During our Dine With Shamu experience, I asked
our waitress what had happened to Nakai’s chin. I told her I had heard rumors
but no concrete answer as to what happened. She told me that it was a freak accident
in which a couple of the whales were goofing around by the open gate and he
swam underneath them and they came down and his chin scrapped on the area where
the gate meets the pool. As soon as they found out what had happened they went
in and fixed the problem so that it wouldn’t happen again and it was fixed in
about a week and a half; that was with a trainer within ear shot of the
conversation.
2.
There was more information about their rescue
and rehabilitation program being shared and talked about, along with the
research that they are doing.
a.
The educators at the Sea Lion/Seal pool knew a
lot about what animals were getting ready to be released and what was going on
in the Animal Care center. That they had a higher number of rescues – a lot of
them pups – than normal and that they were working on teaching them how to swim
and hunt and preparing them to be released as soon as they were ready.
b.
At the start of One Ocean, they showed a video
of one of the rescued and released seals who had been shot, talking about how
they worked with her until she was ready to be released.
c.
Most educators were talking about the research
they do and how they are learning how to better help the animals in their care
and those in the wild.
3.
Kasatka, Nakai, Kalia and Makani were together
for the most part. We had Nakai, Kalia and Orkid at our Dine With Shamu
experience, but as soon as it was over Kasatka and Makani joined them in the
Underwater Viewing pool and stayed with them.
4.
IF a whale was in the med pool, a gate was open
to another pool for them to swim in and out of it freely.
a.
Our second day there Ikaika(I believe it was
Ikaika, hard to tell as I am still learning to identify them) was in the med
pool playing tug of war with Nakai and Kalia and Makani who were in C pool. At
first, I didn’t notice the gate open but then noticed it when he swam back into
B pool parading around the toy that he had won during tug of war.
b.
On Saturday, the med pool gate was opened to the
Underwater Viewing pool. Kalia actually was hanging out by the gate bird
hunting until the crowd thinned out down by the glass and then she came over
and put on a show by catching a bird and sharing it with Kasatka, Makani, Nakai
and Orkid.
Open gate
Kalia bird hunting
Kalia with her bird
Orkid, Nakai, Makani, Kalia all sharing the bird
Bottom line – changes are being made, people aren’t reciting
scripted answers to questions and they are being more open about how they feel.
While I know they are a 2.5 billion dollar company, if people stop going and
they start losing more money do we really think they are going to make changes?
Someone has to pay for the care of the animals and one of the ways that happens
is by the revenue they get from people going to the parks. Do I wish SeaWorld
would do more? Definitely, but I don’t think they will as long as all eyes are
on them. I know what it is like to have every move I make watched and then be
told that the only reason I did something was because they were watching me and
I knew that was what they wanted me to do, in other words forced me to do. It
was less meaningful and didn’t make me want to do any more than I had to do to
get them off my back. I can’t help but wonder if that is what is happening to
SeaWorld. They have taken a beating and every time we turn around someone else
is pouring salt into their wounds and pointing out another injury. It’s like an
accident on the side of the road that everyone slows down to look at. It is
humiliating. You do what you have to do to get it cleaned up and often don’t go
back to fix the deeper stuff – it is just a patch. Why not take eyes off them
for a little while, focus on Lolita, and Kiska and Kshamenk and let SeaWorld be
and in 6 months go back and look to see how they are doing? They can’t make any
major changes over night and constant eyes on them isn’t going to help get what
common knowledge tells us they should be doing.
So, the question still remains, will we go back to SeaWorld?
Probably. I want to support the trainers and care givers of these amazing animals
and they will be the first to feel the effect of people not going to SeaWorld.
I also have two kids who want to work there so I am going to do what I can to
expose them to the industry that they want to work in. They are smart kids who
want to help from the inside out and I am sorry, as a parent I would be doing
my kids a disservice to not take them and help them achieve their goals.
I had a friend ask me, "What does ______(I am leaving
them anonymous as I don’t want to call anyone out in this) suggest we do to
expose our kids to the animals that places like SeaWorld exposes them to? It’s
not like we can all afford to go to Alaska and see Killer Whales in their
natural habitat – even going out on whale watching trips there is no guarantee
that we will see a Killer Whale or see what we get to see at SeaWorld."
SeaWorld does provide eyes into those worlds that normal, everyday people don’t
get to see or experience. It is because of SeaWorld that my kids have a greater
respect for the ocean, have a greater respect for how we treat animals, and
have a desire to learn more about them and want to work with them; so that they
can help create an environment where they thrive and help educate others about
what we need to do to provide a safer environment in their natural habitat. I
am planning on asking them that question along with what do they suggest we
tell our kids who want to work at SeaWorld? Do we tell them not to pursue their
dreams of being a trainer and working at SeaWorld?
Before I end this, I want to point something out to people
who keep saying to free the whales! Of the 29 whales currently in SeaWorld’s
collection, 23 have been born into captivity. 5 were captured for entertainment
purposes and 1 was a rescue. 23 have NEVER seen the ocean before, do we really
think they are good candidates for release then? I think that would be death
sentence for the whales who have grown up with people around them caring for
them and interacting with them, and I think OSHA would have issues with
allowing SeaWorld trainers and veterinary staff near the animals in Seapens. As
it is SeaWorld is having to put fast rising floors in their pools to help
protect the trainers – something that wouldn’t be possible in a sea pen.
Sea World
I am going to start this blog off with a couple of posts about my family's recent trip to SeaWorld. I am open for a healthy debate but if your comments are mean and nasty, they won't be posted. I am done with the mean and nasty and sick of seeing it and hearing so please, keep it clean.
Here is a slideshow (wo music) of some of the pictures we got. It is just the tip of the iceberg of what we got on our trip but a good balance of what we got.
Here is a slideshow (wo music) of some of the pictures we got. It is just the tip of the iceberg of what we got on our trip but a good balance of what we got.
A New Beginning
Just a little about this blog. This is where you will find my pictures and thoughts about animals and natures. I am getting into photography and love photographing animals and nature. Please do not use my pictures without my permission. I will gladly share them with you but would like to know who is using them is all.
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