Wild Dolphin Foundation

Wild Dolphin Foundation We ALL Need a PORPOISE in Life! Conservation, education about and research of dolphins.

08/11/2023
07/23/2023
" It was a trip months in the making to celebrate their 40th wedding anniversary with kids and grandkids, and Janet and ...
05/03/2022

" It was a trip months in the making to celebrate their 40th wedding anniversary with kids and grandkids, and Janet and Steve Ferreira spared no expense. The Acushnet couple booked a family cruise that would take them to several Caribbean islands and Mexico, with several excursions along the way, including a swim with dolphins in Cozumel. [COZUMEL MEXICO}

It was all sunshine and laughter for the Ferreira family until, Janet says, things went awry during the dolphin encounter she paid hundreds of dollars for.

She was in the water waiting for two dolphins to swim up behind her for a “dolphin tow” when, according to the grandmother and former first grade teacher, one of the dolphins went rogue and rammed her in the lower back.

“Maybe two seconds after that hit, here comes another one,” Janet recalls of the August 2019 attack. “It’s like somebody would take a baseball bat, like David Ortiz would take a baseball bat and just swing it at my back. You start thinking, ‘If this hits me one more time, I could die,’ die in front of my family and in front of my three young grandchildren.”

She says the dolphin struck her three times before a trainer jumped in a yanked her out of the water.

Janet was taken to a local hospital with a broken spine and ribs. She doesn’t speak Spanish, so communicating with medical staff was difficult. As she battled intense pain her family and friends back home worked around the clock to get her flown back to Boston in an air ambulance.

Janet filed a lawsuit against Dolphin Discovery Cozumel and Royal Caribbean, the cruise line she booked the dolphin excursion with. Royal Caribbean declined to comment pending litigation. But, in a statement, The Dolphin Company, the parent company of Dolphin Discovery Cozumel, which was operating the excursion Janet was on, said:

“For more than 27 years The Dolphin Company has operated with the greatest respect and consideration for our guests, our team members and the animals in our care. Each year 2 million visitors come to our parks around the world. Above all, safety and security are our number one priority; any type of unplanned experience is very rare yet something we take very seriously. Dolphin Discovery Cozumel has been in our family of parks since 1998 hosting more than 1.8 million visitors since that time.”

“She lied in bed for about a day and a half, without any treatment, until a transport could be arranged,” said George Leontire, Janet’s attorney.

Dolphin attacks are rare, but travel injuries are common. When trouble strikes in a foreign country, it can be a devastating.

“You feel alone, you’re helpless. Helpless because we felt that they didn’t know what to do. They didn’t know how to handle it,” said Janet’s husband Steve, recounting the experience to 25 Investigates.

According to the CDC, 1 in 5 Americans is injured while on vacation. Car and bike crashes; slip and falls; food poisoning; water, theme park and sports accidents top the list. Access to medical care varies from country to country, said Anne Lischwe, a travel advisor with AAA Northeast.

She says Medicare and most private health insurance will not cover medical care outside the United States, and in some countries proof of payment is required before a doctor will even see you.

Lischwe recommends travel insurance. There are countless short-term policies available that cover medical expenses abroad, air ambulance rides back to the U.S. and reimbursement if you or a family member gets COVID right before or during a trip.

“It’s not necessarily a one size fits all. You want to think about what is important to you, and what are you concerned about,” says Lischwe. “You call one number and they tell you what to do, they’ll tell you what hospital to go to, they’ll walk through all of that.”

Travel insurance costs about 3 to 11 percent of your total trip, depending on the policy and where you are going.

It took Janet more than a month just to get back on her feet. She can no longer teach because of permanent damage to her spine.

“If I ever go to an island, I will shop. There will be no excursions of any kind, way, shape or form,” she said."

“Like David Ortiz would take a baseball bat and just swing it at my back,” recalls the grandmother, of the attack.

With all the heaviness in the world right now, we wanted to share an uplifting animal rescue story. Take a moment and en...
04/17/2022

With all the heaviness in the world right now, we wanted to share an uplifting animal rescue story. Take a moment and enjoy 🐬☀️

On March 1, the world welcomed the meteorological first day of spring and J59, the first calf born into J Pod since Sept...
03/05/2022

On March 1, the world welcomed the meteorological first day of spring and J59, the first calf born into J Pod since September 2020.

We are excited to announce that on March 1, we welcomed the meteorological first day of spring and a new calf in J Pod!

We received word that J Pod was nearby. Special thanks to Sara Hysong-Shimazu and Monika Wieland Shields for letting us know that there was possibly a new addition to the Southern Resident orca family.

The Center for Whale Research's photo-ID expert, Dave Ellifrit, found the whales near Kelp Reef and confirmed the new addition to J pod. The calf was next to J37, with J47 and J40 nearby ...
https://www.whaleresearch.com/j59

"In Mexico, consumers are allowed to eat totoaba—just not the wild version of this critically endangered fish. For aroun...
02/26/2022

"In Mexico, consumers are allowed to eat totoaba—just not the wild version of this critically endangered fish. For around 10 years, fish farmers have raised totoaba in sea pens off the coast of Mexico, successfully selling their product domestically: consumers have eaten it up, with foodies describing totoaba flesh as pillowy and tender with massive, buttery, halibut-like flakes. Now the aquaculture industry wants to break out of Mexico and export farmed totoaba, a move that has drawn fire from conservationists.
..To illegally fish for totoaba, poachers use gill nets, which can also entangle and drown the vaquita. This has been pointed out year after year by the International Committee for the Recovery of the Vaquita. The last population survey in 2021 estimated that no more than 10 porpoises remain in the wild.
..Nevertheless, no case is as unique as the totoaba’s when the vaquita is added to the equation. Considering totoaba maw remains coveted in Asian markets, there is a reasonable expectation that farmed totoaba could amplify the demand and eventually trigger more illegal poaching in the Upper Gulf of California. The market for tiger bone wine validates the concern: China banned the tiger bone trade in 1993, but not the farming of tigers, whose population grew from as low as 100 to over 6,000 today. The result, critics say, was a heightened demand for a luxury product that was waning in the 1990s. Investigations have revealed that the legal market provided cover for the black market.

Arguments come and go like waves in the Upper Gulf of California. Too many questions are still unanswered. Can one enterprise provide a solution for a complex conservation conflict? Could this help the vaquita? For now, the future of commercialized and wild totoaba is waiting its turn at the CITES discussion table."

International officials will soon decide the fate of Mexican totoaba fish farming—and with it, possibly the last glimmer of hope for the vaquita.

02/22/2022

The rare marine mammal is facing an existential threat from fishing nets. Scientists hope they can be saved, but time is running out

11/01/2021

This is "WhaleHanaleiOctober2021-2.mov" by Joel Guy on Vimeo, the home for high quality videos and the people who love them.

"Thanking all the photo contributors that have made this study possible, particularly Pacific Whale Foundation, Wild Dol...
06/15/2021

"Thanking all the photo contributors that have made this study possible, particularly Pacific Whale Foundation, Wild Dolphin Foundation, Ocean Joy Cruises, Dolphin Excursions Hawaii, Lynn Padilla, Chuck Babbitt, Paul C. Johnson, Jim Ault and many others!
This photo shows two of the “inter-island travelers” off the south side of Lāna‘i, taken during our December 2020 field effort.
If you are interested you can download a copy of Annette’s thesis from our Hawai‘i publications page at https://www.cascadiaresearch.org/hawaiian.../publications... or directly fromhttps://www.cascadiaresearch.org/.../Harnish_Thesis_2021.pdf

For all that bad rap that Bottlenose Dolphins get (aggressive bullies), they aren't all that bad. Not all the time anyho...
05/28/2021

For all that bad rap that Bottlenose Dolphins get (aggressive bullies), they aren't all that bad. Not all the time anyhow.

Researchers from the Far Out Ocean Research Collective were surprised earlier this month to spot a female bottlenose dolphin swimming off the shore of Paih

See the comments below for the open access paper.
05/09/2021

See the comments below for the open access paper.

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