Fly-a-holic
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Aug 26, 2018
- Messages
- 213
- Reaction score
- 87
- Age
- 53
Ignorance is bliss. I didn’t know jack about sea turtles (or many other animals) until I did some work for conservation groups. You don’t know what you don’t know, until experts tell you what they’ve learned over time. It has little to do with human-based “common sense”. Wild creature sense lacks reason or logic. Over time, scientists develop approved methods for approaching/monitioring species — and they never stop modifying them. Evidently, like many animals & birds, turtles will tolerate or have adapted to, certain levels of restricted human encroachment — like me underwater. Who knew?There is absolutely no common sense in this discussion.
The Cayman Gov’t makes money from exploiting endangered species. This Turtle Tourist Center Also Raises Endangered Turtles for MeatMy younger brother visited the Cayman Islands on his honeymoon, he told me about a resteraunt with sea turtle on the menu. I guess it's kinda hard for me to get upset about someone filming them from above when you can fly south and eat as many of them as you want.
Ps- For the low, low price of $200 you can have one released back into the wild! That way you can ease your conscience after you've devoured one.
I have nothing against common sense approaches to conservation...ecology...ect. You seem to have a problem with "common sense".Ignorance is bliss. I didn’t know jack about sea turtles (or many other animals) until I did some work for conservation groups. You don’t know what you don’t know, until experts tell you what they’ve learned over time. It has little to do with human-based “common sense”. Wild creature sense lacks reason or logic. Over time, scientists develop approved methods for approaching/monitioring species — and they never stop modifying them. Evidently, like many animals & birds, turtles will tolerate or have adapted to, certain levels of restricted human encroachment — like me underwater. Who knew?
Flying objects isn’t one of them. It’s one of many reasons we can’t fly in National Parks or Preserves. Whether it’s sound or shadows, “death from above” is hard-wired into many terrestrial creatures, even amphibians. If not, it’s certainly an unknown, which equals danger — they often spook. How do you react when something suddenly, unexpectedly, flies directly over you? Even something small? A moving shadow on the ground you didn’t hear coming? You duck instinctively... If you’re mating, LOL, you stop...
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