Lighten up on the dolphins
In all due respect to Dennis Kelly, the marine mammal expert, I think
he needs to lighten up a little (“Dolphins nose about bay,” Aug. 12).
We know he has studied dolphin behavior for a long time and is very
credible.
However, we all know that the dolphins are highly-intelligent
creatures, and if they didn’t want to interact, they would certainly
find their way out the way they did in.
We know dolphins can locate food from miles and miles away, and
certainly if they can catch the schools of fish in the vast ocean
from where they came, they can catch that school of fish in the Back
Bay, even if the electric boat scared that one school.
Practically every day for the last 30 years, between here and Long
Beach, I observe dolphins frolicking in the ocean, interacting with
the surfers, surfing beside them in the waves, hanging right next to
them in the surf line. The surfers are there; the dolphins come to
them. Are the surfers also violating federal law? When people go out
in boats and dolphins follow playfully alongside, in front and
behind, are they violating the law?
And what happened to the idea that kayaking or canoeing brings us
quietly close to nature to view birds and other wildlife in the
waters more closely? There is no way a kayaker can catch up with a
dolphin. They are so speedy. If the dolphins didn’t like the goings
on in that portion of the bay, don’t you think they would leave?
The only danger to the dolphins in the bay is the pollution, some
of the off-shore boats, with huge propellers and blasting rap music,
and the occasional, disrespectful, large boaters, who head right into
them, knowing full well they are out in front. This I have observed
firsthand. Perhaps a check from the Harbor Patrol can slow them down.
The dolphins are too smart to hang around if they are being
disturbed. They wouldn’t come up to the kayaks, which are standing
still, if they were so disturbed.
Let the public have a little excitement, and by all means,
everyone should lighten up. By the looks of it, the dolphins have.
SHIRLEY REINKER
Newport Beach
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