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Why We Should have a seal Cull and support our Sealers

Nobody seems to mind a Deer Cull in southern Ontario. Most years now there is a deer season in southern Ontario to cull the thriving deer populations. There is not a sweeter graceful more harmless creature than a deer, but nobody complains about slaughtering them for fur and food. After all it's your corn and petunias they are eating.


The seal is a fierce and clever predator, Their populations are thriving. Each seal eats 5 kilos of fish a day as we are trying to restore the cod population. Every fisherman has lost thousands of dollars to seals destroying mackerel nets and shellfish traps. The seal is also a killer he is in the foodchain he is in the game.

what is the difference between between a Seal and a Deer?


Our Maritime fisher folk are always hard pressed to make a living. The sea is a harsh mistress and no fishery or harvest or market is a sure thing, especially in modern times. The seals need to be culled and it makes sense to give the fisher folk an other opportunity to add to their livelihood.

The Hypocrisy of the European Union should be especially troubling. it as the fathers of these same sealers who first out of the gate to save these same ingrates in two wars.


The Seal Protesters are the most despicable because they use this cause as their cash cow they will say and do anything to keep the cash coming.

Even worse is the propaganda film that they produced that portrays sealers as brutal sadistic killers.

it is just not true. They are honest hard working family men trying to make a living.

If they had any integrity they would be making peace with the sealers and setting up a reasonable and humane seal cull. the sealers (fisher-folk) are closer to seals and could supply valuable information. Believe me more seals are suffering because there isn't one.


Blood and Ice make for great contrasts dramatic photos. But it should be clear that sealers are no crueler than any others in the killing of animals for food and fur. All harvesting of animals is brutal


I don't like killing anything but I am what i am. Just because we are distanced from the abattoir and let others do our butchering for us and we buy our meat in plastic packages. We should not impede others who haven't forsaken our hunter/gather heritage to make their living. If you eat meat or fish you are in the game and should't condem the people who supply you.

and when we have Foreign Governments attacking our own we should rally to their defence.


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Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Canada's annual seal hunt off to slow start

28 MARCH 2010 - 22H45  

Canada's annual seal hunt off to slow start
Seal hunters kill a seal near their boat in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence in 2008. Canada's annual seal hunt was off to a slow start Sunday, with most fishing boats still moored in their harbors, as missing ice floes in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence kept their prey hundreds of miles to the north.
Seal hunters kill a seal near their boat in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence in 2008. Canada's annual seal hunt was off to a slow start Sunday, with most fishing boats still moored in their harbors, as missing ice floes in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence kept their prey hundreds of miles to the north.
AFP - Canada's annual seal hunt was off to a slow start Sunday, with most fishing boats still moored in their harbors, as missing ice floes in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence kept their prey hundreds of miles to the north.
"I know one boat set sail tonight, at around 4:00 am in the morning," Magdalen Island seal hunters' association president Denis Longuepee told AFP.
"In past years, there were 10 to 40 boats weighing anchor" to go seal hunting, he added.
About a dozen hunters are aboard a ship trying to find a small harem of 1,000 seals spotted Saturday from a plane by Fisheries and Oceans Canada near Blanc-Sablon, in the northeastern corner of Quebec province, according to Radio Canada.
The mild winter this year has hampered the hunt for the Greenland seal. A lack of ice floes in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence has kept some 300,000 seals far to the north, off the coast of Newfoundland and Labrador, where there is coastal ice.
That's good news for seal hunters in Newfoundland and Labrador, said Longuepee.
Seal hunting brings in 20-30 percent of the yearly revenue of 400-500 hunter-fishermen in Magdalen Islands. The rest of the year, they fish for lobster and clams.
Seal hunting is highly controversial for its perceived inhumane killing methods. The 27 European Union states in July 2009 adopted a ban on seal products, ruling the goods could not be marketed from 2010.
Around 6,000 Canadians take part in seal hunting each year along the Atlantic coast, and 25 percent of their sales had come from exporting products to Europe.
Canada and Greenland account for more than 50 percent of the 900,000 seals slain in the world each year. Other seal-hunting countries include Norway, Namibia, Iceland, Russia and the United States.

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