Close-ups with Dolphins boost park's cash flow
Posted on Thu, Jun. 23, 2005
BY DOUGLAS HANKS III
Dolphins belong to the Delphindae family, but put them in a pool with tourists and they resemble a far more coveted species: the cash cow.
Theater of the Sea in Islamorada charges $150 for a 30-minute dolphin swim. Petting one costs $15 at the Dolphin Research Center in Grassy Key; volunteering there as a trainer costs $650. The Miami Seaquarium's dolphin swims generate more than $1 million a year -- as much as comes in from the park's gift shops and souvenir stands.
So it's no surprise face-to-fin encounters have emerged as a significant growth industry.
In a decade, the United States went from having four places to swim with the dolphins to more than two dozen. At least seven swim facilities have opened in the Caribbean since 2000, according to Humane Society estimates, with plans for a dozen or more in the works.
http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/business/11961753.htmWhat they don't tell you is at Ric O'Barry's site (Ric is a former Flipper trainer). Here is a description of dolphin capture from that website:
"One Voice succeeded in videotaping the gruesome scene as dolphin trainers, working side by side with the Taiji fishermen, drove a pod of more than 100 bottlenose dolphins into the killing lagoon to select the ones that fit the desired criteria for public display. The trainers killed at least four dolphins in the selection process. ... Meanwhile, the dolphin trainers let the fishermen kill all the dolphins they didn't want. There were several very small babies in the pod. They still depended on their mothers‚ milk for survival and were too young to train. So the fishermen killed them, and the dolphin trainers did absolutely nothing to help them. The dolphins cried as the fishermen slashed them with hooks and knives and the lagoon filled with their blood..."
http://www.dolphinproject.org/