Whales - A unique climate change solution

Why do whales matter in the fight to save our oceans?

These incredible animals are able to modify the environment around them and help:

  • Minimise the effects of climate change.

  • Support healthy commercial fisheries.

  • Support thriving marine tourism industries.

In the Southern Ocean alone, the 12,000 or so sperm whales found there enrich the iron-poor waters with their poop, allowing phytoplankton to bloom and minimising the impacts of climate change. These sperm whales remove 200 000 tonnes of carbon from the atmosphere each year!

Find our more about whales in my latest infographic for LiveAboard.com.

It’s a great resource for adults and children to learn about:

  • How whales support the health of our oceans and minimise climate change.

  • Current threats to whales.

  • How you can contribute to whale conservation from home.

Download your FREE Ocean Superheroes infographic today.

Click on the image below to get your copy now.

World Oceans Day: Help Make A Mermaid’s Dream Come True

There was a time when putting my face underwater brought on panic attacks and the feeling I would die, which is why I decided to train as a scuba instructor. Go big right?!As Mark Twain so elegantly put it…‘Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn’t do than by the one you did do. So, throw off the bowline. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.’I certainly threw off my bowline and dug deep, and frankly, I scared the life out of myself for the next three years. With hypnotherapy, crying in my dive mask often, and more visualisations than an Olympic athlete would use, I showed myself and the world that we can do anything if we have the courage to try. Anything at all.What did success look like?This….Kathryn Diving No MaskThat moment was when I knew I’d made it and it was worth every tear and moment of terror.Fast forward two years, I herniated a disc in my back and found myself unexpectedly unemployed. Who knew sneezing was so dangerous? I needed a new challenge whilst recovering in bed, so started a marine conservation cause Friends for Sharks with my partner. We planned to give free talks to adults and children around the globe, making marine conservation accessible to all, and talking about the importance of sharks. All whilst raising money for two charities, without funding or an income for ourselves for 18 months. Small matters we’d deal with later, or so I hoped when I lay awake wondering what on earth we’d taken on. We spent the last of our savings on two round the world flights before we could back out.We started off not knowing what Twitter was, let alone how to plan a world tour. I still don’t know what Twitter is but we finished having completed 87 talks, in 8 countries, and having presented to over 7000 people.What did success look like?A lot like this…School talks in The Cook Islands. One of 60 events in New Zealand Working hard to get press coverage in each town With plenty of this… Teaching the next generation about sharks A little bit of this… Getting engaged diver-style More of this than we’d like… The fire that stopped our biggest event in Vancouver, four days after our first trip to A&E…on the day we arrived in Canada More hospital time in New Zealand Exhausted in Thailand after 11 months on the road And finally, this!   We can do anything if we have the courage to try. Anything at all.With that attitude in mind, I have entered the Miss Diving Specials 2017 competition to win a diving adventure. I would like to win so I can join that liveaboard, give shark conservation talks to new audiences, and show others what can be done with a pocket full of courage. I also want to win to take my husband on honeymoon, which is something we can’t afford to do and he dearly deserves some ocean time. That man, he’s amazing. Truly he is.To win, I need the most likes of my photograph at this link. It’s that simple and the current leader has 600 or so votes.Please will you vote for me? It will take less than 20 seconds to do and you might just make a mermaid’s dream come true.Let’s dream big and make this happen! 

Vote Here

 Thank you, from the bottom of my heart.Kathryn 

Place your vote at: https://premium.easypromosapp.com/voteme/811128/627152656

Wrongful Death Lawsuit Filed by Conservationist Rob Stewart’s Family

The family of Rob Stewart, a Canadian filmmaker and shark conservationist, filed a wrongful death lawsuit on 28th March 2017 at Broward County, Florida. The lawsuit has been filed following the death of Rob Stewart during a dive off the Florida Keys in January 2017 and seeks unspecified damages.Rob Stewart died whilst filming for Sharkwater Extinction at the Queen of Nassau wreck, 9.7 kilometres off the coast of Islamorada. According to the lawsuit, Stewart dived to a depth of 70m with dive organizer Peter Sotis and came into difficulties during the third dive of the day.Read more here: http://ca.thescubanews.com/2017/03/29/wrongful-death-lawsuit-filed-by-conservationist-rob-stewarts-family/

Sharks - Caretakers of the Oceans

A very proud day seeing my shark conservation article for Forest and Bird New Zealand in print. With over 70,000 members/readers, this will go some way to spreading the shark conservation message.Full article here: Caretakers of the Oceans