“I've been in the shrimp processing business for 34 years, and this is the worst fall shrimp season I've ever seen,” said Danny Babin, general manager of Gulf Fish Inc. in Houma, who will be representing parts of Houma, Grand Caillou and Dularge on the Terrebonne Parish Council next year. The poor shrimping this year has been acknowledged by BP claims czar Ken Feinberg, who announced last month that he would double payouts for fishermen who have not yet resolved their claims. Shrimp and crab harvesters and processors will receive four times their documented 2010 losses from now on. Dean Blanchard, a ...
Mizu announced this morning that it has finalized its executive search and named industry veteran and Ride Snowboards Co-founder Tim Pogue as its new CEO and president. Over the last 20 years, Pogue managed consumer brands from recent marketing and licensing work with the Bob Marley brand, to pro athlete management at Burton, to product development and business operations as president and co-founder of Ride Snowboards. Full Story at: http://business.transworld.net/80578/features/mizu-names-tim-pogue-ceo-and-president/ About Mizu: Mizu is the original action sports water bottle brand. The company was founded by Jussi Oksanen, pro snowboarder, a four-time Winter X Games medalist, three-time US Open medalist and Olympic athlete, in ...
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Every year tens of millions of sharks die a slow death because of finning. Finning is the inhumane practice of hacking off the shark's fins and throwing its still living body back into the sea. The sharks either starve to death, are eaten alive by other fish, or drown (if they are not in constant movement their gills cannot extract oxygen from the water). Shark fins are being "harvested" in ever greater numbers to feed the growing demand for shark fin soup, an Asian "delicacy". Illegal Shark Finning in China! Not only is the finning of sharks barbaric, but their indiscriminate slaughter ...
At 3PM, thousands of students, workers, and other supporters gathered in Union Square chanting "Shut the city down!" and using the People's Mic to share stories of how banks and corporate greed have impacted the 99%. Simultaneously, Occupiers took to multiple subway stations in all five boroughs. Students chanted "CUNY should be free!" and "Student Power!" as they took to the streets along 16th and 5th Avenue, shutting down traffic and leaving police powerless to respond. Police attempts to erect barricades along 5th Avenue failed to block the march, as banners reading "OCCUPIED" were seen along New School buildings. Now, massive crowds ...
A Sustainable Vision The ultimate goal for Ocean Green is to produce surfboards that are made entirely from natural sustainable raw materials. Most surfers feel compromised by having to use equipment that is ecologically damaging in what should be a natural environment. OG gives surfers the choice of showing respect for their environment as they interact with it. Performance, Strength and Beauty The innovative construction of our EcoFoil surfboards produces a robust yet lightweight hollow balsa core. The shapes have been designed by our world class shaper Frank McWilliams and the Nicaraguan balsa wood achieves a stunning finish. Ethical Practices We are committed to sourcing sustainable ...
"LOVE" Militia from Miami, complements of 3rd and Ocean... 3rd and Ocean - http://www.3rdandOcean.com
The Springwise Newsletter informs us all of another awesome recycling/reuse idea: Keeping surfboards out of landfills with recycling and reuse. We've seen efforts focusing to varying extents on each of the “3Rs” of waste management — reduce, reuse and recycle — but we couldn't resist mentioning one more that recently caught our eye. It isn't brand new, but California-based Rerip is a site that aims to help surfers resell, exchange and recycle old surfboards. Polyurethane, epoxy resin and expanded polystyrene are among the harmful compounds used to make surfboards today, Rerip points out. For that reason, its mission is “to create accountability, ...

Ancient giant horned turtles were driven to extinction by settlers of a Pacific island, say Australian researchers.
Palaeontologist Dr Trevor Worthy from University of New South Wales in Sydney and colleagues report their findings of a turtle graveyard in Vanuatu in this week’s issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The turtle remains were found on top of an even older human graveyard, and this is the first time such remains have been found with human remains, says Worthy.
The findings show the turtles coexisted with humans for 300 years before being hunted to extinction.
“People arrived on Vanuatu 3100 years ago and the village middens, which are the rubbish dumps that provided these bones, date to 2800 years ago,” he says.
“So there’s essentially a 300-year gap between those first human arrivals and the end of these turtles in these middens.”
Meiolaniid or horned turtles are an extinct family of land-dwelling animals that evolved during the time of the dinosaurs in Gondwana.
Worthy says the turtles had horns on their head, spikes on the back of their shell and a big club on their tail – an armoury that evolved as a defence against predators like dinosaurs.
He says the horned turtles were thought to have all died out by at least 50,000 years ago.
In Australia the animals were most numerous on Lord Howe Island where they died out, ‘probably due to climate change’, says Worthy.
But now, he and colleagues have found remains of a completely new species of horned turtles that is just 2800 to 3000 years old – the youngest ever found.
The turtle graveyard was found at a place called Teouma, on the south coast of Efate Island in Vanuatu.
This was home to the Lapita people, the first colonisers of eastern Melanesia and Polynesia who are well known for their decorated pottery.
So far, Worthy and colleagues have found more than 400 fragments of turtle remains, representing about 30 individuals.
Significantly, they have found mainly leg bones, but no head or tail remains, and only small fragments of shell.
“This suggests very strongly that the animals were butchered somewhere other than in the village where we excavated them,” says Worthy.
“They just cut them up and brought back the bits that had most meat on them.”
Despite all their armour, the turtles were vulnerable to being speared in the neck and being flipped over so they were defenceless, says Worthy.
“Once you spear them, you could just turn them on their back and they’re stuffed,” he says.
He says this is what early Dutch and Portuguese sailors did to turtles on Rodrigues, part of the Mascarenes Islands in the Indian Ocean, in the 14th and 15th centuries.
“They just grabbed the turtles, laid them upside down so they couldn’t walk away and put them in the boat. Then they had fresh meat for ages,” says Worthy.
He says it took the sailors two centuries to wipe out turtles on Rodrigues.
Thanks to ABC Catalyst: Ancient turtles hunted to extinction
image: Like this close relative, the turtle had horns, spikes on the back of its shell and a club on the end of its tail, say researches (Source: C. Bento /Australian Museum)