Baleal Surf Fest II Rotating Header Image

What is Baleal Surf Fest (?)

The Baleal Surf Fest has a very unique concept, driven by the surf community of Peniche and the region around it. The basis of this small event is rooted in Chile where in a talk with some of the people of Surfers for Cetaceans, like Howie Cooke and Dave Rastovich, and also inspired by their campaign called “El Mar, Mi Alma”, that was aimed at the heart of the surf communities in Chile and the civil society in general.

That was the genesis of the idea, having the community and civil society participation in such an event that gathered Surf, Music, Art and the struggle for a better healthier planet, via the activism and the environmentalist movement.

The idea was very well accepted and we managed to have some of the Surfers for Cetaceans crew down in Baleal, Peniche. Gathered some of the community of the region and for two days celebrated the ocean, our inspiration and creativity and also armed ourselves with knowledge regarding some of the most striking  and brutal ways of destroying nature, that is the whaling industry.

This year we want not to expand the event but make it a little better, with a few more things that were missing last year.

The big difference between this and others festivals is that all of it is for free, based on donations and landings from the community and some brands. You can get active and participate in spreading the word, get conscious of many aspects of the oceans that you didn’t know perhaps… or you have been told something else about it. This is an act of truth, respect, dignity and praise and care for our oceans, the creatures that live on it, and ourselves!

Join us on th1 18th and 19th of June at the small village of Baleal, Peniche, Portugal for the BALEAL SURF FEST II!

This year we will have (see our program for more information!):
- Beach Clean-up: where you will learn what does the simple act of leaving a plastic bag on the beach;
- Surf Championships: Paddling and Surf Vintage Championships will take place, more for fun, rather than competition;
- Surf Clinic: where everyone can have a surf class for free, and experience this wonderful sport;
- Surf Test-Drive: provided by the local surf factory fatum surfboards, where you can try different boards and technical material;
- The Cove: watch the Oscar winning documentary, and learn about the dolphin industry;
- Art: come and see old surfboards and their stories, live painting, and ways of re-using many things you thought were garbage;
- Music: celebrate with us the joy of living and being able to share the ocean connect with nature and act for a better tomorrow.

Mahalo!
Mahalo is a Hawaiian word meaning thanks, gratitude, admiration, praise, esteem, regards, respects.

Plan to overturn whaling ban unveiled!

(Sydney, Australia – 23 April 2010) – The International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW – www.ifaw.org) announced that the International Whaling Commission (IWC) has released a new plan to legalize commercial whaling.

The proposal, if adopted, would overturn the 1986 ban on commercial whaling by authorizing whaling by Norway, Iceland, and Japan. It would also legalize Japan’s whaling in an internationally recognized whale sanctuary around Antarctica, grant new rights to Japan, Iceland, and Norway to kill whales for commercial purposes, and ignore established IWC scientific procedures for estimating sustainable whaling limits.

The plan, released today by the IWC Secretariat based in Cambridge, United Kingdom, is to be considered and acted on in June at the IWC’s annual meeting in Agadir, Morocco.

“This plan is a whaler’s wish list,” said Patrick Ramage, IFAW’s Whale Program Director. “It throws a lifeline to a dying industry when endangered whale populations face more threats than ever before. This would be a breathtaking reversal of decades of conservation progress at the IWC.”

The IWC, which is comprised of 88-member governments, is the global body responsible for conservation of our planet’s great whales. Three member countries – Japan, Norway, and Iceland – have continued to hunt whales, ignoring the worldwide commercial whaling ban. The proposed plan proposes annual whale-hunting quotas for these countries under the discretion of the IWC.

The current proposal would also:

Overturn the global ban on commercial whaling and allow hunting in the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary around Antarctica.
Approve the killing of whales for commercial purposes by Japan around Antarctica and in the North Pacific.
Add new rights for Japan to hunt whales in its coastal waters.
Allow continuing whaling by Iceland and Norway in violation of long-agreed scientific procedures and the global whaling ban.

“Australia offered a proposal which saw a phase out of whaling down to zero – the only number that should be considered in the 21st Century,” said Erica Martin, Director IFAW Asia Pacific.

“This package, in contrast, rewards Japan, Iceland and Norway for decades of whaling in defiance of international law.”

“We trust Australia will maintain its courageous stand and continue to fight against this proposal. And we encourage New Zealanders and Americans to raise their voices in anger that their governments would push forward this dangerous deal that will see a return to commercial whaling.”

“Any nation that claims to be in favour of whale conservation cannot accept this package. It can and must be rejected.”