reeferx
Member
Ok. I am hoping this post will help rationalize our addictions to this hobby.
Everyone has lost fish. Multiply that by the thousands (millions?) of us out there and that is a lot of fish. Behind the scenes even more fish are being lost in capture and shipping. Somewhere in the world right now someone is squirting fish with a water bottle full of cyanide, or throwing dynamite overboard, or breaking off some slow-growing coral to sell to tourists on the beach.
I realize that even this does not cause as much damage as poorly managed fisheries or military activities, etc, but are we doing more harm than good? I can name a few postives, but do these really outweigh the negatives?
I don't want to rain on everyone's parade, I love this as much as anyone else, but this guilt is something that I, and I suspect many of you, wrestle with from time to time.
What real positives come from this hobby?
Sincerely,
Matt Rogers
Everyone has lost fish. Multiply that by the thousands (millions?) of us out there and that is a lot of fish. Behind the scenes even more fish are being lost in capture and shipping. Somewhere in the world right now someone is squirting fish with a water bottle full of cyanide, or throwing dynamite overboard, or breaking off some slow-growing coral to sell to tourists on the beach.
I realize that even this does not cause as much damage as poorly managed fisheries or military activities, etc, but are we doing more harm than good? I can name a few postives, but do these really outweigh the negatives?
I don't want to rain on everyone's parade, I love this as much as anyone else, but this guilt is something that I, and I suspect many of you, wrestle with from time to time.
What real positives come from this hobby?
Sincerely,
Matt Rogers