ナショナルジオグラフィックのインスタグラム(natgeo) - 5月28日 15時39分
Photo by Cristina Mittermeier @Cristina Mittermeier | “When the tide is out, the table is set.” Those are words Hereditary Chief Bill Cranmer of the 'Namgis First Nation used to hear a lot. Now they’re just an echo of a more sustainable past: In 2009 the open-net Atlantic fish farms were destroying the wild salmon runs his people have depended on for thousands of years. He went on record as saying, “It’s a lot worse than people think.” Nine years later, after endless court proceedings, protests, and a heroic 280-day occupation of the farms, the open nets are finally being removed from the once pristine Broughton Archipelago of British Columbia, and the wild salmon might return. Chief Cranmer is an advocate of land-based fish farms and was a leader in the opening of Kuterra, an on-land alternative to open-net farms. #FollowMe at @Cristina Mittermeier for more portraits and stories of people from around the world. #GetFishFarmsOut #BritishColumbia #sustainability #ocean
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