WHALING INDUSTRY.
- LOOKING Oil' iOii GOOD GltO(.iN'i;ib.v
(Special to ••''sh-c Coloiiibx.";
ChitLi.o>^i"C.'i, August £6. Tho sluiuu awu!;-!' uojurt Wuiiih icffc Ly"LU.-itL,ii last iii:j.;:., \\:ii ai^iiij v. "prospoeuiig" criiih^. v..: uer \ Vl ;j iu>.ii;u the coasu ip V. v'Stp^i •:. il^i i-ii.toi,^u- ib on tilO IOOivOUt lOi1 Ja'JCd \.^liUig y,IX;UJiUb, iUid no wui Jin v.t- t jjj,::L-L- ou> \, u.ccjib in
uio viciUK,} oi i^m^j^j., •ooOiv bi.i-i.aL, *-v;'.i-Ci_\i CiiarkitLL ,:.^.^, ;~iui .i^a^n island. bjVCi.Ui uU.'HUa ViiU Uv paid lO tno an<-uunices; i.. i^u iioi^iioouriiuoa oi tiiO tuo lu>6C Ui^^l.Lj.l^^i jjiutx-o. it- IS uituley iiaie .-.k-l^. 1 bcii,rto in i\ew /ic.-uaad iwiu.:;;, ...:ij. Lio clonus oi tJio two iieirts lnr\ c L.0j.1 \i,is Mnuii. '.ljio Hawk has not laii^vi v, Biii^i-j vwuiio tvu luig mo paus mo \.-<-±-». jiw iui^uigers oi the companies ;uc, however, by no means ditxjura^cil, a.ivi j.i\> oi opinion HKio tlsu presein, li^ic sjs ua "on seasou. " information Jius bueii received in Chnsiichurcn thai, v.;j i^iuornuus V» lialiwg Company, \uiiuh ib v uiy, iWv\egmn concern, will siioi'lij L:.ivo iiti activo part in the whaling .huUit,\i\ i in this, pare of the world. Tliis company wili shortly send out to New Zw.;u.mi tito big s\.e;>mer JLaborimus ol 6,'vjJu tons deau uoignt capacity. Siio is uo present Oding htied cue in Norway y.^ a iloaitiny; mciory •completely equipped for dealing with twenty-four wliaios i>2r day! bna will "•be accompanied by two,fast and. up-to-date whale -hunting stoamers similar to the Hbbart and otnors iiof in JSiow Zealand waters, and is expected to arrive out at the.Uluif in November, in connection with this'iieet, to which the Hobart, Eagle, and other whale hunters will pro/nibiy La attached, & bold step is proposed. As has been shown by.thereports juf .the Antarctic exploration expeditions whales abound in the seas of the Far ■'South, having probaoly taken to those -lonely stretches of ocean to escape from the op-orations of tlie modern whalers.. The uaborimus Company will send its floating factory and the whaling steamers to the Far South, and during the summer months tiio hardy Norse whalers will operate in the seas inside*the Antarctic Circle. It has always been considered impracticable and unsafe for steel \essels to attempt to navigate the ice strewn seaa of these high latitudes, but the Norwegians 'are confident that they can successfully carry on whaling operations during the Antarctic summer in those latitudes. There is practically continuous daylight during the summer, and it is considered by the Norwegian whalers,, that with ordinary care, the floating ico will not I>3 a ba>r to their work. It is hoped j that the factory Labcrimu-s and her fleet of whale hunting steamers will bo . able to carry on as far south as the Great 102 Barrier of the Antarctic, and with favourable weather conditions, will reap a rich" harvest of the seas.
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Bibliographic details
Colonist, Volume LIV, Issue 13507, 29 August 1912, Page 6
Word Count
463WHALING INDUSTRY. Colonist, Volume LIV, Issue 13507, 29 August 1912, Page 6
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