It's a very regulated affair now. WA Department of Parks and Wildlife line visitors up on the beach and jetty like boot camp, lecture us about the evils of over provisioning and then choose the lucky few to toss a fish into the toothy maw of the just 5 dolphins that are being fed. It is a crowd experience, a set piece and not for me.
By contrast last evening, when there were no buckets of fish about, Dolphins came in close to the beach and thrilled the handful of us watching the sunset. Yes they were probably looking for a handout, but it was up close and personal. It was terrific.
And behind us stood a resort that exists only because those Dolphins started getting fed fifty years ago . So I find myself very ambivalent about it all. I like to see Dolphins up close, I don't want the crowded lecture and I want the Dolphins to live happily ever after too!
So I guess the solution is somewhere close to where they've landed.....the feeding is regulated, the population is monitored, the crowd gets educated and the sunset admirers obtain random, close encounters of a cetacean kind!


























