Transaction: c5291f331b89440bf7a9d9106157d37a839ab561

Included in block 22,457,307 at 2018/05/15 17:10:00 (UTC).

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Transaction info
transaction_id c5291f331b89440bf7a9d9106157d37a839ab561
ref_block_num 43,975
block_num22,457,307
ref_block_prefix 1,131,320,730
expiration2018/05/15T17:19:54
transaction_num 54
extensions[]
signatures 1f40ab3ca3105f9c65a44131e73173651a3e2303be0eb52bb96d73c5511bad5df304a29000794d568e54bd373c8fc4a095fa02a1edb52d67de841fdaf9779de114
operations
comment
"parent_author":"",<br>"parent_permlink":"steem",<br>"author":"milonmia",<br>"permlink":"perano-whaling-station",<br>"title":"Perano Whaling Station",<br>"body":"![perano.jpg (https:\/\/gateway.ipfs.io\/ipfs\/QmWWuJkTKH45USMz7yU4tRaBrNXJ3ZC6oTVHGS6jBywPyf)\n\nPerano Whaling Station (1911)\nLast gasp of the \u2018robber economy\u2019?\nWhaling off the New Zealand coast did not die with the sacking of Koror\u0101reka or the departure of the last Nantucket ship. In Cook Strait and around the East Coast the \u2018robber economy\u2019 lingered on well into the 20th century. Tory Channel in the Marlborough Sounds book-ended the era of New Zealand shore whaling.\n\nAt Te Awaiti,<br> established by the legendary John Guard fleetingly in 1827 and permanently from 1830-31,<br> you can still see trypots,<br> the terraces of European huts and historic graves. But we are more interested here in an operation of a different sort. In 1911 at nearby Fisherman\u2019s Bay the Perano family,<br> Genoese-New Zealand fishermen who drifted into whaling just after the turn of the century,<br> started killing humpbacks. In their peak years they built high-speed whale chasers and hunted with bomb lances,<br> and they finished up with the big steam chaser Orca and a spotter aircraft. By the early 1960s,<br> however,<br> both economics and public sentiment were running against whaling. Four days before Christmas 1964,<br> gunner Trevor Norton caught the last whale in New Zealand waters and brought to an end the working life of the country\u2019s last big shore-whaling station.\n\nYou can still see an impressive wharf and the skeletal remains of the processing complex,<br> complete with the slipway once used to haul up the whales for processing. The Department of Conservation completed restoration work in 2010. And as for the whalers? When the season is right a few of these ageing hunters still climb to the top of Arapawa Island to scan the sea for migrating humpbacks,<br> but strictly to monitor and count them for conservation reasons.",<br>"json_metadata":" \"community\":\"busy\",<br>\"app\":\"busy\/2.4.0\",<br>\"format\":\"markdown\",<br>\"tags\":[\"steem\",<br>\"busy\",<br>\"utopian-io\",<br>\"development\",<br>\"steemconnect\" "
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