Choosing a
dolphin lover gift may not be as easy as it is for a pet lover, but that is not
to say it is not possible. In fact, you will find quite a range of dolphin
related gifts around the internet, although in your local store it may be hit
and miss as to whether you will find anything. In my case, I received the true,
ultimate dolphin lover gift, some years ago, but more of that later.
The demand
for dolphin gifts, though, is undoubtedly high. On a brief and unscientific
survey, dolphin lover gifts are about half as popular as cat lover gifts. If
you think about it, that is amazing. Most people will never see a dolphin in
their lives, yet we are surrounded by cats.
What is it,
then, that makes dolphins so appealing? I love birds and cats especially, but
dolphins I adore. They are wonderful and appealing creatures with a mystique
that helps their popularity. Dolphins are the stuff of sailors' tales, and true
stories, about dolphins and man. They have faces that are expressive in a human
like way, and they seem to smile. Dolphins also seem to follow man out at sea,
when men venture out in their boats or into the water.
Dolphins
are also performers, not just in captivity, but in the wild. While they do
travel at high speed and jump out of the water in so doing, they do come across
as playful, and capable of enjoying life. So, in a way they are partly human
like, and therefore easy for us to relate to. They are also very intelligent.
Dolphins
engender excitement, and at times everyone becomes a dolphin lover. In my
country of origin, England, dolphins off the coast have always been something
of a rarity; although I have read that large numbers of dolphins have been seen
off nearby Wales recently. While I still lived in England, though, the
appearance of a few dolphins close to shore may even have made the television
news and front pages of the newspapers. Now, that's something cats cannot do!
I am one of
the lucky few, though. I was fortunate to be able to live on the Dorset
coastline, where a group of about 6 dolphins had become familiar passers-by
just offshore. Very rarely they ventured into Swan age Bay, but mostly they
were observed sometimes off Durlston. But, you needed a lot of luck and
patience to see any dolphins there, even when they were known to be in the
area. I had a naturalist friend who had lived in Swanage for 25 years, and was
a frequent visitor to Durslton; he had never, ever seen a dolphin there.
I was a
member of Dolphin Watch, spending long hours on the cliff top looking out for
the dolphins to record their movements. I had no luck ever while on duty, nor
had many fellow dolphin lovers on the watch. My luck suddenly changed, though,
when I was out walking with my daughter one Sunday afternoon, on the cliff tops
at Durlston. It was early December, and winter and Christmas were in the air.
The grass
slope was a little bit slippery, and I slipped over, ending up on my back.
After my daughter's initial concern subsided, we both had a good laugh, and I
hobbled over to a nearby bench to get my breath back. The bench was looking out
to sea. That's when something of a miracle happened; well, at least a major
coincidence; an incredible coincidence.
As we sat
down, I said: "Ok, we will sit here until we see a dolphin, even though it
may mean missing Christmas." Christmas was 3 weeks away, so it was a rash
thing to say. We looked out to sea, and within a minute, I saw two dolphins. I
was in disbelief, but I took another look; I had my glasses on so was not being
deceived. It really was dolphins.
My daughter
thought, assumed, and was sure, I was joking. Then she saw them also, plus a
third dolphin. We watched them for about 45 minutes, walking along the coast
with them, and then back again. It was a mesmerising and unforgettable time,
even though they were so far away; those three bottle-nosed dolphins were, to
me, the ultimate dolphin lover's Christmas gift. A few weeks early, and free,
but a wonderful gift nonetheless.
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