Not on My Watch
How a Renegade Whale Biologist Took on Governments and Industry to Save Wild Salmon
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Narrated by:
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Katie Ryerson
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By:
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Alexandra Morton
About this listen
NATIONAL BESTSELLER
Alexandra Morton has been called "the Jane Goodall of Canada" because of her passionate thirty-year fight to save British Columbia's wild salmon. Her account of that fight is both inspiring in its own right and a roadmap of resistance.
Alexandra Morton came north from California in the early 1980s, following her first love--the northern resident orca. In remote Echo Bay, in the Broughton Archipelago, she found the perfect place to settle into all she had ever dreamed of: a lifetime of observing and learning what these big-brained mammals are saying to each other. She was lucky enough to get there just in time to witness a place of true natural abundance, and learned how to thrive in the wilderness as a scientist and a single mother.
Then, in 1989, industrial aquaculture moved into the region, chasing the whales away. Her fisherman neighbours asked her if she would write letters on their behalf to government explaining the damage the farms were doing to the fisheries, and one thing led to another. Soon Alex had shifted her scientific focus to documenting the infectious diseases and parasites that pour from the ocean farm pens of Atlantic salmon into the migration routes of wild Pacific salmon, and then to proving their disastrous impact on wild salmon and the entire ecosystem of the coast.
Alex stood against the farms, first representing her community, then alone, and at last as part of an uprising that built around her as ancient Indigenous governance resisted a province and a country that wouldn't obey their own court rulings. She has used her science, many acts of protest and the legal system in her unrelenting efforts to save wild salmon and ultimately the whales--a story that reveals her own doggedness and bravery but also shines a bright light on the ways other humans doggedly resist the truth. Here, she brilliantly calls those humans to account for the sake of us all.
©2021 Alexandra Morton (P)2021 Penguin Random House CanadaCritic reviews
"A devastating literary exposé of one of the greatest scandals of recent Canadian history. What begins as a wholly human memoir of a reluctant activist takes on the urgency of a murder thriller—one in which the victims are wild salmon, coastal communities, science and democracy." (J.B. MacKinnon, author of The Once and Future World: Nature As It Was, As It Is, As It Could Be)
“[Not on My Watch] doesn’t read as an angry polemic. Rather, it’s an outline of a life spent standing up for something.” (Dana Gee, Vancouver Sun)
“How does a scientist and mother fight both foreign-owned fish farm cartels and lying governments? Alexandra Morton provides a thrilling recipe: a wallop of persistence, three decades of science, cups of stubbornness and the salt of undaunted courage. If the Pacific Northwest Coast's wild salmon can survive our industrial assault on their very existence, credit must go to the indomitable courage of Alex Morton and a brave renaissance in First Nations governance.” (Andrew Nikiforuk, author of Empire of Beetle and Slickwater)
What listeners say about Not on My Watch
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- JFC Maxwell Stuart
- 10-04-21
An astonishing tale of industry and govt cover up
Were this a work of fiction it would debut alongside a La Carrie novel. Tragically this is an incredibly well researched account from a lady, Alex Morton, who inadvertently deviated from her life's path to becoming a beacon call for the saving of one of nature's corner-stone species, wild salmon, that breathe life into so many parts of the world, in so many ways that to ignore its safeguarding is the natural equivalent of genocide. The first chapters brought tears to my eyes as Alex uncovers the suffering of the pair or Orca whales she was studying. What follows is an incredible story that is compassionate and yet brings feelings of frustration and anger as the commercial interests of the salmon farming industry attempt to use every means at their disposal to drown out her voice. This is a very compelling account that needs to be read to be believed.
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