Whaling worldwide

The Faroes
The Faroese have been catching pilot whales since the 10th century, or as long as the islands have been permanently settled. There are almost continuous catch records dating back to 1584.

The pilot whales are caught in whale drives. When a school of whales is sighted close to land, and when sea and weather conditions permit, boats gather in a wide semi-circle behind the whales and slowly and quietly begin to drive them towards the chosen authorised bay and up on the beach where they become stranded.

The whale is killed with a sharp knife cutting down to the spinal chord and severing the major arteries leading to the whale's brain. The hunt is quite bloody, with the nearby sea turning red.

In the last decade, the annual hunt has been about 1,000 pilot whales. The North-Atlantic population is estimated to be 780,000.

The Faroese also take a few bottlenose whales. Until the 1980s, there was also a fin whale hunt.

Records of whale catches in the Faroe Islands extend as far back as to 1584, and the annualstatistical record has been unbroken since 1709.

Further reading:
Modern and Traditional - Whaling in the Faroe Islands
Whaling in the Faroe Islands
Whales and whaling in the Faroe Islands (external)