"Every year for over a thousand years, hundreds of pilot whales have been rounded up, cornered and slaughtered by hand on the beaches of the Faroe Islands.
Residents of the Volcanic archipelago, located in the North Atlantic Ocean between Scotland and Iceland, call the hunt the Grind (pronounced to rhyme with "wind").
When the call is given, flotillas of boats set sail, herding pods of whales onto the beaches, where villagers wade through the water to kill them with lances.
It's a confronting sight — the majestic blue ocean turns red with blood.
Yet whale meat has always been a staple of the Faroese diet: locals have historically consumed the meat and blubber to sustain themselves over the harsh winter months."
Joel Carnegie reports for Radio Australia November 21, 2016.
"The Grind: Faroe Islands Divided Over Whaling Tradition"
Source: Radio Australia, 11/21/2016