Occasionally Pink lake’s reflection looked pink, especially when the
sunset and clouds’ positions were just right, but most likely the lake's
name was inherited from the old legend of the pink dolphins. There was a
time when dolphins played in those waters. The swimming mammals were
exactly like the endangered species of fresh water dolphins found in the
Amazon River; they are called Pink Amazon River Dolphins because of a
light pink tinge in their almost white skin pigmentation. Many young men
growing up in the Glenariff area, including Phil Kingsley, cringed at
the thought of having to call the lake such a girly name.
Paulo
Cardoso made a few documentaries on preservation projects in his
homeland of Brazil. One of his films featured Brazilian ecologists’
efforts to save the endangered pink dolphins of the northern river.
Legend
tells that these pink dolphins appeared in Northern Ireland in the
early 1900’s. These were not ordinary animals, but creatures endowed
with powers to communicate with humans and supernaturally carry them
from the material world to the realm of imagination and back. Some say
they used to live in Pink lake at a time when fairies and gnomes and
other creatures of the sort were visible to the human eye.
To find
out more about the endangered pink dolphins and their adventures with
the Kingsley family on Pink lake, you can download "The Conjunction of the Realms (Part One)" ebook in the U.S. on Amazon.com or Kobo.com, in Canada on Amazon.ca, and in the U.K. on Amazon.co.uk.
Copyright © 2013 by Livre Press, Inc. Reproduction in whole or in part not authorized without author's written permission.
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