Sophie Boyer, founder of Conscience dauphins
Born on the ocean side, Sophie Boyer liked the surfing from the age of 15 years. It is through this sport that she will travel and will navigate all over the world.
In 1996 during a journey in Costa Rica, she met dolphins for the first time, she tells: “I had the happiness to share for a long time their wonderful company. I remained immovable with them watching at them evolving with grace and playing while feeding. They danced around me, at first in a discreet way, observing me and crossing me throughout with it something who allows them to know exactly for whom they have to make. I perceived the waves of their sonar, this instrument of echolocation, and I felt more and more opened, free and close to them. They got closer and surrounding me, they integrated me into their dance. It lasted for a long time, then, on six that they were, five disappeared and it stayed there only one who evolved by my side until face me, close to my face with almost the touch. And I met its glance, this magnificent glance, this glance mirror, this intense glance “.
This discovery awakened in her the desire to meet dolphins to know them better, understand who they are, how they live, how they communicate between them and also how to communicate with them. During numerous meetings, the positive impact of dolphins on the human being imposed upon her as an evidence.
In 2001, Sophie Boyer found the Conscience dauphins association to share hers experiences with dolphins, make the link between human beings and dolphins and create a collective consciousness avid to protect and to respect the life of cetaceans.
Its purpose is to make sensitive the persons by means of the unique emotion which springs from this meeting.
Sophie Boyer investigated numerous places on the planet on the meeting of cetaceans. She sometimes intervenes as advice with directors, cameraman or collaborates with researchers (Hawaiian Islands).
After 12 years of a real nearness with dolphins, she acquired an expertise which allows her today to perceive what would be the priorities of actions to lead to protect cetaceans.


