Posted under Conservation

The Globe and Mail have an amazing story told by the crew of the HMCS St John’s of their experience freeing a 10m long whale entangled in fishing gear on the Grand Banks off Newfoundland.
“I couldn’t believe the size of it — he was three times longer than our boat,” Commander Brian Santarpia, the ship’s skipper, said yesterday.
“We were a little concerned about letting the boat get close, let alone letting divers get in.”
For more than an hour, sailors in one of the boats tried to free the whale by cutting some of the lines that were attached to the buoy and about 20 heavy crab pots below the surface.
The sailors had to keep a safe distance as the humpback dove to the bottom and then surfaced in a futile attempt to get loose of the lines.
Cdr. Santarpia eventually dispatched two navy divers without air tanks into the water to try to save the animal before it drowned.
As most of the 220 members of the ship’s crew watched from the frigate’s upper decks, the divers swam up behind the exhausted whale and cut a line that was snagged under its belly.
The divers, who got within reach of the whale’s tail, said it was slightly unnerving to stare into the animal’s eye, which was about the size of a large human hand.
“The guys came back quite exhilarated,” Cdr. Santarpia said, laughing. “They were really excited.”
Once free, the whale swam away slowly as two other humpbacks stayed nearby and a few dolphins looked on.
Cdr. Santarpia said he turned to one of 20 young naval cadets training on the vessel and asked: ” ‘When was the last time you saved a whale?’ He said he never had and I said, ‘No, me neither.’ After 21 years in the navy, I’ve never seen anything quite like this.”
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.