Personal Journals about Hang Gliding

Stinky Sunday Funday

Postby Rick Masters » Fri Jul 01, 2016 9:19 pm

Beware, a whale of a rotor awaits the unwary.

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Authorities attempted to remove the whale from Dockweiler Beach on Friday.
LOS ANGELES (AP) — The reeking carcass of a dead humpback whale was stuck on a popular Los Angeles County beach Friday as Fourth of July weekend crowds began arriving.

Authorities planned to use boats pulling ropes attached to the tail to pull it off the sand during an evening high tide and take it far out to sea.

Because of the stench, authorities attempted the procedure at midday, with a bulldozer pushing, but it was unsuccessful.

The huge whale washed onto Dockweiler Beach, a long stretch of sand near the west end of Los Angeles International Airport, just before 8 p.m. Thursday and holiday beachgoers began arriving in the morning.

Lifeguards posted yellow caution tape to keep people away and biologists took samples to determine what caused the death of the humpback, an endangered species. Beachgoers watching from a distance covered their noses.

Tail markings were compared with a photo database and found that the same whale had been spotted three times previously off Southern California between June and August of last year by whale watchers who gave it the nickname Wally, said Alisa Schulman-Janiger, a whale research associate with the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County.

At the time of the prior sightings the humpback was covered with whale lice, which usually means a whale is in poor physical condition, but it was also actively feeding and breaching, she said.

Schulman-Janiger said she noticed healed entanglement scars on its tail indicating that in the past it been snarled in some sort of fishing line. The carcass was in relatively good condition which meant the whale could have died as recently as Thursday morning, she said.

The whale was about 46 feet long and at least 15 years old, meaning it had reached maturity, said Justin Greenman, stranding coordinator for the National Marine Fisheries Service.

Skin and blubber samples were taken for DNA testing along with fecal matter to be tested for biotoxins.

The experts had hoped to more extensively open up the whale but due to the holiday weekend authorities decided to get it off the beach as soon as possible, Greenman said.

North Pacific humpbacks feed along the West Coast from California to Alaska during summer, according to the Marine Mammal Center, a Sausalito-based ocean conservation organization. Although the species' numbers are extensively depleted, humpbacks have been seen with increasing frequency off California in recent years, the center's website said.

Humpbacks, familiar to whale watchers for their habits of breaching and slapping the water, are filter feeders that consume up to 3,000 pounds of krill, plankton and tiny fish per day, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

The whale that washed up is not the same one spotted earlier in the week off Southern California tangled in crab pot lines. That animal was identified as a blue whale. Efforts by a rescue crew in a small boat to cut away the line failed, and it disappeared.

California has seen a number of whales on beaches this year. A humpback carcass that appeared off Santa Cruz in May had to be towed out to sea, while a massive gray whale that ended up on San Onofre State Beach in April had to be chopped up and hauled to a landfill.

The same month, a distressed humpback was freed from crabbing gear in Monterey Bay. In March, a dead gray was removed from Torrey Pines State Beach.
Rick Masters
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Re: Stinky Sunday Funday

Postby Rick Masters » Fri Jul 01, 2016 9:27 pm

March 24, 2016
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SAN DIEGO — A 28-foot dead gray whale likely hit by a ship washed ashore at Torrey Pines State Beach on Thursday morning, officials said.

The female appears to have been about 2 years old based on her length, said Kerri Danil, a biologist at National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in San Diego. Gray whales grow to about 45 feet long.

A stranding response team found propeller marks on the dead animal, but it was unknown whether she was hit by a vessel before or after she died, Danil said, adding that tests would try to determine that.

The carcass was discovered somewhere between the parking lot along Torrey Pines Road and the beach trail, said Darren Smith, California State Parks environmental scientist and supervisor. He did not know who found the whale or what time.

The washed up animal was moved with a forklift to higher ground near the Torrey Pines State Park entrance, and would be taken to a local landfill Friday morning.

The stranding response team collected samples that will allow them to study the genetics, hormones, contaminants and biotoxins of the whale, Danil said.

She said the San Diego Natural History Museum hopes to collect the entire skeleton Friday for its collection.
http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/news/2016/mar/24/dead-whale-at-torrey-pines-beach/

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Anyone who wants to know how I feel about whales need only listen to my 1986 epic "Man Shall Follow."
https://soundcloud.com/rick-masters/sets/man-shall-follow-album
Rick Masters
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