Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Tangled Whale Came To Downtown Waterfront Looking For Help, Rescuer Says

The Canadian Press, 22 Jul, 2016 12:36 PM
    DIGBY, N.S. — A Digby, N.S., man who helped free a whale from a fishing net said he's convinced it came to the downtown waterfront looking for help.
     
    Barry O'Neil was doing fibreglass work on a boat around noon Wednesday when Dallas Kenley, one of two men working with him, called out.
     
    "He was under the boat, and he kept yelling, 'Come look at this, you won't believe it.'"
     
    O'Neil and Nathaniel Denton rushed over to see a six-metre minke whale, burdened by about nine kilograms of net tangled in its nose and mouth.
     
    "He was laying sideways, not moving much at all," said O'Neil.
     
    Without a pause, the trio went to work freeing the whale. O'Neil jumped into the waist-deep water; it started to swim away, but he gently grabbed the net and pulled it in, he said.
     
    He pulled its nose out of the water and saw that the rope had really dug in. It had clearly been there for some time, and kelp had been growing on it.
     
     
    "He ... was as gentle as a kitten. It was just like it came there for help," said O'Neil.
     
    "It calmed right down. We just kept petting it. It seemed to know what we were doing, it was looking for help."
     
    He took out a jackknife to cut it free. It took a bit of work, but the whale waited patiently for about five minutes. O'Neil said he figures the whale hadn't been able to eat very much.
     
    "He seemed to be pretty relieved. We put his nose back in the water and he was in no hurry to get away. He took his time. We watched him swim away, nice and calm."
     
    Cutting the rope had turned the water red with blood, but the bleeding had stopped by the time the whale headed to sea, said O'Neil.
     
    The trio returned to work, but posted photos of the rescue on Facebook lest family members were skeptical about their whale story.
     
    O'Neil said they learned later that fishermen had for about a week been reporting sightings of a distressed whale in the area.
     
    "It was pretty surreal — it was like that whale knew totally what we were doing," said O'Neil.
     
    "It's amazing what damage a net can do to an animal like that."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Halifax Taxi Industry In Crisis Over Sex Assault Allegations: Cabbies' Group

    The recent spate of alleged assaults has raised safety concerns in a city where there were just three alleged sexual assaults by cab drivers in all of 2015.

    Halifax Taxi Industry In Crisis Over Sex Assault Allegations: Cabbies' Group

    Applications Soon To Be Accepted For PM's New Youth Advisory Council

    Applications Soon To Be Accepted For PM's New Youth Advisory Council
    The application form will be launched on July 22 and anyone between 16 and 24 years of age can apply until Aug. 12.

    Applications Soon To Be Accepted For PM's New Youth Advisory Council

    Woman Caught In Lake Erie Rip Current Rescued By Kite Boarder

    Woman Caught In Lake Erie Rip Current Rescued By Kite Boarder
    WAINFLEET, Ont. — A 40-year-old Toronto man used his kite board Monday afternoon to help rescue a New York state woman from a rip current in Lake Erie.

    Woman Caught In Lake Erie Rip Current Rescued By Kite Boarder

    Canada Child Benefit: Everything You Need To Know

    Canada Child Benefit: Everything You Need To Know
    The federal government's new child benefit that rolls out this week is expected to lift almost 300,000 children out of poverty by 2017.

    Canada Child Benefit: Everything You Need To Know

    Dynamic U.S. Presidential Election Fuelling Novelty Bets In B.C., Manitoba

    Dynamic U.S. Presidential Election Fuelling Novelty Bets In B.C., Manitoba
    The B.C. Lottery Corp. is taking online novelty bets on the American election, and spokesman Doug Cheng says there has been rapid growth in wagers since presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump's campaign began to gain momentum.

    Dynamic U.S. Presidential Election Fuelling Novelty Bets In B.C., Manitoba

    American Skier Lauds New Technique At Vancouver Hospital For Brain Recovery

    American Skier Lauds New Technique At Vancouver Hospital For Brain Recovery
    VANCOUVER — A competitive skier from Utah is crediting a new technique at Vancouver General Hospital for a swift recovery from a brain injury she suffered in Whistler, B.C.

    American Skier Lauds New Technique At Vancouver Hospital For Brain Recovery