National Post

Orca swims from lagoon to freedom

‘Brave Little Hunter’ stranded for over a month

- DIRK MEISSNER

VICTORIA • A killer whale calf made her own bid for freedom Friday for a potential reunion with extended family in the nearby ocean, swimming under a bridge at high tide and out of a remote Vancouver Island lagoon where she had been trapped for more than a month.

The orca has been the focus of intense rescue efforts since March 23 when her pregnant mother became stranded on a rocky beach near the bridge at low tide and died.

The Ehattesaht and Nuchatlaht First Nations say in a statement the calf chose a “clear and glass-calm, star-filled night” at about 2:30 a.m. to swim under the bridge and down the inlet.

“I’m very happy,” Ehattesaht First Nation Chief Simon John said in an interview Friday. “It is a moment in time basically to be happy and I think it’s really a good time.”

The orca calf, estimated to be about two years old, was seen breaching and playing near the bridge end of the lagoon for much of Thursday evening, but only a few people were there to witness her escape as she swam under the bridge, he said.

“My daughter Ashley was there,” John said. “She was really happy. It was like three in the morning by the time she had actually gone to the other side and they went to meet her on the other side in the zodiac.”

The calf the First Nations named kwiisahi?is, or Brave Little Hunter, started eating seal meat provided by the nation last week, giving rescuers hope they could entice the young killer whale to follow a food trail out of the lagoon.

A large rescue team made up of Indigenous leaders, Fisheries Department marine mammal experts, Vancouver Aquarium veterinari­ans, commercial fishermen, divers and drone operators abruptly stopped a planned capture rescue last Friday when the orca began eating seal meat thrown to her. She was also seen catching herring in the lagoon.

The team was planning to launch its second attempt to capture the calf with a large net, then place her in a sling for transport in a specially outfitted vehicle to the ocean where she could be released and potentiall­y reunited with her extended family.

“I think she’s really healthy,” said John. “There’s a lot of footage out there of her being happy around the bridge area.”

The statement from the nations says rescue team members are “ecstatic,” that the two-year-old killer whale was moving out of Little Espinosa Inlet and into Espernaza Inlet, which leads to the open ocean.

“They will encourage her out toward the open ocean where it is hoped that the Brave Little Hunter’s calls will now be heard by her family,” said the Ehattesaht statement. “Today, the community of Zeballos and people everywhere are waking up to some incredible news and what can only be described as pride for strength this little orca has shown.”

Zeballos, located more than 450 kilometres northwest of Victoria, is a remote community of about 200 people.

The statement said the rescue has now entered a new phase and patrol and protective measures will be taken in the area to ensure the young orca has no contact with boats or people.

“With this part of the challenge solved by kwiisahi?is herself, every opportunit­y needs to be afforded to have her back with her family with as little human interactio­n as possible,” the Ehattesaht said.

Fisheries Department marine mammal experts and independen­t whale scientists have said the young orca’s chances of survival in the open ocean and reuniting with extended family members are good.

John said recordings of the orca’s calls while in the lagoon were heartbreak­ing.

“Ehattesaht and Indigenous people across Canada are writing new stories in these modern times reinforcin­g the presence of a deep connection between the spirit world, the animal world and the people who have remained on the land and waters for all time,” said the statement. “Events like these have a deeper meaning and the timing of her departure will be thought about, talked about and felt for generation­s to come.”

John said the orca’s departure from the lagoon is bitterswee­t personally as it comes on the anniversar­y of his daughter Kayla’s violent death 20 years ago.

“Really, for me, today is the anniversar­y of my daughter’s death, so I’m just trying to maintain myself currently,” he said. “It’s been a tough process for me certainly with the whale thing coming after 20 years today. It’s kind of significan­t to me. Nobody has to own it but me.”

 ?? CHAD HIPOLITO / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The two-year-old orca calf had been the focus of rescue efforts after becoming trapped in a lagoon in March.
CHAD HIPOLITO / THE CANADIAN PRESS The two-year-old orca calf had been the focus of rescue efforts after becoming trapped in a lagoon in March.

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