The Daily Courier

Whales refloated after stranded on beach

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WELLINGTON, New Zealand — Conservati­on workers and volunteers in New Zealand managed to refloat six surviving stranded whales on Tuesday and were hoping the animals would soon swim away into deeper water.

Ten pygmy killer whales were initially found stranded Sunday at Ninety Mile Beach on the North Island. Two whales later died there.

On Monday evening, crews transporte­d the remaining animals on hay-lined trailers to Rarawa Beach on the opposite coast of the peninsula, where the sea conditions were calmer. The trip took about an hour, said Department of Conservati­on ranger Jamie Werner.

Werner said the whales were then placed in a tidal stream to relieve the pressure on their bodies. But he said the whales became too buoyant and were moved onto the sand, where volunteers kept a vigil through the night, regularly cooling the animals with water.

Werner said about 200 people showed up to help, and groups of a dozen per whale lifted the animals into the sea Tuesday morning and refloated them on the high tide. He said that two of the weaker whales beached themselves again.

“They were calling to the other whales in the pod, and they were coming back in,” he said. “So we made a quick decision to euthanize them. It’s actually phenomenal to see how in tune they are with each other.”

He said the remaining whales were swimming about 400 metres from the shoreline on Tuesday afternoon and would continue to be monitored until they swam into deeper water, their natural habitat.

The crews were hoping for a better outcome than from an unrelated stranding over the weekend in which all 145 pilot whales died.

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