Vancouver Sun

Rescuers will use a net pen to save stranded orphan orca

First Nation says attempt to move whale from lagoon could happen next week

- DIRK MEISSNER

Rescuers will be searching waters off Vancouver Island for the family of an orca calf stranded in a lagoon, in the hopes of reuniting them with the young whale after a rescue attempt that could happen next week.

Ehattesaht First Nation Chief Simon John says he expects a Jet Ranger helicopter to be used to locate the family pod of the orphaned calf that has been stuck in the lagoon at Little Espinosa Inlet since March 23, when its mother became trapped on a rocky beach at low tide and died. The First Nation uses the helicopter mainly for forestry work, John said in a statement.

John said equipment for the planned rescue has started to arrive in the remote community of Zeballos, located more than 450 kilometres north of Victoria.

A heavy lift machine the First Nation also uses in forestry work will arrive in Zeballos this weekend and could be used in the rescue effort.

He said a large seine net more than 270 metres long arrived from Campbell River Thursday and is expected to be used to corral the young killer whale in a shallow area of the lagoon, before it's put in a sling and transporte­d to a pen in ocean waters.

The rescue team is waiting for the arrival of the net pen similar to those used by B.C. salmon farms to house the young orca at a yetto-be-determined location, John said.

He said the highly orchestrat­ed rescue attempt could happen next week, as the clock ticks to save the two-year-old calf.

John said earlier plans to use a helicopter to lift the killer whale calf out of the lagoon have been overtaken by the effort to move it from the lagoon to the net pen by a specially outfitted vehicle, landing craft or boat.

 ?? CHAD HIPOLITO/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Ehattesaht Chief Simon John, seen in Zeballos on Wednesday, says a plan to move an orphaned killer whale calf from a Victoria Island lagoon to the open ocean is in the works.
CHAD HIPOLITO/THE CANADIAN PRESS Ehattesaht Chief Simon John, seen in Zeballos on Wednesday, says a plan to move an orphaned killer whale calf from a Victoria Island lagoon to the open ocean is in the works.

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