Whale swims for freedom after big German rescue effort on Baltic coast

Whale swims for freedom after big German rescue effort on Baltic coast

17 hours ago

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Paul KirbyEurope digital editor

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EPA

Biologist Robert Marc Lehmann was heavily involved in Thursday’s bid to free the whale from the sandbank

A humpback whale has freed itself from a sandbank near the German coastal city of Lübeck, after a series of rescue attempts.

Rescue teams say the whale is now swimming a few hundred metres off the coast and they are hopeful it will then head towards the wider sea.

The humpback, which is about 12-15m (40-50ft) in length, was first spotted stranded near the resort of Timmendorfer Strand last Monday. Several attempts were made to free the humpback during the week.

Biologist Robert Marc Lehmann said the whale had built up its strength overnight and freed itself.

At first light on Friday, it became clear the whale had swum off the sandbank and Stephanie Gross from the Institute for Terrestrial and Aquatic Wildlife Research said a colleague was in an inflatable boat alongside the mammal.

Initial attempts to move the humpback this week had proved unsuccessful, but eventually two diggers were deployed on Thursday to dredge a channel for the whale to swim into deeper water, and rescue teams worked late into the day under floodlights to save it.

By early evening, hopes had risen that the humpback had become more active.

Reuters

By Friday morning it was clear that the whale had reached deeper water

Lehmann, who had led the attempts to coax the whale into the channel, said the mammal was not yet safe and it was crucial that it remained in open water in Lübeck Bay so that it could then swim out into the wider Baltic Sea.

The whale was escorted by several boats including the coast guard, and there were initial concerns on Friday morning that it was swimming backwards and forwards in a zigzag pattern and might return to the sandbanks.

After several hours, the whale appeared to have swum some distance from the sandbanks, although it was still visible from the shore and had still not completely left the bay.

Lars Hoppe, one of the team who dug the channel enabling the whale to swim away, was convinced it had been desperate to escape.

“He still had a lot of life in him – you could feel it. He wanted to break free,” he told regional broadcaster NDR. “I’m happy he’s managed to do it, and above all I think it’s great that he’s done it by himself.”

Rescuers were unable to fit a tracker to its skin because of its poor condition, and a piece of netting is lodged in its mouth.

Local mayor Sven Partheil-Böhnke also said he was delighted that the humpback had managed to free itself and experts were optimistic that it would continue to swim north in the direction of Denmark.

Even if the whale reaches the Baltic, rescuers believe it needs to swim on into the North Sea and then the Atlantic before it reaches its natural habitat.

Rescuers attempt to save stranded humpback whale off German coast

Germany

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