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They Tried to Move a Whale

1 articles · 1 outlets · spread 0.00

They Tried to Move a Whale
wildlife13 hr ago

They Tried to Move a Whale

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1 articles1 outletsSpread 0.0012 claims
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From the Left

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From the Center

1 outlet
  • The Atlantic·May 2

    They Tried to Move a Whale

    One afternoon in November, just north of the small Oregon coastal town of Yachats, a juvenile humpback whale tumbled ashore. A few hours earlier, local residents had spotted it thrashing in distress half a mile out at sea, entangled in crabbing gear, with a rope bound around its pectoral fin and woven through its baleen. One resident had swum out and cut the whale free, but it didn’t turn itself around and was now lodged on sand in shallow surf. A few people gathered on the beach and called for help. It finally arrived, in the form of two representatives from the Oregon Marine Mammal Stranding Network, a collection of volunteer scientists and advocates based some 20 miles up the coast in Newport. The experts said that given the impending darkness, incoming tide, rough surf, and heavy fog, they couldn’t even assess the whale’s condition until morning.The onlookers scattered—all but one, a local named Amy Parker. She stayed long after sunset, listening to the whale’s haunting, high-pitched cry, a sound so plaintive and elemental that it cut through the roaring surf. The whale wanted help; you didn’t need a degree to interpret those sounds. And Parker, a longtime coast dweller,

From the Right

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Outlets covering this story

The Atlantic

First seen

May 2, 2026

Latest

May 2, 2026

Outlets

1

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