RIO VISTA, Calif., May 22, 2007

Wayward Whales Stall In Their Trip To Sea

Two Humpbacks Halt In Their Journey Down Sacramento River

  • Play CBS Video Video Wayward Whales Going Home

    After days of trying to lead two humpback whales toward the ocean using underwater whale feeding songs, it may have been the sound of tugboats that got them back on course. Sandra Hughes reports.

  • Video Whale Rescue In California

    Marine biologists are looking into ways to save two humpback whales who traveled 90 miles upstream the Sacramento River in Northern California. John Blackstone reports.

  • Video Are The Humpbacks Sightseeing?

    The two Humpback whales who traveled nearly 70 miles up the Sacramento River are still not back in the ocean. Now, rescuers are banging pipes under water to scare them south. Sandra Hughes reports.

    • The smaller of two humpback whales surfaces in front of one of the boats trying to herd the whales back to the ocean, near Rio Vista, Calif., May 21, 2007.

      The smaller of two humpback whales surfaces in front of one of the boats trying to herd the whales back to the ocean, near Rio Vista, Calif., May 21, 2007.  (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)

    • Larissa Ivanov points to the pair of humpback whales to her godson, Johnny Rusk, 19 months, swimming in Cache Slough, near Rio Vista, Calif., May 21, 2007. Ivanov, and her husband, Andrei, left, and Johnny's mother, Olga Dyer, drove from San Francisco to see the whales.

      Larissa Ivanov points to the pair of humpback whales to her godson, Johnny Rusk, 19 months, swimming in Cache Slough, near Rio Vista, Calif., May 21, 2007. Ivanov, and her husband, Andrei, left, and Johnny's mother, Olga Dyer, drove from San Francisco to see the whales.  (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)

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  • Photo Essay Whale Watching

    Two humpback whales take a wrong turn and draw crowds in California

  • Photos Whale's Tale

    Humans are quick to the rescue when mammoths of the sea lose their way

  • Photo Essay Lost In London

    A wayward whale becomes a major attraction in London's River Thames

(CBS/AP)  Two wayward whales made it 20 miles back toward the ocean before balking at a Sacramento River bridge and swimming in circles, apparently upset by vibrations from the traffic.

Searchers spotted the whales Tuesday morning still north of the bridge but moving downstream.

"The last report was they were headed in the right direction," California Department of Fish and Game marine biologist Carrie Wilson said.

Coast Guard crews and scientists planned to spend another day on the river banging metal pipes in the water in an effort to coax the whales back toward the Pacific. More than two dozen vessels were slated to join the whale herding operation, including an 87-foot Coast Guard cutter.

The humpbacks, nicknamed Delta and Dawn, had traveled 90 miles inland before turning around at the Port of Sacramento on Sunday. They were making progress Monday until they reached the Rio Vista Bridge and began swimming in circles.

Scientists theorized that the whales began circling because vibrations from traffic upset them. The pair could not be coaxed forward even when the drawbridge was raised to halt the flow of vehicles.

The U.S. Coast Guard tried positioning more than a dozen boats in front of them to turn them around, but the whales appeared unfazed.

Not so for their fans, who came out to see the rare sight of whales stuck in the middle of a farming community, reports CBS News correspondent Sandra Hughes.

"I'm not really sure where they're at — might as well bring the little man to come check it out," said a man who was carrying a toddler on his shoulders.

Scientists have been watching the two closely because their route includes sloughs leading to muddy deltas that could trap the whales, both already apparently wounded by a boat's propeller. The pair also face a couple more highway bridges between Rio Vista and San Francisco Bay.

Federal officials have authorized researchers to fire darts carrying a satellite tracking device beneath the mother's fin to monitor her location, but gusty winds and choppy waters Monday led scientists to postpone the tagging.

"They're at this point lost," Rod McInnis of the National Marine Fisheries Service.

"We believe they don't have any clue as to where the Golden Gate is," McInnis told CBS News.

It could take the whales a while to make it back to the ocean, reports Hughes. The last time a whale was stuck in the river, it took almost a month for it to find its way home.


© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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by clinardr May 23, 2007 7:54 PM EDT
I am living in Germany with my daughter Delta Dawn. My husband is in the Army and is deployed. My mother in law called me today and told me that these whales have the same name as my daughter. How funny is that. My daughter has two whales named after her. I never would have thought.
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