Whales May Be Over The Hump
Two Lost Humpbacks Last Seen Near The Golden Gate Bridge May Have Slipped Back Into The Pacific
-
Play CBS Video Video Are Wayward Whales Home Free? After wandering for two weeks in the waterways of California, two injured humpback whales have disappeared from view. Manuel Gallegus reports that the pair may have returned to the ocean.
-
Video Salty Water Helping Whales As two wayward whales enter saltier water, their wounds are getting better and the calf is becoming more active. Sandra Hughes has the latest.
-
Video Are Wayward Whales Back Home? There is no sign of the two humpback whales that spent more than two weeks in a river in California. The rescuers' best guess is that they slipped back into the ocean overnight. Sandra Hughes reports.
-
-
A crowd watches the whales pass under the Carquinez Bridge in Crockett, Calif., on May 29, 2007. (AP)
-
A mother humpback whale and her calf surface as Fish and Game officials look on, May 25, 2007. The wayward whales have made progress swimming back to the Pacific Ocean. (AP Photo)
-
-
Photo Essay Whale Watching Two humpback whales take a wrong turn and draw crowds in California
slipped back into the Pacific Ocean after a two-week sojourn that took them 90 miles inland up the Sacramento River, scientists said Wednesday.
This may mark the end of an 18-day circus that included everything from banging pipes to boat herding. California officials won't say how much the entire venture will cost taxpayers, reports CBS Correspondent Sandra Hughes.
Rescuers launched several boats Wednesday morning in an effort to find the mother humpback and her calf but hadn't found them, said Bernadette Fees, deputy director of the California Department of Fish and Game.
The whales were last seen Tuesday night in San Francisco Bay, where few obstacles were left on their route past Alcatraz to the ocean.
"The assumption is if we have not sighted the mother and calf by late afternoon that they have made their way out to the Pacific," Fees said.
Rescuers planned to rely on commercial vessels and Coast Guard patrols on regular duty to watch for any sign of the pair in the bay.
Biologists originally planned to attach a satellite tracking tag to the mother humpback, but gusty wind and malfunctioning equipment stymied the effort.
The whales was first spotted May 13 in the Sacramento River and got as far as the Port of Sacramento before finally turning around. Thousands of people have since lined Northern California waterfronts to see them.
Biologists also said the chance to closely observe the pair for so long was invaluable for science, using the urgent situation to their advantage, gathering whale data for study, reports Hughes.
Ariadne Green, 57, of Vallejo, Calif., caught a glimpse of the pair on Tuesday and earlier in the week at Rio Vista, where the whales had circled for several days near a bridge. She described the humpbacks' inland visit as a "profound spiritual experience" but was equally grateful for their departure.
"They need to go home now because their health is in jeopardy," Green said. "It's good to know they're on their way back."
Biologists said the saltier water where the mother humpback whale and her calf had been swimming since leaving the Rio Vista area helped reverse some of the health problems caused by long exposure to fresh water.
Recent photographs showed that serious wounds suffered by both whales appeared to be healing, said Rod McInnis, a spokesman for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Antibiotics were injected into the whales on Saturday to try to slow the damage from the gashes, likely from a boat's keel. Lesions that had formed on the humpbacks' skin over the weekend also appeared to be sloughing off, Fees said.
"We would love to be able to see them one last time and say goodbye," said Fees. "But if they've made their way home, that's what counts."
© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- Imagine that! The whales slipped away, all by themselves without the "help" of humans.
- Reply to this comment
- Sometimes they disappear. There are many cases of whales that go missing from pods that are never found.
- Reply to this comment
- Dead whales, like the one which washed ashore on Oregon's southern coast over the weekend...WASH ASHORE.
Every been out of Town and into the Countryside? - Reply to this comment
- Do dead whales float, or sink?
- Reply to this comment
- Hey, this is good news. Over the weekend, 70 miles up river it didn't look good. Now, they are back in salty water and a stone's throw from the Pacific. Good story.
- Reply to this comment
- ....."IT'S A WHALE OF A TALE!!!!!!!!!!!".........
- Reply to this comment
- this is what i love about the news media. they have no new information, except to say "we dont know anything new." and that makes for worthy news stories on all the news sites.
- Reply to this comment
Mike Huckabee on GOP "rock stars," 2012, health care reform and more.




