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Home / The Country

DoC to visit schools in wake of shooting of stranded pygmy killer whales

By Peter de Graaf
Reporter·Northern Advocate·
3 Dec, 2018 06:00 PM3 mins to read

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More than 300 people - including DOC staff, local residents, schoolchildren, iwi and whale rescue groups - descended on Rarawa Beach in the Far North on November 27 in a bid to save eight survivors of a pod of pygmy whales which had stranded on the opposite coast a day earlier. Video by Peter de Graaf.

Department of Conservation rangers plan to visit all four Far North schools involved in last week's whale strandings after concerns were raised about the way two pygmy killer whales were euthanised.

Eight of the marine mammals — which, despite their name, are a type of oceanic dolphin — were refloated at Rarawa Beach in the Far North last Tuesday after earlier becoming stranded on Ninety Mile Beach on the opposite coast.

However, two of the weakest pygmy whales kept re-stranding, sparking fears their distress calls would draw the rest of the pod back to the beach.

Read more: Rare pygmy killer whales stranded on Ninety Mile Beach
Joy, tears on Rarawa Beach as hundreds fight to save pygmy whales
Another whale, believed to be pygmy orca, found dead in Rawene
Anxious scenes during attempts to refloat stranded whales on opposite Northland coast

They were carried up the beach and shot after three attempts to return them to the water failed.

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See photos of the rescue attempt here:

Hundreds of volunteers formed a human chain to discourage the creatures from returning to shore. Photo / Peter de Graaf
Hundreds of volunteers formed a human chain to discourage the creatures from returning to shore. Photo / Peter de Graaf
The pygmy whales were held in the water for up to an hour before release to allow them to regain buoyancy and adjust to being back in the water. Photo / Peter de Graaf
The pygmy whales were held in the water for up to an hour before release to allow them to regain buoyancy and adjust to being back in the water. Photo / Peter de Graaf
A re-stranded pygmy whale is returned to the water for the third time. Photo / Peter de Graaf
Project Jonah volunteer Les Robinson makes noise to drive the pygmy whales out to sea. Photo / Peter de Graaf
Far North Surf Rescue IRBs were used to shepherd the pygmy whales out to sea. Photo / Peter de Graaf
Far North Surf Rescue IRBs were used to shepherd the pygmy whales out to sea. Photo / Peter de Graaf
Rescuers farewell a weakened pygmy whale before it is euthanased. Photo / Peter de Graaf
Two of the pygmy whales were weak and repeatedly re-stranded. Photo / Peter de Graaf
Rescuers bid a tearful farewell to the first of two pygmy whales to be euthanased. Photo / Peter de Graaf
A rescuer bids a tearful farewell to the first of two pygmy whales to be euthanased. Photo / Peter de Graaf
Te Aupouri kaumatua Heta Conrad performs a karakia for an ill-fated pygmy whale. Photo / Peter de Graaf
Wikitoria Makiha, a teacher at Te Kura Kaupapa Maori o Te Rangi Aniwaniwa in Awanui, recites a karakia urging the survivors to seek the open sea. Photo / Peter de Graaf
Wikitoria Makiha, a teacher at Te Kura Kaupapa Maori o Te Rangi Aniwaniwa in Awanui, recites a karakia urging the survivors to seek the open sea. Photo / Peter de Graaf

Image 1 of 15: Hundreds of volunteers formed a human chain to discourage the creatures from returning to shore. Photo / Peter de Graaf

The Advocate saw rescuers invited to farewell the whale before a kaumatua recited a karakia and explained what was going to happen. DoC staff put up a tape barrier to keep people away and held up sheets so no one could see the shooting.

However, Les Bore, an Ahipara surf school operator who found the stranded pygmy whales the previous Sunday, said the warnings would have been heard only by the 50 or so people within earshot.

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Hundreds of other people on the beach, including children, had little idea the whales were about to be shot.

''Some parents I spoke to just weren't expecting it, they were horrified. The kids were traumatised,'' Bore said.

"Families should have had been given more warning so they could have taken their kids away, or the whale could have been moved further away."

Bore, who helped during the refloating attempt, agreed the first pygmy whale ''definitely'' needed to be put down — though he questioned the need to euthanase the second, which he believed was merely disoriented — and was pleased sheets had been put up so the public couldn't see them being shot.

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When DoC called for help at future strandings it should come with a warning there was a chance whales would have to be euthanised if the rescue was unsuccessful.

That way parents could prepare their children or leave them at home, Bore said.

DoC Northland spokeswoman Abigail Monteith said it was a distressing and emotional incident for everyone involved, with staff on Rarawa Beach trying to give as much forewarning and information as possible to the public on the beach.

DoC rangers had since arranged to visit all schools involved in the rescue attempt to answer questions about the strandings, whales and euthanasia.

If members of the public had questions about the day's events they could contact DoC's Kaitaia office.

Monteith said DoC stood by the decision to euthanise the whales, which was done only after expert advice about the animals' health.

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Two of the four schools were visited yesterday.

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