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Officals dispose of washed-up whale



Officals dispose of washed-up whale

Officals dispose of washed-up whale

Published on July 2nd, 2008
Published on March 5th, 2010
Chris LeBlanc RSS Feed

A 50-tonne whale that washed up in Slack's Cove on Saturday, June 28, has been removed from the beach and buried inland.
After more than seven grueling hours of work on Wednesday evening, Department of Natural Resources officials have disposed of the decaying carcass, which is believed to have been a fin whale, by using heavy machinery to move it to a woodlot near Rockport for burial.

Topics :
Department of Natural Resources , Rockport , Bay of Fundy

A 50-tonne whale that washed up in Slack's Cove on Saturday, June 28, has been removed from the beach and buried inland.
After more than seven grueling hours of work on Wednesday evening, Department of Natural Resources officials have disposed of the decaying carcass, which is believed to have been a fin whale, by using heavy machinery to move it to a woodlot near Rockport for burial.
Leon LeBlanc, a resource supervisor for the DNR, said the whole process was especially difficult because of the location of the carcass.
Due to the nature of the landscape, trees were cut down in order for heavy machinery to get close to the rotting whale. Once down there, the 50-foot long carcass was hoisted up the bank with a winch, though the steepness of the hill made things even more difficult.
"It was a slow process," LeBlanc said. "You couldn't have done it without the big winch on that truck."
The original plan was to place the carcass onto a trailer and move it to the woodlot; but due to its enormous size it was impossible to maneuver.
"So we basically dragged it out with two excavators," he said, adding that a truck primarily used to pull tractor-trailers out of ditches was used.
"We pulled it on to the woodlot just past Rockport and we buried it."
While everything was in place for the move at around 4 p.m. yesterday, the DNR crew wasn't finished until 11 p.m. that night.
Whale carcasses have been disposed of in the past by moving them back into the ocean and anchoring them so they'll decompose. But Leblanc says with the strong tides in the Bay of Fundy, that would have been next to impossible.
"And with the shallow water of Slack's Cove it would have been kind of dangerous to bring a boat in there because you can only go in at high tide," he said, "and that would probably be during the night these past few days."
"Burying it was the best option."
It is not yet known what caused the whale to come ashore, where it later died in the open air.

Comments

  • Username
    Sasha
    - March 8th, 2010 at 14:16:45

    My family & I decided to drive down last night & see the whale that had washed up near Sackville.

    We got there around when they were dragging the whale up & digging the hole.

    First off, the smell was making grown men gag.. I had my mouth & nose hidden in my coat.

    Also, when they rolled it into the hole (ditch, really, that they had made deeper) it made a crunching noise halfway and then it THUMPed when it hit the bottom.

    We decided to leave then, as I was about ready to vomit (lol). The rest of the people around me weren't much better.

    -Sasha B, from over the border in NS

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