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Dead whale washed back out to sea | |
(about 1 hour later) | |
A dead minke whale thought to have been stranded in the Bristol Channel has been washed out to sea again after beaching on the south Wales coast. | |
The spectacle of the 33ft (10m) creature brought many onlookers to the Knap at Barry, Vale of Glamorgan. | |
But after much of the day on the beach it was dislodged by the rising tide and drifted out into the channel again. | |
It is believed to have been initially sighted off Burnham-on-Sea, Somerset, on Monday. | |
Rescuers from Somerset had tried unsuccessfully to tow it out to sea before it appeared again at Barry on Tuesday morning. | |
It was then thought to have been taken in an easterly direction by the tide, towards the direction of Barry Island. | |
The whale was initially spotted off Burnham-on-Sea | |
Vale of Glamorgan council said it would monitor the situation with a view to removing it if it washes up somewhere else. | |
Dave Ball, coastguard rescue officer with Barry Coastguard Rescue Team, said: "It has clearly been dead for some days at least. This sort of thing does happen from time to time. | Dave Ball, coastguard rescue officer with Barry Coastguard Rescue Team, said: "It has clearly been dead for some days at least. This sort of thing does happen from time to time. |
"There have been reports of a dead whale in the sea here for some time." | "There have been reports of a dead whale in the sea here for some time." |
Water-bikers Derek Jones and his 12-year-old son Sean, from Bristol, spotted the mammal still alive in the estuary at about 1700 BST on Monday. | Water-bikers Derek Jones and his 12-year-old son Sean, from Bristol, spotted the mammal still alive in the estuary at about 1700 BST on Monday. |
They unsuccessfully tried to tow it back out to sea with a rope attached to their water bike. | They unsuccessfully tried to tow it back out to sea with a rope attached to their water bike. |
Mark Simmonds, science director at the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society, said: "Assuming it is indeed a minke whale, they are fairly commonly seen close to the shore around the UK, but more so in the north rather than the south. | Mark Simmonds, science director at the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society, said: "Assuming it is indeed a minke whale, they are fairly commonly seen close to the shore around the UK, but more so in the north rather than the south. |
"The minke whale is the smallest of the filter feeding whales that we often see in the UK. | "The minke whale is the smallest of the filter feeding whales that we often see in the UK. |
"When whales are sick or wounded they might come ashore and the size of this whale is quite large." | "When whales are sick or wounded they might come ashore and the size of this whale is quite large." |
He said he was sure the father and son meant well, "but towing it is not ideal as it could cause more harm - you should always call the experts." | He said he was sure the father and son meant well, "but towing it is not ideal as it could cause more harm - you should always call the experts." |