T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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847.1 | I've got a Nikon and I'm not afraid to use it! | CSSE::COUTURE | Abandon shore | Tue May 24 1988 13:58 | 4 |
| The best method for scaring off whales from my experience is to
pull out a camera. The seem to disappear almost immediately. This
method seems to work equally well for seals and dolphins.
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847.2 | Pentax's don't work. | RIVEST::TIERNEY | a pirate, 200 years too late. | Tue May 24 1988 14:40 | 4 |
|
Actually, I tried the camera trick, it didn't work. :)
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847.3 | Moby Dick | CAMELS::MCGARRY | | Tue May 24 1988 15:38 | 8 |
|
Besides Moby Dick, I've have never heard or read of a whale doing
damage to a boat in the New England area, has anyone else?
Besides whales, how do you scare off sharks.
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847.4 | | RIVEST::TIERNEY | a pirate, 200 years too late. | Tue May 24 1988 16:01 | 11 |
|
You don't have to worry about sharks if you're in the boat.
If you're in the water, shouting into the water is suppose to
scare them. They typically will nudge their prey before
attacking, to test the prey. At this time you should strike
the shark. Gouging the eyes is good too.
I don't have any empirical data on this! :)
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847.5 | Try "DIRTY" tactics. | BPOV06::LORD | | Tue May 24 1988 16:24 | 15 |
| re: .4
How about biting the shark or pulling its hair or kicking it in
the you know what? Or shine a flashlight in it's eyes and shout,
FREEZE!
re: .0
As for the whale, try dumping your portapotty. Someone from New
Jersey told me that one. Apparently, it's common practice down
there to do that to your neighbors. :-)
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847.6 | dumb answers FREE | HYEND::SVAILLANT | | Tue May 24 1988 16:30 | 5 |
| re: .1
Good reply from a MARKETING/SAILOR!!
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847.7 | Some more suggestions ... | SALEM::MCWILLIAMS | | Tue May 24 1988 16:33 | 15 |
| You could try speaking to the whale in Japanese or Russian, and
invite it to dinner ;^)
Or you could don a fake wooden leg and and scream "thar she blows"
or may be display a Nuke the Whales bumper sticker.
or turn on the stereo and play soothing tunes from Twisted Sister.
or turn on the TV and tune to CBN.
On the serious side, how about turning on the motor ?
/jim
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847.8 | enjoy the show, it's free ... | GRAMPS::BAILEY | May the 4 winds blow u safely home | Tue May 24 1988 21:04 | 17 |
| Why scare it at all??? I mean, people pay good money for a show
you got for free. Sure, that air they blow through their top stinks
to high heaven, but I've never heard of whales brushing against
boats. Once one surfaced less than 50 feet from the Hobie Cat I
was sailing off of Halibut Point, and I just kept telling myself
that they are rumored to be gentle creatures. Sure, I was scared
sh_, uh, witless, at the time. But there were no inadvertant waves
of the tail or anything. Just a couple of quick glimpses of a back
that was clearly bigger than the boat, and then it was gone. And
if you sail off of P'town you'll see plenty of them, and mobody
I know ever had any problems getting bumped. I think they're just
curious, and probably not curious enough to risk hurting themselves
against your "hard" boat hull. So I'd recommend that you just relax
and take lots of pictures.
... Bob
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847.9 | Couple of serious suggestions | AYOU17::NAYLOR | Purring on all 12 cylinders | Wed May 25 1988 05:07 | 22 |
| I agree with -.1, why frighten away such a wonderful creature. but
if you really get worried, Greenpeace (the ecology group) have an
ingenious way of preventing Japanese and Russian whalers catching
their prey - they play distress calls through transducers fitted
to the hull of their ship. Makes the whales dive for cover in deep
water!
Sharks - that's another story. You *can* frighten away grey reef
sharks (the most dangerous type for divers apart from Tiger sharks)
by hauling a bag of rotten grey reef shark meat behind you. They'll
still be as curious to start with but after first looks they disappear
like billy-oh! (Tested in OZ off the barrier reef I believe).
In Scotland, we have basking sharks up to 35/40 feet long, not
dangerous in themselves (plankton eaters) but they have a nasty
habit of wanting to scratch the barnacles off their backs using
your hull and many small boats have been toppled over the years.
Keep a good lookout!
Brian
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847.10 | they are big ..... | MSCSSE::BERENS | Alan Berens | Wed May 25 1988 10:18 | 9 |
| re .8:
Well, sometime whales do bump into boats intentionally. Some years ago a
whale (thought to be male) apparently thought that a Valiant 40 was a
female whale and spent some hours rubbing and bumping against the hull.
A bump that is gentle to the whale may not be so gentle to the crew of
the boat. The amorous whale bumped the Valiant 40 hard enough to knock
some books off the chart table.
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847.11 | A whale of a race | AKOV12::DJOHNSTON | | Wed May 25 1988 10:25 | 22 |
| I think I mentioned this in another note. Two years ago we were
doing the Monhegan race in our Express 37. Blasting downwind about
3 in the morning. There were four of us on deck. I was driving,
one guy was trimming the chute and two others being rail meat and
snoozing. Rest of the crew was below resting. All of a sudden
a whale sounds right next to us. I mean about ten to fifteen feet
away! The water washing of his (her?) back rolled the boat noticibly.
Scared the "wits" out of me and the trimmer. The exhaust did stink
very, very bad. This whale hung out with us until sunrise, constantly
surfacing very close. Got some great pictures (using a flash and
sacrificing night vision for a bit). We speculate that the speedo
which operated on sonic impulses may have been the source of
attraction. At sunrise the fella dove and we never saw it again.
After the initial shock we never had the feeling we were in any
sort of danger of collision. The whale knew to keep just out of
contact I guess. Anyway, it livened up the night and made for great
stories at the club!
Dave
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847.12 | In a serious vein | SALEM::MCWILLIAMS | | Wed May 25 1988 10:49 | 23 |
| Re: .7
I was serious about turning on the motor (but not engaging the prop).
Last year when we were of Provincetown a pod of Pilot whales came
along side and kept pace with us for a while. It ended when some
person in a 34 Carver decided to come over for a look. As he got
close, the whales sounded and were never seen again.
When I have been on whale watching trips, they usually shut down
the engines or throttle way back when the boat is near a whale
supposedly not to scare off the whale. Apparently many of them have
scars from a close encounter with a prop and thus they are more
wary around engine noise.
Everything I have heard indicates that in general whales are very
well behaved around boats, but there have been stories about boats
loosing rudders when colliding with a whale sleeping on the water,
or getting knocked around when the whale wants to rub against the
hull.
/jim
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847.13 | Best Whale Watch time/charter? | EJMVII::GERMAIN | Down to the Sea in Ships | Wed May 25 1988 14:20 | 12 |
| While we're on the subject......
I would like to take my 8 year old daughter on a whale watch this
summer. What time of the summer gives you the best chance of seeing
whales - especially humpbacks. We will be taking a charter out of
the Mass. shore - which charters are the best?
Thanks,
Gregg
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847.14 | USE AN AIR HORN | ABE::HASKELL | | Wed May 25 1988 16:34 | 7 |
| Why not sound your Freon powered air horn under water to scare off
unwanted sharks or whales?
I would think that the sound from that device would be devistating.
Paul
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847.15 | Use your sounder! | CSSE::GARDINER | Architects-R-Us | Wed May 25 1988 17:10 | 15 |
| In all seriousness the best way to keep the whale away is to turn
on your depth sounder. It serves that same purpose as the transducer
used by Greenpeace. The objective is not to scare the whale away,
but to let them know your there. If they are sleeping (basking)
or just trying to scratch their backs on your barnacles, the sounder
pulse will let them know.
It's simple and all boats have one. If you don't have a depth sounder
you probably don't have to worry about whales because you're probably
stuck in the mud!
Good luck.
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847.16 | Some collisions | OBLIO::STONE | | Wed May 25 1988 18:08 | 11 |
| re: #3
There have been a number of collisons with whales. From what
I recall a boat lost it's rudder 2 years agon in the Corinthian
200 race off of Race Point. From what I have been told, sailboats
are more prone to collisions particularly in the early early hours
because of the whale's sleep cycle and the relative lack of noise
comining from a sailboat.
Joe
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847.17 | don't frighten whales -- they're too big | MSCSSE::BERENS | Alan Berens | Wed May 25 1988 18:20 | 13 |
| The question for this note should be "how to ask a whale to go away",
not "how to scare a whale". The response of an animal to fear is either
to flee from the danger or to confront the danger (fight). Whatever you
do, you don't want to frighten the whale. What if the whale you frighten
happens to be a nursing mother, and she decides that attacking your boat
is the better way to protect her calf? Many of the whales in New England
waters in the summer are calves, I think. I like to idea of using
nonthreatening noises to let the whale know that I am nearby, but that I
am not another whale. (One reason that I wouldn't use black bottom paint
is that it is too whale-like in color.)
Alan
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847.18 | | RIVEST::TIERNEY | a pirate, 200 years too late. | Wed May 25 1988 18:44 | 17 |
|
I think we're all talking about "asking the whale to go away"
not frightening it.
I suppose you have to be in the position we were in (and others)
to understand the motivation behind this note. The first thought
that goes through your mind is "boy, this is great! A whale
right alongside the boat!" The second thought is "This thing
is big, what do we do to move it along".
I suppose there's no one thing that will work with all whales,
so the best one can do is ride it out and enjoy the experience.
[As far as the depth sounder goes, I've heard that it attracts
whales. Ours was not on at the time though..]
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847.19 | don't assume universal gentleness | CLT::FANEUF | | Thu May 26 1988 17:32 | 8 |
| I haven't heard of any sinkings in NE, but let's not forget that
whales have collided with and sunk sailboats on occasion. One or
more pilot whales sank Dougal Robertson's 46 foot (I think) wooden
boat in the the Pacific (read the book).
Ross Faneuf
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847.20 | black paint here. | RDF::RDF | Rick Fricchione | Fri May 27 1988 13:06 | 12 |
| re .17: Yes. This happened to us when sailing in Mass Bay on
the way to the canal. It was only after I saw the
whales did I realize that I had painted the bottom of
my boat black. Too late then.
I can just picture some calf trying to stay close..
Mommy! Mommy!...
Maybe next year I'll paint the bottom red.
Rick
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847.21 | yummy | MSCSSE::BERENS | Alan Berens | Fri May 27 1988 13:18 | 5 |
| >>> Maybe next year I'll paint the bottom red.
But then some killer whale or shark or something will think you're
a large meal oozing blood ...... Maybe a blue bottom?
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847.22 | Don't paint it orange | CSSE::COUTURE | Abandon shore | Fri May 27 1988 15:51 | 8 |
| I read a report a few years ago from The University of Florida in
Gainsville (I guess they have some spare time after football season.
Anyhow, they were doing some research on which how sharks react
to color. It turned out that they absolutely hated black . . .
maybe it reminded them of dolphins or something. On the other hand,
they absolutely LOVED orange, just the color of life jackets. In
fact, the researchers started calling the color "yum yum yellow."
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847.23 | Whale Attack | CSSE32::BLAISDELL | | Wed Jun 15 1988 09:09 | 12 |
| From today's Manchester (N.H.) Union Leader:
WHALES SINK RACING YACHT
London (UPI) - A British yachtsman said yesterday he was nearly killed when a
school of about 20 whales attacked and sank his yacht in the mid-Atlantic
about 1000 miles west of the British Coast.
"They were trying to kill me, I am sure of it," said David Sellings in a radio
interview with the British media. "I sent out a Mayday alert and just had time
to get into my liferaft before my yacht sank."
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847.24 | The revenge of the sons of Moby Dick ... | GRAMPS::BAILEY | May the 4 winds blow u safely home | Wed Jun 15 1988 13:32 | 14 |
| Gee, did he say what color they were ??? Was this man's name Ahab
perchance ??
I'm not going to pretend to know what goes through the mind of a
whale, or what motivates them to behave the way they do. But this
seems like an extremely unusual incident to me. We were sailing
not 100 yards from one last Saturday out by Stellwagon bank, and
it didn't seem the slightest bit interested in our presence.
If they were "trying to kill" him, I should think they'd have less
trouble sinking the liferaft than the yacht.
... Bob
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847.25 | No Challange at all | PENUTS::HOGLUND | | Fri Aug 05 1988 16:07 | 5 |
| RE:24
If they were trying to kill him, I don't think either the life raft
or the yacht would present much of a challange. :-)
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847.26 | A whale of a time | HXOA01::MOWBRAY | from Newfoundland | Tue Jun 19 1990 09:17 | 34 |
| We see a lot of whales here in Newfoundland, particularly around
this time of year when various fish species come close in shore.
Mostly we see small whales such as the Minke and Pot head. The
Pot heads are only slightly larger than a large porpoise while the
Minkes can get up to around 40-50 feet. We also sometimes see the
basking sharks although they tend to stay more in the Atlantic than
in the bays in which I sail. The basking sharks (and some whales)
often cause serious damage to fishing nets as they get inside the
net, gorge themselves and then cannot get out again.
Last year, four of us, when returning from an ovrnight sail on a
C&C 27 (with a black painted bottom) ran into a very large number
of Pot heads. The pot heads move around in "Pods" of 8-12 and fish
as a team (I guess). Anyway, we were on a beam reach, screaming
along not a care in the world when we looked back and from all over
the bay pods started to close in on us. We guessed at the time
that there were probably up to 200 whales racing after the boat.
The whales set up in a V behind us with their leaders sitting right
on the stern quarter. Could have touched the closest 2 or 3.
It didn't take long to figure out that they were (just like us)
out for a weekend's fun on the water ! they followed us for well
over 2 hours although, when the wind came around a little to ur nose
and we started to tack, they backed off. After that happened, we
then tacked very slowly and they just stuck behind us all the way
until some idiot in a Tuna Boat decided to make the best of an otherwise
bad day and try to foul hook one of the Pot heads to entertain his
guests. His engine seemed to scvare them away.
I spoke to a Professor at the University here who specializes in
whales and he told me that while he had never heard of quite such
an incident before, he stressed that there was nothing to fear from
whales other than accidents that happen when "big things" are around
smaller things.
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