The 25-foot whale doesn’t seem sick or injured, but the hope is that the whale can soon find its way out to sea.
According to Rachel Haight of Orca Network, Quiver was born in 2013 to mother T46B Raksha, who has six living offspring.
The 25-foot whale doesn’t seem sick or injured, but the hope is that the whale can soon find its way out to sea.
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Smithsonian Magazine on MSNNew Orca Calf Is a Descendant of the 'Budd Inlet Six,' the Last Killer Whales Captured in United States Waters in 1976On a Sunday afternoon in March 1976, SeaWorld contractors herded a family of orcas into Budd Inlet at the southern tip of ...
A group of nine critically endangered killer whales got a lot of attention off the coast near Depoe Bay, but it’s uncertain ...
An orca was spotted balancing a salmon on its head in late October near Washington’s Kitsap Peninsula, according to the Orca Network. This specific killer whale is known to marine biologists and whale ...
Whale watchers are crossing their fingers for another glimpse of what could be an albino whale. “We noticed there was a white ...
A rare sighting of critically endangered southern resident killer whales off the Oregon coast offers a glimpse of a ...
Early Monday morning, marine biologist Carrie Newell with Whale Research EcoExcursions reported seeing a pod of orcas north ...
Founder Sarah Shaoul said Bricks Need Mortar received fewer responses because small business owners have “little bandwidth.” ...
The Pacific Whale Watch Association (PWWA) announced that a new Bigg’s orca calf has been spotted in the Salish Sea.
The sighting coincided with Oregon’s Whale Watch Week, hosted each year by Oregon State Parks. During Whale Watch Week, ...
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