Killer whales escape as Canada's Hudson Bay ice shifts
BBC News online - 10 January 2013
A
dozen killer whales trapped under sea ice with only a single breathing
hole have reached safety in Canada's Hudson Bay, local villagers have
reported.
The whales had been jockeying for space to breathe through a gap in the ice.
They were spotted by a hunter on Tuesday, the day after residents say the bay froze.
Since then, two hunters reported the water had opened around the area where the whales were seen surfacing for air, Mr Palliser said.
"They confirmed that the whales were no longer there and there was a lot of open water," the Inukjuak leader said.
"That's good news for the whales," he added.
Many villagers made the one-hour snowmobile ride on Tuesday to see the whales.
The Inukjuak public safety officer told CTV on Wednesday the whales should not even be in the area in January.
On Wednesday, the village asked the Canadian government to send icebreaker ships to help free the whales.
But Inukjuak Mayor Peter Inukpuk said the ships were too far away to help.
Villagers had said they would launch their own rescue operation with chainsaw and drills.
Labels: Animal Stories, Canada
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