2023-patos- (2027)

2023-patos- (2027)

Using a 30-foot pole with a curved knife (a “whale cutter”), rescuers from a Zodiac boat waited for the whale to surface for air. When the whale exhaled, the boat moved in.

The whale, estimated to be a 2-year-old male, was not the typical "Sounders" (the group of 12-15 gray whales that forget to migrate and stay in the region all summer). He was a transient migrant. But what caught the researchers’ eyes wasn't the whale's presence; it was the bright orange buoy trailing behind its tail. 2023-Patos-

The line went slack. The orange buoy floated free. Using a 30-foot pole with a curved knife

“We initially thought it was a crab pot buoy,” said Dr. Hannah Waters, a marine biologist with the CWR (name fictionalized for narrative, though the event is real). “But as we got closer, we realized the entanglement was severe.” Upon closer inspection via drone footage and long-range photography, the rescue team identified the source of the whale’s distress: a massive, heavy-gauge commercial Dungeness crab pot line . He was a transient migrant