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-   -   July 30, 2009: Whale Tale (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=20769)

xoxoxoBruce 07-30-2009 12:00 AM

July 30, 2009: Whale Tale
 
Got a whale of a tale to tell ya, lads
A whale of a tale or two
'Bout the flappin' fish and the girls I've loved
On nights like this with the moon above
A whale of a tale and it's all true
I swear by my tattoo

But that's for another time. ;)

This whale tale happened in Harbin, north-east China.

http://cellar.org/2009/beluga.jpg

Quote:

It looks like a moment of terror - a diver finds her leg clamped in the jaws of a beluga whale. In fact, it was a stunning example of an animal coming to the rescue of a human life.

Yang Yun, 26, was taking part in a free diving contest without breathing equipment among the whales in a tank of water more than 20ft deep and chilled to Arctic temperatures. She says that when she tried to return to the surface, she found her legs crippled by cramp from the freezing cold. At that point Mila the beluga took a hand, or rather a flipper.

At depths of 20ft and below, the water pressure keeps a body down, particularly if, as in this case, the limbs are effectively paralysed by the cold.
Reliving the drama, Yang Yun said: 'I began to choke and sank even lower and I thought that was it for me - I was dead. 'Until I felt this incredible force under me driving me to the surface.'
Or Mila didn't want any dead girls littering her tank. :haha:

link

Scriveyn 07-30-2009 01:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by xoxoxoBruce (Post 585113)
... At that point Mila the beluga took a hand, or rather a flipper. ...

While the photographer wouldn't lift a finger, except to press the camera buttons.

DucksNuts 07-30-2009 04:35 AM

Way cooler if they were out in the ocean, but pretty nifty.

capnhowdy 07-30-2009 06:56 AM

20 Feet? I guess one can drown in a lot shallower water.

Shawnee123 07-30-2009 08:23 AM

Ocean creatures (even when displaced) are the coolest.

"The albatross and the whales, they are my brothers."

:)

ajaccio 07-30-2009 09:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by capnhowdy (Post 585146)
20 Feet? I guess one can drown in a lot shallower water.

Pass out in a 2" puddle and you can drown...
:thepain:

wolf 07-30-2009 09:42 AM

Was her father the keeper of the Eddystone light?

Pie 07-30-2009 10:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Scriveyn (Post 585124)
While the photographer wouldn't lift a finger, except to press the camera buttons.

Guessing it's an automated camera. Electronics don't care as much.

newtimer 07-30-2009 10:24 AM

...or maybe the whale was in the mood for some Chinese today.

glatt 07-30-2009 10:48 AM

Or maybe the 20 foot deep "tank" was an aquarium with an observation window, and the photographer was outside the tank.

Clodfobble 07-30-2009 01:09 PM

How in the world do people swim that deep? My ears are in agony by the time I'm ten feet under.

Shawnee123 07-30-2009 01:35 PM

Dove to 110 feet once...you gotta hold your nose and pop your ears. One of the foam drink holders (our instructor brought it along to show us) was compressed to the size of a pencil.

glatt 07-30-2009 01:46 PM

1 Attachment(s)
What's amazing are the submarine evacuation training tanks the Navy has. You have no air tank, just a hood. They open a hatch at the bottom of one of these towers, and you swim the hundred feet or so to the top.

Shawnee123 07-30-2009 02:21 PM

Wow. The only difference would be not needing decompression!

Oh, and I so want to try it. ;)

glatt 07-30-2009 02:25 PM

Well, in the Navy tank, you are breathing compressed air in the chamber at the bottom, and when you swim up to the top, you have to exhale (scream) the whole time so you don't burst from the expanding air in your lungs.

Shawnee123 07-30-2009 02:32 PM

Yeah, that makes sense. Pretty neat.

SteveDallas 07-30-2009 03:11 PM

What's the failure rate? I imagine the consequences for not doing it right would be nasty.

(BTW--I can't believe nobody else has. Google image search for whale tail. You're old enough to know better than to click.)

glatt 07-30-2009 03:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SteveDallas (Post 585197)
What's the failure rate?

From 1956 through 1966 there were 23.

Quote:

Originally Posted by SteveDallas (Post 585197)
I imagine the consequences for not doing it right would be nasty.

They can be very nasty. When I took a SCUBA course in college, they went into graphic detail. Your lungs basically tear open inside your chest.

The good news is that at these Navy places, they have staff and facilities right there ready to treat you. Not like if you have a diving accident at some remote tropical island.

Sarasvati48 07-30-2009 08:46 PM

Who took the picture?

ZenGum 07-30-2009 09:26 PM

Dolphins.

monster 07-30-2009 09:33 PM

Sharks

or, the huge manatee

TheMercenary 07-31-2009 09:02 PM

Since she was tank kept, I wonder if she was not trained to do this kind of rescue for swimmers.

xoxoxoBruce 08-01-2009 12:02 AM

Not trained, although she has had a lot of interaction with humans. They claim everyone was very surprised.
But hey, it's China, so that may be commie propaganda to cover up a program training whales to attack our soldiers at the beach.;)

TheMercenary 08-03-2009 08:35 PM

I knew it! That is exactly what I was thinking! The Whales would just beach themselves and Tora Tora Tora! Wait that was the Japs.


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