Is this loosely based on a True Story?
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mrjjmac22-1 — 20 years ago(July 26, 2005 08:58 AM)
No Killer Whale has ever Inentionally attacked a Human.They are too intelligent to make a mistaken identity attack.The most major thing commited by a Killer Whale was capsizing a few small dinghys when Surfacing.
If you were going to be stranded in the middle of the ocean this is the one thing you would want around.It will not harm you and no predators will be close.Great Whites wont even attack one of these unless they are half dead/wounded. -
wallacesawyer — 20 years ago(September 09, 2005 06:02 PM)
I remember I think it was Entertainment Tonight, some dolphines were attacking a killer whale. I'm not sure why. I never saw any update on it.
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wallacesawyer — 20 years ago(December 21, 2005 06:41 PM)
Sounds more like the opposite. Killer whales are really oversized dolphins.
I think it was ONE killer whale, and a school of dophins.
Spread The Fear,
Toyland Chairman
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deepmoss — 20 years ago(December 21, 2005 10:17 PM)
Yes two orcas killed a female aquarium worker in Victoria BC. The news report said they kept her under water and she drowned.
Orcas in Antarctica have also mistaken people on icefloes for either penguins or seals and have tried to catch them by breaking the ice where the people were standing.
Dougal Robertson and his family had their boat sunk by Orcas off the west coast of South America , Dougal wrote about it http://www.survivethesavagesea.com/index.html -
ginger2055 — 20 years ago(February 09, 2006 05:16 PM)
Orcas have attacked people when they were abused by them or another trainer and was mistaken. Orcas might attack a few boats but if they do its most likely because they smell fish or blood. Orcas can kill any animal when they are in their pod.
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schlechtj — 19 years ago(December 16, 2006 05:44 PM)
This is the way Orcas kill baby dolphins. They work together to keep the baby from surfacing and it dies. A lot of the time they don't eat it afterward it's as if they are just amused with their own power. They are like humans. They are the absolute masters of their domain and they know it. An Orca if it gets a good look at you has a pretty good idea what you are and may provide it with some mental stimulation but, in the water you are as defenseless against an orca as if an orca was on land. If it is really hungry, or psycho, it will kill you.
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lm362 — 9 years ago(September 14, 2016 03:21 AM)
"This is the way Orcas kill baby dolphins. They work together to keep the baby from surfacing and it dies. A lot of the time they don't eat it afterward it's as if they are just amused with their own power."
As someone has already said, please do research before you post anything. The reason orcas kill baby dolphins without eating them, sometimes, is to teach their young how to hunt and kill. They are not amused with their own power. You are humanizing orcas.
"Do All Things For God's Glory"-1 Corinthians 10:31
I try doing this with my posts -
bigbadbass3 — 19 years ago(December 10, 2006 09:54 PM)
HA! You should really do some research before you go posting things that absurd. Orcas are intelligent mammals that protect there young fiercly, have a sense of community and have NEVER killed a human in the wild, at least not in some toothy, Jaws-like attack. Yes, accidents happen, but think about it. Almost any large predator will kill a human if provoked or starved. Orcas, however, as pointed out in other posts, are too intelligent for that sort of nonsense.
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glenheron — 19 years ago(January 05, 2007 01:02 PM)
yea right go to youtube.com and look up killer whale attacks 0.0
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toph1980 — 19 years ago(March 19, 2007 03:35 AM)
I dunno what happened here but +100 stitches is a lot of stitches. Shamu is clearly annoyed with that chick, and refuses to let her get out of the water:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cuqhKwG83TY
Bad Shamu! -
seand-10 — 19 years ago(October 27, 2006 05:35 AM)
Sorry Plutokrypton but I, and many other beg to differ. Orcas are seen in Newfoundland waters quite often. Actually pods of Orcs have been sighted a number of times off Cape Spear which, as you know, is just around the corner from Petty Harbour. Just this summer (2006) my brother and his family sighted a pod off the headland down Flatrock. He always carries his video camera but on that day neglected to do so. He is still kicking himself. My cousin, an avid whale watcher (who lives right on the water) has seen Orcas off Cape Spear and other places as well.
Try a Google search as well on Orcas and Newfoundland. Here was my first hit:
http://www.wildlands.com/wildlife_reports/wildlife_report_2.html
Here's another:
http://www.newfoundlandwhales.net/orcawhale.htm
Cheers from lovely St. John's,
Sean -
Who99 — 19 years ago(April 19, 2006 01:14 AM)
I have yet to find anything close to resembling this on the internet, so I am thinking it was probably purely fiction.
Actually I saw a really excellent show a few months ago on a story of cooperation between man and killer whales. It was on an episode of Nature, titled "Killers of Eden". I think there is a book that is recently out on the same subject, by the same name. Its about a pod of Killer Whales hung around the Australian whaling town of Eden, where they would herd other migrating whales into the shallow bay for the local whalers to kill. Cooperation was so close, apparently the killer whales even helped to pull on ropes to help secure the other whales. Once the whalers had killed the whale, they would leave the carcass in the bay overnight for the killer whales to eat the tongue. This was known as the "Pact of the Tongue".
Heres a link to the Nature episode site: http://www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/killers/clode.html
A really, really fascinating story. I highly recommend a watch if you see its going to be on again.