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Keiko makes move to quieter bay
the Register Guard ^ | 8 Nov 02 | By The Associated Press

Posted on 11/08/2002 5:08:36 PM PST by Glutton

HALSA, Norway - From his new home in a tranquil Norwegian bay, Keiko the killer whale has what his friends say is an ideal place to live: peace and quiet, human care and ample opportunity to meet wild orcas.

The six-ton orca, who gained fame in the "Free Willy" movies, was led Thursday from the Skaalvik fjord, where he turned up in early September, to the nearby but quieter Taknes Bay.

"Here at last," said Colin Baird, 36, Keiko's Canadian trainer.

"Welcome to Taknes," Baird said in Norwegian, reading a sign painted by some of the 10 residents who turned out to welcome their new neighbor. They also painted an orca lying on its back.

Baird and Norwegian fishery officials spent weeks seeking the perfect winter home for the orca before settling on the bay, which is just six miles away.

Baird said the new location is ice-free, has plenty of fish, is along orca migration routes and is more remote - something they hope will reduce crowds of admirers.

Keiko's keepers kept the move secret until the last minute, hoping to avoid the publicity that has surrounded Keiko since his arrival in the Scandinavian nation of 4.5 million people. The 35-foot-long orca swam alongside a blue boat stacked with boxes of frozen herring for the 90-minute trip.

Occasionally darting beneath the boat, Keiko waved his distinctly curved dorsal fin, responded to hand signals from a trainer and snapped up fish that were thrown to him, often opening his mouth wide to demand more.

Keiko's stardom in the three films about a boy who befriends a whale sparked a more than $20 million campaign to rescue the then-ailing orca from a Mexico City aquarium after 23 years in captivity.

Keiko was rehabilitated at the Oregon Coast Aquarium and was then airlifted in 1998 to Iceland, where he had been captured at the age of 2. His handlers taught him to catch live fish and released him. He swam straight for Norway - an 870-mile trek that seemed to be a search for human companionship.

In the Norwegian fjord, he allowed fans to pet and play with him. Some even crawled on his back. He became such an attraction that animal protection authorities imposed a ban on approaching him.

"Keiko has had an amazing odyssey," said Paul Irwin, president of the Humane Society of the United States, a project backer. "When somebody says this creature can never be released, I say it isn't so. Keiko is free to go. ... He is at liberty to do as he chooses."

Authorities in this Scandinavian nation of 4.5 million people also have endorsed the project, as long as Keiko is not penned in or captured, does not come in conflict with other maritime interests and is not commercially exploited.

Norway is the only country that commercially hunts whales, but the hunt is limited to minke whales. Killer whales are a protected species.

Keiko's trainers, who will live nearby in a house fixed up for them by a local farmer, will lay out buoys to mark his area in the bay, which has a tiny island in the middle.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: freewillie; killerwhales; orca
You have to give Keiko credit for intelligence. The dumber humans waiting on him spend millions "rehabilitating" him and send him on his merry way where he has to work to eat enough, and the other Orca's likely consider him a whale nerd of sorts.

But he is smart enough to keep them feeding him and looking after his medical needs. All in a nice natural setting.

Now that he has his humans well trained, he should built a Park where he can charge other Orcas to come and watch him get them to preform.

Seems only fair, doesn't it?

1 posted on 11/08/2002 5:08:36 PM PST by Glutton
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To: Glutton
"and the other Orca's likely consider him a whale nerd of sorts. "

Kind of the Uncle Tom of the orcas.
2 posted on 11/08/2002 5:41:17 PM PST by Blood of Tyrants
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To: Glutton
"You have to give Keiko credit for intelligence"...???

Norway is one of the only countries that still allows whaling ! ... stupid fish !

3 posted on 11/08/2002 5:42:35 PM PST by RS
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To: Blood of Tyrants
Yep. At the very least, I'm sure they gave him grief at having the same name as Chief O'Brien's wife on Deep Space Nine. ;-)
4 posted on 11/08/2002 5:43:04 PM PST by Glutton
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To: RS
Hey, Keiko lived in Oregon ong enough to have been exposed to protester tactics. Maybe he hopes to find a whaleboat to chain himself to to save Minke, Bryde’s, or humpback whales.

After all, being a slacker is a social slot humans like, and Keiko seems to have adopted. You never know what else he has learned. ;-)

5 posted on 11/08/2002 5:50:27 PM PST by Glutton
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