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US Navy's 'Flipper' goes AWOL
News.com (Australia) ^
| March 31st, 2003
Posted on 03/30/2003 11:03:45 AM PST by Sabertooth
US Navy's 'Flipper' goes AWOL
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| Staff Sgt. Justin Roberts escorts K-Dog, a Bottle Nose Dolphin belonging to Commander Task Unit. |
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| In Bahrain, sea lions are being used to detect unauthorized swimmers near U.S. Navy ships. |
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A sea lion moves through the water with a training device during a harbor-patrol exercise.
Photo Credits: Courtesy U.S. Navy |
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March 31, 2003
AUSTRALIAN military divers yesterday questioned the effectiveness of the US Navy's mine-clearing dolphins, revealing one had disappeared for two days.
The polite way to express their scepticism about the mine-clearing skills of the dolphins is to question their reliability and cost-efficiency, but one diver spoke more plainly yesterday.
"Flipper's f----ed, mate," he said.
"The dolphins have had all this amazing publicity but as soon as they put one in the water it shot through. There's a war going on and Flipper goes AWOL (absent without leave)."
The diver said the dolphin returned two days later.
But in the interim, the US Navy brought in another dolphin by helicopter.
"That meant some of our gear got bumped off the flight," he said.

K-Dog, a U.S. Navy dolphin trained to detect underwater mines,
leaps out of the water during exercises in the Persian Gulf.
The handlers of the five dolphins at work in the Iraqi port of Umm Qasr confirmed yesterday that one of their charges, a male named Tacoma, did disappear when put in the water to go to work.
"Two days later we found him in the same spot where we put him in the water," said Lieutenant Robert Greene, the officer in charge of the M-7 series of mine-clearing dolphins.
Tacoma was yesterday resting in his holding pool with the Navy's oldest dolphin, 33-year-old Makay.
Makay has been more diligent in Iraq, perhaps learning from a painful experience when he, too, took off from duty once in Florida.
A shark attacked him during his self-declared holiday, leaving him with scars on his back.
Lt Greene said the dolphins had been a great success in Iraq in using their sonar to detect potential mines and placing markers on them to guide human divers to the targets.
TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: amphibdesgru; awol; dolphin; mineclearing; mines; navy; navydolphin; norfolknas; sealions; seals; specialops; takoma; ua
Operational Fleet Systems

From the capabilities demonstrated in the Advanced Marine Biological Systems program, four operational Fleet Marine Mammal Systems (MMS) have been developed to fulfill Navy requirements where hardware is inadequate or safety is an issue. Dolphins are used in MMS because of their exceptional biological sonar that is unmatched by hardware sonars in detecting objects in the water column and on the ocean bottom. Sea lions are used because of their very sensitive underwater directional hearing and low light level vision. Both of these marine mammal species are trainable for tasks and are capable of repetitive deep diving. Fleet MMS are assigned to Navy Explosive Ordnance Disposal Mobile Units (EODMU). Each system has from 4 to 8 marine mammals, an Officer-in-Charge, and several enlisted personnel. All MMS are rapidly transported by aircraft, helicopter and land vehicles with all equipment to sustain an operational deployment. These systems regularly participate in major Fleet exercises. The Mk 6 & 7 MMS were used to support waterside security at the 1996 Republican Convention in San Diego, CA. SPAWAR supports these Fleet systems with replenishment marine mammals, hardware, training, personnel and documentation.
What is a "System"?
"System" is the term used for the various marine mammal programs developed for use by the Fleet. They include:
Mk 4 is a dolphin mine searching system that detects and marks locations of mines moored off the ocean bottom. It is capable of shipboard forward deployment to support post-amphibious operations. (EODMU THREE, Coronado, CA)
Mk 5 is a sea lion exercise mine recovery system that locates pingered training mines. The sea lions can locate these mines to depths of 1000 feet and attach a grabber device for recovery. (EODMU THREE, Coronado, CA and EODMU SIX, Charleston, SC)
Mk 6 is a dolphin swimmer and diver detection system that can detect and mark the location of an intruder. This system was used in Vietnam in 1970-71 and the Persian Gulf in 1987-88. (EODMU THREE, Coronado, CA)
Mk 7 is a dolphin mine searching system that detects and marks the location of mines on the ocean bottom. This system is also capable of shipboard forward deployment to support post-amphibious assaults. (EODMU THREE, Coronado, CA)
LINK

To: CheneyChick; vikingchick; Victoria Delsoul; WIMom; one_particular_harbour; kmiller1k; mhking; ...
((((((growl)))))

To: Sabertooth
To: Sabertooth
PETA cheered....that is, until the dolphin returned.
To: Sabertooth
5
posted on
03/30/2003 11:07:58 AM PST
by
MeekOneGOP
(Bu-bye Saddam! / Check out my Freeper site !: http://home.attbi.com/~freeper/wsb/index.html)
To: new cruelty
Thanks. Good thing I didn't post this in breaking news.

To: Sabertooth
They forgot they gave him a 48 hour pass I bet . . .
7
posted on
03/30/2003 11:09:36 AM PST
by
MeekOneGOP
(Bu-bye Saddam! / Check out my Freeper site !: http://home.attbi.com/~freeper/wsb/index.html)
To: Sabertooth
Well, at least they got him back. Just when you think that you've got an animal figured out, they'll do something to surprise you.
To: Sabertooth
My impression is that the dolphins are very capable, but perhaps not terribly reliable. As part of a total system they probably save a lot of labor and dive time, particularly when investigating targets that have been previously mapped to GPS coordinates by magnetic anomaly detectors.
I wonder if they can be "steered" to particular locations through some form of underwater communication?
To: Excuse_My_Bellicosity
Yeah, that AWOL dolphin sounds fishy.
I wonder if the seals are talking.
Maybe he's a pinnipedophile?
To: Sabertooth
Thanks for the heads up!
To: Sabertooth

Now, did they tell me to 'get bombs' or 'get bombed'?
12
posted on
03/30/2003 11:24:54 AM PST
by
Slyfox
To: Sabertooth
At least Flipper did not try to avoid service like the great Maha Flipper. He avoided the porpoise draft by whinning about his pilonidal cyst.
To: Carry_Okie
I wonder if they can be "steered" to particular locations through some form of underwater communication?
Oh, I don't think there's any doubt that they can be steered, they do that at marine parks.
About 20 years ago I worked at Sea World in San Diego, and had a chance to play around with a lot of the cetaceans. I wasn't a trainer, but I've had direct experience with bottlenose, Pacific whiteside, pilot whales, beluga, and killer whales. They're very doglke, but there is more happening upstairs than there is with canines. Cetaceans have an advanced play instinct, a much greater capacity for calculated mischief, and also for the spontaneous creation of games with basic rules. I'm not at all surprised that there is an element of unpredictability with the Navy's dolphins.

To: Excuse_My_Bellicosity
Just when you think that you've got an animal figured out, they'll do something to surprise you.LOL--that describes the average spouse!
15
posted on
03/30/2003 11:31:50 AM PST
by
NautiNurse
(Usama bin Laden has produced more tapes than Steely Dan)
To: Slyfox
To: Sabertooth
He's back! How did you miss
this thread? It's a good one.
17
posted on
03/30/2003 11:34:28 AM PST
by
sweetliberty
("To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it.")
To: Sabertooth
"Flipper's f----ed, mate," he said. Yeh, without this quote the story would certainly lack authenticity. This and smear is is what passed for journalism today.
18
posted on
03/30/2003 11:40:21 AM PST
by
TopQuark
To: Sabertooth
LOL!
19
posted on
03/30/2003 11:41:17 AM PST
by
Slyfox
To: Sabertooth
The handlers of the five dolphins at work in the Iraqi port of Umm Qasr confirmed yesterday that one of their charges, a male named Tacoma, did disappear when put in the water to go to work.I wonder if there are any girl dolphins in the area, or perhaps he just wanted to check out the new neighborhood. I hope they don't court marshall him.
20
posted on
03/30/2003 11:41:26 AM PST
by
Mister Baredog
((They wanted to kill 50,000 of us on 9/11, we will never forget!))
To: Slyfox
LOL!
21
posted on
03/30/2003 11:43:15 AM PST
by
sweetliberty
("To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it.")
To: Sabertooth
""Cetaceans have an advanced play instinct, a much greater capacity for calculated mischief, and also for the spontaneous creation of games with basic rules.""
I had an opportunity to go visit 'Keiko' the killer whale while he was in the aquarium on the Oregon coast. As he swam about the quite large tank he was obviously as much interested in the people as the people were interested in him.
The trainers said that he demanded (how, they didn't say) that someone keep him company at all times. To keep him entertained they would turn on a television and place it in a window in his tank so that he could watch.
The trainers said that he was bored by comedy and love scenes, but that he liked action-adventure shows and movies. They would test him, somehow (again, they didn't say how), and found that he had a limited understanding of what was happening in some scenes that he watched.
It could be that some cetaceans are quite intelligent, but that they just aren't interested in the same things as we are, so we don't see it. Even the dolphins may be to playful to demonstrate their intelligence.
Remember the series of stories by David Brin?
22
posted on
03/30/2003 12:11:14 PM PST
by
jimtorr
To: Sabertooth; tgslTakoma
"Two days later we found him in the same spot where we put him in the water," Wow. Failure to go. Disobeying a direct order. Sounds like someone has Captain's Mast in his future.
23
posted on
03/30/2003 12:22:59 PM PST
by
rabidralph
(Very Soon, All Your Base Are Belong To Us)
To: Rebelbase; ewing
He's back! Wonder if he has a guilty grin on his face.
To: nickcarraway
Ping!
To: Sabertooth
Damn dolphin. I bet he got drunk, hit a whorehouse and didn't have enough money to make it back to base. I hope they take away a stripe and give him two weeks of hard labor - such as clearing beer and soda cans off the bottom of the ocean floor.
26
posted on
03/30/2003 12:32:38 PM PST
by
SamAdams76
(California wine beats French wine in blind taste tests. Boycott French wine.)
To: Sabertooth
Dolphins are such smart creatures- I bet if they don't want to perform you can't get them to. Kind of like a cat. :-D
27
posted on
03/30/2003 12:36:18 PM PST
by
lawgirl
(Running from the Grand Ennui)
To: All
"That meant some of our gear got bumped off the flight," he said.
Ah, here we go. This is the real reason why the Aussie is having a hissy fit.
He has a case of dolphin envy.....he doesn't like being second in consideration by the U.S. military.....:) lol
28
posted on
03/30/2003 12:36:34 PM PST
by
rwfromkansas
(Soli Deo Gloria)
To: Sabertooth
The diver said the dolphin returned two days later.This is good. At first I was worried that Flipper had changed his name to Flipper X and defected to Al Queda or Hamas.
29
posted on
03/30/2003 12:39:50 PM PST
by
putupon
(The Frog Pond needs soap.)
To: Sabertooth
AWOL is not the appropriate term. As he was on a mission the correct term is MIA. Of course that would engender sympathy for the coalition so the media won't use it.
30
posted on
03/30/2003 12:45:05 PM PST
by
Justa
To: Canticle_of_Deborah
The handlers of the five dolphins at work in the Iraqi port of Umm Qasr confirmed yesterday that one of their charges, a male named Tacoma, did disappear when put in the water to go to work.One of those burka wearing hussies got to him.
31
posted on
03/30/2003 1:02:21 PM PST
by
alexandria
((Shpeling Opshunal))
To: rabidralph
Wow. Failure to go. Disobeying a direct order. Sounds like someone has Captain's Mast in his future. Gulp! - Give 'em another chance!
32
posted on
03/30/2003 1:12:18 PM PST
by
HairOfTheDog
(May it be a light for you in dark places, when all other lights go out.)
To: Canticle_of_Deborah
Does Takoma have a tatoo and potential Veneral Disease after his 48 hour pass?
33
posted on
03/30/2003 1:39:52 PM PST
by
ewing
To: ewing; alexandria
"Two days later we found him in the same spot where we put him in the water," said Lieutenant Robert Greene,A likely story. I can't believe anyone bought that.
Tacoma was yesterday resting in his holding pool with the Navy's oldest dolphin, 33-year-old Makay.
Yeah right. He's in the brig being dressed down by a seasoned officer.
To: All
Free Willy.
35
posted on
03/30/2003 2:27:36 PM PST
by
battlegearboat
(Chirac Sans Culottes!)
To: Sabertooth
Everyone here is way off base, the AWOL story is just a ruse. I have it on good authority (A friend's friend's third cousin twice removed, who knows a girl who used to date a guy a CENTCOM HQ) that the Dolphin is a SEAL and was on a mission up the Euphrates...
Don't know the details but there may be a Navy Cross or possibly even a Medal of Honor in it for him... But you didn't here it from me.
36
posted on
03/30/2003 3:58:59 PM PST
by
GreenLanternCorps
(Mind like a steeel trap... Rusty and illegal in 37 states.)
To: GreenLanternCorps
Hmm - looking for those 2 flyers who parachuted into the river???? LOL
37
posted on
03/30/2003 4:33:15 PM PST
by
mollynme
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