Stranded orca calf remains in B.C. lagoon, breaching at regular intervals
ZEBALLOS, B.C. — Thick fog covers the mountainside as heavy, pounding rain pelts a remote lagoon Tuesday near the northern Vancouver Island village of Zeballos, where a real-life drama involving a stranded killer whale calf is unfolding.
The two-year-old orca has been alone in the tidal lagoon near Little Espinosa Inlet since March 23 when its pregnant mother became trapped by the low tide and died on the rocky beach.
Efforts to get the calf to open water where it might reconnect with its pod members have included using a flotilla of boats to convinced it out at high tide, setting a series of directional lines leading out of the lagoon and playing recorded whale calls from its family.
The rescue team that includes Fisheries Department marine mammal experts, area Ehattesaht First Nation leaders and whale scientists have not been able to coax the orca calf to swim through a narrow channel where its mother died.

