It happened right in front of friends of mine.
I guess the whales are correctly named then...
Free Willy bump
What happens when one forgets that wild animals are wild animals; apparently, an affliction increasingly common in our modern world.
A killer whale killed someone?
Go figure.
After seeing a story on a coordinated attack by a pack of Killer Whales on a Mother Grey Whale and her baby. (she managed to get her baby to safety) I don’t like Killer Whales. BAD whales.
The whale was probably not trying to kill her, but they are wild animals. Carnivores to boot.
I suppose there is a reason they are known as “Killer” whales.
I heard PETA is now demanding they be called “Sea Pitbulls”.
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“... around the waste”
Off topic, but does the Orlando paper really say that?
Every time I read a paper these days, I think - there’s a job being wasted on someone (and wonder where I can apply).

I have never been comfortable with the idea of keeping creatures such as killer whales in such confined quarters.
Park guest Victoria Biniak told Local 6 that the trainer was a veteran of SeaWorld and had just finished explaining to the audience the show they were about to see.
At that point, Biniak said, the whale came up from the water and grabbed the woman.
“He was thrashing her around pretty good. It was violent,’” Biniak told Local 6.
The whale “took off really fast in the tank, and then he came back, shot up in the air, grabbed the trainer by the waist and started thrashing around, and one of her shoes flew off.”
She said sirens went off and everyone was forced to leave the stadium.
Guests were evacuated from the area. The park is not shut down
Witnesses are reporting that the victim was a trainer who was dragged into the tank and drowned by the whale.
Around six months before Tilikum came to SeaWorld Orlando, the whale was involved in an incident that resulted in the trainers death. In 1999, a man who snuck into the park was found dead in the whales tank.
“Tillikum measures 22 feet 6 inches long and weighs in at 12,300 pounds (as of 2007). His pectoral fins are six and one half feet long, his massive flukes curl under, and his 6-foot-tall dorsal fin is flopped completely to his left side, and weighs close to 200 pounds. He is the largest Orca in captivity and also the most successful sire in captivity, with 13 offspring, 10 of which are still alive.”
http://www.wftv.com/news/22659910/detail.html
Shamu, in deep thought, ....”she tells me to hop over that stupid stick one more time and.....”
If not, at what age was the wale captured.
This could be a case of a wale pining for the fiords.