Whale of a Tale
When Luna, a people-loving orca, chose Vancouver Island's Nootka Sound for his home, he set in motion a drama of leviathan proportions
- By Michael Parfit
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2004, Subscribe
It was a story about an animal, and then it wasn’t. It was just a story about a lonely whale, at first. Then it got completely out of hand.
The story began in June 2001 when a baby male orca went missing from the waters near the San Juan Islands, between WashingtonState and Canada’s Vancouver Island. He had been born in September 1999 into a group of about 80 orcas called “southern residents.” The group, named because it spends summers near the southern part of Vancouver Island, is listed as endangered by Canada and by WashingtonState, so the whale, nicknamed Luna in a contest held by a Seattle newspaper, was vital to its future. But a whale census taken in June 2001 did not find little Luna. Baby orcas almost never make it on their own, so scientists assumed Luna was dead.
They were wrong.
In April of this year my wife, Suzanne, and I drove to a remote and spectacular fiord called Nootka Sound halfway up the west side of Vancouver Island. We rented an apartment in GoldRiver, a mill town of about 1,500 near the sound, which has lost its mill and is trying hard not to go ghostly. This was where Luna had come back from the dead.
Luna showed up in Nootka Sound in July 2001. Among the first to see him was the crew of a spruced-up former minesweeper called the Uchuck III, which carries spools of cable to logging camps, beer to fishing lodges and tourists into ancient wilderness. The little whale came out of nowhere one day to cavort in the ship’s wake, and over the next weeks, as the Uchuck went back and forth on its regular journeys, he became bolder and bolder.
“He breached, did tail flips, blew raspberries and squirted water at us,” Donna Schneider, the ship’s cook, remembered. “Sometimes he’d go right down the side of the boat, flapping his flipper at us.”
Scientists identify killer whales by the individual shape of a splash of gray behind their dorsal fin, called a saddle patch, and the fin itself. They identified Luna by matching his patch with early photographs. Although his family, known as Lpod, had not been documented in Nootka Sound—200 sea miles north of their summer territory—Luna had somehow found his way here. And though he was the equivalent of a human toddler in orca years, he’d figured out how to eat enough salmon to keep himself alive.
Orcas, or killer whales, are actually members of the dolphin family. They are extraordinarily social; the southern residents stay together in their pods all their lives, which can be as long as humans’. But in Nootka Sound, Luna had no pod, so he made one out of people.
Soon, anyone who went out in a boat to Luna’s part of Nootka Sound might meet him. He’d occasionally come up, put his head up on the gunwales, open his mouth, and let you rub his tongue. He played fetch. If you put a boat fender out on a rope, he’d hold it in his mouth and play tug-of-war, gently enough not to destroy the fender. When a tourist’s hat fell off the Uchuck, Luna came up with it perched on his nose. When loggers dropped the end of a chain into the water, Luna brought it up and gave it to them. When he heard a familiar boat coming, he’d jump three times and then zip right over to ride the wake. To the people who played with him, he was a charmer, a rogue, a goofball, a rambunctious kid. People fell in love.
“You can see in people when they have been affected by a whale,” says Lisa Larsson, a researcher who studies whale sounds. “You really get moved by them, and you don’t know how, but it just touches you inside somehow.” Donna Schneider felt the same. On one occasion the little rascal came up beside the Uchuck, rolled over on his side, and looked her right in the eye. “When he looks at you,” she said later, “it’s like he’s looking right into your soul. I can’t breathe.”
During our first week at GoldRiver, Suzanne and I were crossing a bay at high speed in our 14-foot Zodiac when Luna showed up unexpectedly. First, he leaped about 50 yards away. We were going over 15 knots. I thought we could keep away from him, but I was wrong. The next moment he blasted out of the water right next to us, going just as fast, his skin brushing the starboard side. He was bigger than the boat, and a lot higher. Boom, splash, a huge smooth back, a rush of noise, a rush of breath, a cascade of water in the face, then he was gone.
To me it was as if some barrier had evaporated, like the mist of the whale’s breath. Everything had changed. It was about then that I figured out that this was not just a story about an animal.
An intense response to an animal feels unique when you’re having it, but it isn’t. In fact, that kind of response is the focus of a growing new academic discipline called anthrozoology. To James Serpell, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania and a pioneer in the field, the effect Luna has on people is not surprising.
“People’s attitudes are very affected by an animal’s anthropomorphic characteristics,” he says. “Their size, the fact that they’re long-lived and have complex social lives, are all things that people equate with human characteristics. But with whales, people are also attracted by the elemental difference between them and us. When whales cross that barrier, it almost has spiritual meaning. That whales should want to be with us is both flattering and disturbing. It makes us rethink our whole relationship with animals.”
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Comments (9)
What a beautiful story. I only wish I could help Luna or even know what the right thing to do is. As was said above, "he was a gift to us" Thank you.
Posted by Ms. Mercer Ervin on April 27,2012 | 11:46 AM
There are times when close interspecies contacts occur. It has been so throughout our history and will continue to do so. Usually by happenstance, but sometimes by design. Whose design is the question and for what purpose? It is my belief that when meetings of this sort occur they are part of a grander plan than we might normally think. Meetings of this sort have been occurring and usually to the detriment of the non human species. Look at whales in general and our exploitation of their social behavior. There are exceptions, unfortunately for Luna, in the end, he wasn't. His interactions with humans were chosen by his own intention and the interplay between us and him have led us all to appreciate that we share this planet with other intelligent beings. As such, it is our responsibility to see that all living creatures have the opportunity for a full and free life. That includes all our fellow mankind as well. Luna's legacy will be the gift of introspection and where we fit into the grander scheme of life.
Posted by Steven Carter on July 15,2011 | 01:29 PM
I Haven't heard of Luna before his article was in the Smith-sonian magaZine. I fell completly in love with Luna. I felt so sad that he lost his pod. It would have made a very happy ending with him rejoining his pod. I have not seen the movie yet, when it comes, I am definately going to see it.
Posted by Geri Brown on July 15,2011 | 10:59 AM
I can't wait to see the movie. What a tragedy. Such a real and heart warming story. We need more of these in our lives. I hope we learn from this mistake. I wonder if the indians are aware of what they did that didn't keep Luna safe.
Posted by Annette Scott on June 29,2011 | 11:39 AM
This story leaves us closer to the end but not at the end. Knowing now what happened to Luna is heartbreaking. As an animal advocate I strongly agree that Luna should have been reunited with his pod. The native intervention prevented him from being moved to safety - which tragically led to his eventual death. Situations like this will no doubt happen again. I think we need to learn from this experience. Animals need to be with their own kind. Our tendency to anthropomorphize animals is not in their best interest. He was a gift to us - not to keep for ourselves, but to return to his own species, and to ensure his happiness and safety. I hope we don't think only of our own entertainment and interests if another Luna comes our way someday. Apparently that there will be now be a film about Luna called The Whale Movie and there was the award winning original film Saving Luna.
Posted by Here&Erehwon on October 15,2010 | 05:31 PM
This story made me cry. I loved it!!!
Posted by Gena Gerhardt on March 15,2010 | 09:40 PM
Fascinating, moving story - and well-written!
Posted by Gail Trenfield on May 25,2009 | 10:05 PM
Wonderful story for these complicated times. Anthropromorphizing happens all of the time but how much of it do we really understand. I hope Luna finds his way back to his pod.
Posted by Robert Capriccio on May 25,2009 | 07:07 PM
this is wonderful!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Posted by sarah little on April 30,2009 | 01:56 PM