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Befriending Luna the Killer Whale

How a popular Smithsonian story about a stranded orca led to a new documentary about humanity’s link to wild animals

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  • By Kenneth R. Fletcher
  • Smithsonian.com, April 14, 2008, Subscribe
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Luna
Separated from his pod along the Pacific Coast, Luna befriended the people of remote Nootka Sound on the western shore of Canada’s Vancouver Island. (© Suzanne Chisholm, 2004-2005)

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Luna would often roll over on his side and look people in the eye in attempts to socialize.

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Saving Luna

Saving Luna

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  • Saving Luna

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  • Understanding Orca Culture
  • Luna: A Whale to Watch
  • Dispatch From Cannes
  • EcoCenter: Greener Living
  • Whale of a Tale

Michael Parfit's story "Whale of a Tale" (Smithsonian, November 2004) documented a phenomenon that was so rare and so touching it was publicized worldwide: a baby killer whale separated from its pod along the Pacific Coast befriended the people of remote Nootka Sound on the western shore of Canada's Vancouver Island. They called him Luna.

The article ended with the attempt by the Canadian government to capture Luna and reunite him with his pod—an effort dramatically blocked by members of a Native American tribe, who rowed out in traditional canoes to intercept the government boat.

For the next two years, Parfit and Suzanne Chisholm, a documentary moviemaker, continued to follow Luna and report on his astonishing impact on the community. The orca would live in the area for more than four years.

Chisholm's and Parfit's film, Saving Luna: The True Story of a Lone Orca, is showing at film festivals and other events around the world. See SavingLuna.com for venues and to learn more. This past March I spoke with Parfit and Chisholm, who are married, when they were in Washington D.C. to screen the movie at the Environmental Film Festival. (Yes, we know: orcas are not really whales but dolphins.)

What makes Luna unique?
Suzanne Chisholm: Killer whales are in some ways even more social than humans. They spend their entire lives together in family groups. At first, scientists didn't believe reports that there was this baby killer whale all by himself. Because they had never recorded an event like that before, they were very skeptical that he would survive. He was just about two years old, barely weaned.

Not only did he survive, but he started to thrive. One of the ways in which he compensated for the loss of his family was interaction with people. They became his family. It's not to say that we humans are a good replacement for whales. But he would do a lot of the things with boats or people that he would have done with other whales.

They are very tactile animals. In the wild they are always touching and bumping and swimming very close to each other. He would do that to boats, come up and rub alongside of them. He would come up to people and vocalize. He would roll over on his side and look people in the eye.

 


Michael Parfit's story "Whale of a Tale" (Smithsonian, November 2004) documented a phenomenon that was so rare and so touching it was publicized worldwide: a baby killer whale separated from its pod along the Pacific Coast befriended the people of remote Nootka Sound on the western shore of Canada's Vancouver Island. They called him Luna.

The article ended with the attempt by the Canadian government to capture Luna and reunite him with his pod—an effort dramatically blocked by members of a Native American tribe, who rowed out in traditional canoes to intercept the government boat.

For the next two years, Parfit and Suzanne Chisholm, a documentary moviemaker, continued to follow Luna and report on his astonishing impact on the community. The orca would live in the area for more than four years.

Chisholm's and Parfit's film, Saving Luna: The True Story of a Lone Orca, is showing at film festivals and other events around the world. See SavingLuna.com for venues and to learn more. This past March I spoke with Parfit and Chisholm, who are married, when they were in Washington D.C. to screen the movie at the Environmental Film Festival. (Yes, we know: orcas are not really whales but dolphins.)

What makes Luna unique?
Suzanne Chisholm: Killer whales are in some ways even more social than humans. They spend their entire lives together in family groups. At first, scientists didn't believe reports that there was this baby killer whale all by himself. Because they had never recorded an event like that before, they were very skeptical that he would survive. He was just about two years old, barely weaned.

Not only did he survive, but he started to thrive. One of the ways in which he compensated for the loss of his family was interaction with people. They became his family. It's not to say that we humans are a good replacement for whales. But he would do a lot of the things with boats or people that he would have done with other whales.

They are very tactile animals. In the wild they are always touching and bumping and swimming very close to each other. He would do that to boats, come up and rub alongside of them. He would come up to people and vocalize. He would roll over on his side and look people in the eye.

 

This was just for companionship?
Chisholm: When you think about our relationships with wild animals, whether it is a bear, a deer or even hummingbirds, they come to us for food. Cetaceans, the whales and the dolphins, are really the only animals that come to us strictly for companionship.

He was starting to interact a lot with boats, and people were worried for his safety. People figured he was quite lonely and would be best off with his family. He wouldn't leave Nootka Sound, so even though conceivably his family swam on the western coast of Vancouver Island, he was isolated. They communicate with underwater calls and whistles. If he had heard his family, he might have gone back to them.

How long did the process take from when you first got there to the end of the story?
Chisholm: We went up there in 2004 just as the government was trying to capture him. You know from the Smithsonian article that the First Nations interfered with the capture. We lived up there for another two and a half years, pretty much full time for the last year. We ended up getting quite involved in trying to change the outcome of the story, trying to help save Luna.

Was it inevitable that you would become part of the story?
Chisholm: I guess in hindsight you could say so. You have an innocent and intelligent creature who needed help from humans. There was a huge amount of conflict over what was the right thing to do for him. After this big event in which the natives came out and prevented the capture from happening, you can look at it as a victory for Luna. It was quite possible that he would have gone into an aquarium had the capture gone through.

The government didn't have a very clear plan. If he got back down to the area where his pod was and still played with boats, the government wasn't going to give him very much time before they said "Okay, that's it, you're going to be shipped off to an aquarium." Of course, Luna was worth huge amounts of money to these aquariums. He was obviously a very intelligent, healthy killer whale.

That's one of the reasons the Native American tribes opposed it.
Chisholm: The media coverage put a very strong emphasis on the First Nations' cultural connection to the whale. When their chief passed away he said he was coming back as a killer whale. The same week that he died, Luna showed up in Nootka Sound. The killer whale happens to be a very sacred creature in their culture. A lot of them believed the whale embodied the spirit of their chief.

From our point of view he was an animal who needed help. It felt strange to be there covering this story and not trying to help him. We weren't what you call activists, but we really wanted to get out the information that here was a physically healthy, obviously intelligent animal in difficult circumstances. Captivity is a horrible life for these animals. They swim 100 miles a day. For them to be in a small, confined area is not a good life for these animals.

What were you doing to increase awareness?
Chisholm: We spent a lot of time writing for the Web. We also spent a lot of time and our own money going out on a boat and talking to people on the water. There were a lot of people frustrated with the situation. Luna was very persistent in trying to get attention. He would sometimes push boats around. People were threatening to kill him.

He wasn't malicious. He was just playful. Sometimes he would break things. He damaged a septic system at a marina. He would damage rudders on sailboats. He would also break off little transducers and depth sounders on the bottom of boats. He started playing with float planes, which have very fine control rudders and stuff. It was quite scary. There is no question that his presence was a problem for humans. That's something that we humans have to figure out. As we expand our territories, it's inevitable that there are going to be conflicts with wild animals. We should have done more to accommodate his presence.

Both of you developed a strong relationship with the whale.
Chisholm: We had never thought that it would be possible to have that kind of relationship with a wild animal. When Luna did come to us humans, he was asking for something, and I know it wasn't food. To have a wild animal come to you for social contact is really quite an amazing thing. He would flap his flippers, or turn over and look you in the eye. There was so much about him that we didn't know. Clearly he was trying to communicate. He would mimic sounds. If somebody would whistle he would whistle back in the same pitch. He also imitated sounds of chainsaws.

One of the things that struck us was he was extremely gentle. Never once were we scared for our own safety. There is no history of killer whales ever attacking humans in the wild.

Did he get to be full grown?
Chisholm: No, he was about 18 feet long. The males grow to be about 30 feet long. The big concern was that there would be an accident. The bigger he got, the stronger he would become. They are big animals with very big teeth, and he looks a little bit scary if you don't know any better.

How did he die?
Chisholm: He was six when he was killed . He was swimming behind a large tugboat. These tugs are massive, they've got propellers several meters long. The tug captain put the vessel into reverse and Luna was sucked into the propeller.

It sounds as if that was also kind of inevitable.
Chisholm: Well, I don't think so. The government was really not willing to try anything. After the failed capture event they threw up their hands and said "We don't know what to do here."

The program we were trying to get in place was one where he had a safe boat to come to for interaction. The idea was he needed social contact with somebody. If you have a safe boat, with trained professionals, designed by scientists and people who knew Luna's behavior, then he would get his interaction in a safe and consistent manner. We know that he needs his contact. If you could give him interaction in a safe way, he wouldn't be a danger.

The second part of our idea would be to lead him outside of Nootka Sound. If you could lead him out of Nootka Sound on a repeated basis it would expand his territory and give him the option that in the event his pod did pass by that he could make the decision whether to go with them or not. Hopefully he would have.

There was reluctance on the part of a lot of people to give him interaction because they thought it might spoil his chances of becoming a wild whale again. We argued that you've got to do something, because he was on a collision course.

 

Did you have qualms about becoming involved?
Chisholm: We agonized huge amounts over it. As journalists and filmmakers we hadn't really done that. It seemed like the most natural thing to do, because we thought that we were in a position to help him. It's one of those things we wouldn't have predicted when we got this assignment from Smithsonian to do this article. Who would have ever known that we would have spent so many years of our lives covering this? It's coming up on four years now.

What response has the film gotten from people?
Chisholm: In December we went to a film festival in China. It was very interesting because you don't assume that every culture has a fascination for whales and dolphins. But when we showed this film in China we had an incredible response. People were crying. The affection and respect that we had for Luna is a universal story.

Michael Parfit: People all over have responded to it. We tried to make it a universal story and not focus on the politics.

What makes him such a great story?
Parfit: To have a large, dynamic wild animal come up to you and need your attention, your affection, is just stunning. These sorts of things happen in fables. We have all these stories that we've heard as children about human beings making contact with one animal or another, but it really doesn't happen. Wild animals come to us when they are hungry or starving or they have dropped out of their nest and they need food. Sometimes we buy their friendship with food. This little whale didn't need that. He didn't need anything except what we call friendship. It breaks through all of these preconceived walls we have between ourselves and wild animals.

We think of these animals as not having anything related to our emotions. Here's an animal that needs a social life as much as life itself. He wound up dying because he needed this contact. All of a sudden we can recognize that in ourselves. We know we need one another. Now we are recognizing this need in this whale. He doesn't look like us. He doesn't come from the same environment. He's practically from another planet.

What are the broader lessons?
Parfit: Needing one another in order to survive is not unique to humans. Because Luna experienced something that is similar to what we experience, it kind of shuffled our perception of the world. We can't take ourselves out of the picture. With Luna, we had to figure out how to relate to him in a way that would not hurt him. With him we did not learn how to do that. He wound up being killed just because he was being friendly. It's appalling to think that an animal would have to die because he wants to be friends with us. That is kind of what our relation to the whole planet is.

Chisholm: We have to open up our minds and look at the signs and seek more understanding of these creatures, whether it's killer whales or a tree frog or changing climate. We all need to do better.


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Comments (7)

It sounds to me that the whale was pushed out of the pod for being precocious.

This is common activity in wolves, lions, elephants and quite a number of pack animals.

I imagine had the locals accepted his company on the terms of keeping him in safety as some tried to do but not with a cohesive policy, things might have improved.

In the wild ostracised animals tend to find each other and form their own group until they are ready to join up with a herd or pack needing a new male.

It was a phenomenal opportunity, giant FAIL.
Men with guns rule KO.

Posted by Weatherlawyer on March 2,2010 | 07:00 AM

Me and my partner watched the story of Luna the other night.
It has left both of us upset by his death. I cannot believe that people wished this beautiful whale to die just because he was lonely and needed some kindness and
friendship. They have as much right to be here as us -
I am still affected by the documentary and wished something could of been done to save him. I too hope it was an accident.

Posted by Paula Langdon-White on February 26,2010 | 10:08 AM

I watched the program on the luna last night for the first time...i was really touched by this Killer whale.. i would have loved to have met him for myself so today i read up on him. Im so glad to know that there are so many amazing people out there that would help a wild animal! but i also cant believe the man in the movies who was happy that he died how can people really admit that on tv he should be spat on!
thanks for all your great information my heart goes out to luna and all the people that were his friend I too would have loved to be his friend

Posted by Myshele Nutbrown on April 6,2009 | 04:13 PM

This story just confirms something that I believe -- that the higher animals have emotions like humans. I think it is incredibly sad that people wanted to kill Luna, and that he was killed by the tug boat. Did the captain know Luna was around? I truly hope it was an accident. These animals are so intelligent, killing them for no reason is wrong. If this happens again in the future, I hope something different is done.

Posted by Naomi Smith on April 24,2008 | 09:03 PM

My sons had interaction with Luna some years ago when they were fishing in the area. Luna came up to their boat to communicate with them. My sons have pictures with Luna - they loved this whale. They said it was an extraordinary experience.

Posted by Linda Dalton on April 24,2008 | 02:54 PM

This is reminiscent of Keko (not sure of the spelling of his name) the killer whale saved from the cramped swimming pool and taken to Iceland. Got attached to his keepers. When they released him he swam to Norway trying to find human friends and died of pneumonia.

Posted by Beth Lee on April 22,2008 | 12:49 AM

I saw the documentary here in Vancouver just recently and the directors were in attendance at the show. They had some interesting information to share with the audience about how it affected their lives. It was a powerful and wonderful film. Highly recommmended.

Posted by Linda Bull on April 22,2008 | 09:25 PM

I think that wildlife specialists, film crews, biologists should interfer with Nature and in this case should have taken action to get Luna back to his pod. He would have had a better chance at living a full life. As a species, humans have encroached on territory once inhabited by wildlife. We have CHANGED the world once known by these creatures. They have many of the same needs as we do (as this documentary) exemplifies. I've seen the non-intervention policy by documentary specialists on the various televisioon channels and because many of these animals are endangered by we overpopulating "mammals" we own them. The balance of Mother Earth's "respiratory" system has changed at an ever increasing rate. I see this by the fact that an ever increasing rate of "human" are sick with respiratory, arthritic, cancer and other chronic and terminal diseases. We need to create space and actively seek to maintain their existence. I often wonder what ever happened to the animals that once lived in what is now acres and acres of housing communities we have built. So, too are we invading the oceans (coastlines) and creating havoc with the many animals that live and pass. "Saving Luna" is an intimate film of the war between man and other of nature's creatures.

Posted by Nora.Norris on April 22,2008 | 08:47 PM

Wonderful story. I am interested in learning more about the killer whale dolphin connection since the US Navy has trained dolphins could dolphins also be trained? And off shore I have had dolphins chase my sailboat, head straight for it and then swim under and come up on the other side. I assume they were playing.

Posted by Don Dackins on April 22,2008 | 07:47 PM



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