Killer Whale Attacks on Yachts Spread to the North Sea

Killer Whale Attacks on Yachts Spread to the North Sea

Orcas opened another front in their war against yachts and their rudders this week when a sailing yacht making its way from England to Norway was rammed by killer whales in the North Sea.

The incident occurred near the Shetland Islands, nearly 3,219 km from the Strait of Gibraltar where the initial attacks occurred, the Guardian reports:

Dr Wim Rutten, a 72-year-old retired Dutch physicist and experienced yachtsperson, was sailing solo from Lerwick to Bergen in Norway. He was fishing for mackerel, with a single line off the back of the boat, when the orca suddenly appeared in the clear water, and hit the stern of the seven-ton boat.

“I said: ‘Shit!’” Rutten, who said he had heard about the “Portuguese accidents”, told the Guardian. The whale hit again and again, creating “soft shocks” through the aluminium hull.

“What I felt [was] most frightening was the very loud breathing of the animal,” he said. The orca stayed behind the boat “looking for the keel. Then he disappeared … but came back at fast speed, twice or thrice … and circled a bit.

“Maybe he just wanted to play. Or look me in the eyes. Or to get rid of the fishing line.”

This is the first report of an orca attack in these waters since orcas began interacting with boats around the Strait of Gibraltar off the coast of Spain and Morocco. There have been at least 20 attacks on yachts in the last month alone, with the marine mammals sinking three vessels.

Researchers believe the attacks may be coordinated by an older orca named Gladis who, it’s theorised, may have had a traumatising run-in with an illegal fishing vessel. Since then she’s taught the younger orcas in the pod how to disable such boats. It could also be hunting training, play, or even a “fad.” Orcas have highly developed social groups and fads have been known to spread like wildfire amongst various groups, like in 1987 when scientists noticed one Orca balancing a dead salmon on its head. This odd behaviour spread to other animals, according to Atlas Obscura.


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