Friendly Star Trek Discussions Sat Nov 23, 2024 6:17 am  
  SearchSearch   FAQFAQ   Log inLog in   
Keiko
View: previous topic :: next topic

stv-archives.com Forum Index -> World News This topic is locked: you cannot edit posts or make replies.   This forum is locked: you cannot post, reply to, or edit topics.
Author Message
Melodramatic
Rear Admiral


Joined: 04 Feb 2003
Posts: 4577

PostThu Jan 01, 2004 5:35 pm    Keiko

Quote:
The whale, who was 27, died Friday afternoon after the sudden onset of pneumonia in the Taknes fjord. He was old for an orca in captivity, though wild orca live an average of 35 years.
David Phillips, executive director of the San Francisco-based Free Willy-Keiko Foundation, said Keiko had been in good health but started showed signs of lethargy and loss of appetite on Thursday.
��This is a long sad day for us,�� Phillips said.
One of his handlers, Dale Richards, also said Keiko died quickly. ��We checked his respiration rate and it was a little irregular ... he wasn��t doing too well,�� Richards told The Associated Press. ��Early in the evening, he passed away.��
In captivity since 1979
Keiko �� which means ��Lucky One�� in Japanese �� was captured in Iceland in 1979 and sold to the marine park industry.
Starting in 1993, the six-ton, 35-foot-long mammal starred in three ��Free Willy�� movies, a heartwarming box-office franchise from Warner Brothers in which sympathetic humans help set a long-captive killer whale free.
The drive for the real-life reintroduction of the movies�� star started after he was found ailing in a Mexico City aquarium. The project �� to reintegrate Keiko with a pod of wild killer whales �� cost more than $20 million and stirred interest and ire worldwide.
Keiko was rehabilitated at the Oregon Coast Aquarium, then airlifted to Iceland in 1998. His handlers there prepared him for the wild, teaching him to catch live fish in an operation that cost about $500,000 a month. That amount recently paid for a year of care, Phillips said.

Keiko was released from Iceland in July 2002, but he swam straight for Norway on a 870-mile trek that seemed to be a search for human companionship.
He first turned up near the village of Halsa in late August or early September of 2002. There, he allowed fans to pet and play with him, even crawl on his back, becoming such an attraction that animal protection authorities imposed a ban on approaching him.
A quick death
Keiko lived in Taknes Bay, a clear, calm pocket of coastal water deep enough that it doesn��t freeze in winter. Keepers fed him there, but he was free to roam and did, often at night. He was equipped with a VHF tracking device that let his four handlers pinpoint his location provided he stayed within a range of about five miles.
Keiko��s keepers said the whale seemed to adapt to living in the wild despite so many years in captivity, learning to slap his tail and do jumps called side breaches that are typically done to stun fish.
To keep Keiko in shape, his caretakers took him on ��walks,�� leading him around the fjords from a small boat at least three times a week.
Nick Braden, a spokesman of the Humane Society of the United States, said veterinarians gave Keiko antibiotics after he showed signs of lethargy Thursday, but it wasn��t apparent how sick he was.
��They really do die quickly and there was nothing we could do. ... It��s a really sad moment for us, but we do believe we gave him a chance to be in the wild,�� Braden said.


This is what some of you probally heart about Keiko.

R.I.P
Keiko

You'll be missed.


View user's profile Send private message MSN Messenger 
Reply with quote Back to top
Paul Marshall
Rear Admiral


Joined: 30 Aug 2002
Posts: 2976
Location: Winston-Salem, North Carolina

PostFri Jan 16, 2004 9:30 am    



View user's profile Send private message AIM Address  
Reply with quote Back to top
Angel_of_Music
Freshman Cadet


Joined: 30 Jan 2004
Posts: 8
Location: Three Minutes from Nowhere

PostSun Feb 01, 2004 2:52 am    

Sigh. I visited him once while I was at the coast (when he was still in Oregon). If they'd just left him here, he'd still be alive.



View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail Visit poster's website MSN Messenger 
Reply with quote Back to top
Mulder
Rear Admiral


Joined: 27 Dec 2001
Posts: 2520
Location: Netherlands

PostSun Feb 01, 2004 2:42 pm    

This happened a few months ago actually, but still it's

View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail Visit poster's website Yahoo Messenger MSN Messenger 
Reply with quote Back to top
Display posts from previous:   
This topic is locked: you cannot edit posts or make replies.   This forum is locked: you cannot post, reply to, or edit topics.



Jump to:  
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum
Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2002 phpBB Group
Star Trek �, in all its various forms, are trademarks & copyrights of Paramount Pictures
This site has no official connection with Star Trek or Paramount Pictures
Site content/Site design elements owned by Morphy and is meant to only be an archive/Tribute to STV.com