Click on the words “Orca at California Academy” above to read this post and see a related header image.
In Nov. of 2011 a rare offshore orca washed ashore dead on a remote beach of Point Reyes. Read about that event here.
Today I stopped by the CAS In San Francisco to see the progress on assembly of the skeleton of this extraordinary creature.
The last image shows one of the flippers. I packed both of those out in two trips. Each one weighed over 70 pounds when covered with flesh. It is incredible to see the inside.
What an amazing job these folks have done.
See for yourself. The first 4 are from a few weeks ago, the rest are from today.
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After visiting the orca, I stopped by the Marie Mammal Center to preview a new art installation by my friends Richard and Judith.
They made an amazing piece from a large trawler net I packed off the beach near Slide Ranch last year. It was wet when I packed it out and weighed over 100 pounds.
Click on the title of this post to read it and see a related header image.
NOTE2: Go to this post to see images of the skeleton being assembled at The Academy of Science.
NOTE: Hello orca enthusiast. You’ve found my images, take a moment to leave a comment at the bottom of this page. Tell me how you got here, what your interest in orcas is. This orca skeleton is being assembled at the California Academy of Science for the next few weeks. Go here to learn more.
I packed out both pectoral fins as well as four vertebrae.
Here are images from the removal of O319 from the beach.
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An 18 foot long, juvenile male orca washed ashore on a remote beach at Point Reyes just before thanksgiving 2011. This animal belongs to one of three ecotypes, the offshore group. It was last seen off Vancouver in September. The other ecotypes are resident and transient. These names are derived based on what the animals do during the summer months.
A full necropsy was performed. Blood was found in the blowhole and there was other evidence of trauma to the head. This may have been the result of being struck by a ship, or during interactions with other whales. No determination on cause of death has been made.
Little is known about offshore orcas. This may be only the second specimen of this type to be collected, most animals die offshore and sink.
Orcas are actually members of the dolphin family, the largest member. Males can grow to over 30 feet long, though are usually 20-26 feet in length. This is the first killer whale known to wash ashore at Point Reyes in many decades.
Offshore orcas mainly feed on sharks. Sharks have very tough skin and that is likely why the teeth of this animal are very degraded. Resident animals mainly feed on salmon, transients prefer marine mammals, such as seals.