Dead whale heads toward Rhode Island beach

Published: June 16, 2009 at 1:15 PM

LITTLE COMPTON, R.I., June 16 (UPI) -- Members of a Rhode Island beach association hope a dead humpback whale will wash up in time to be decently buried before the beach opens for the summer.

The whale has been drifting towards Briggs Beach in Little Compton for more than a week, the Providence Journal reported. Witnesses say the whale is 20 to 30 feet long and weighs between 2 and 3 tons.

A team from the Mystic Aquarium & Institute for Exploration is standing by, prepared to examine and measure the whale once it gets to the beach. Then the carcass may very well be buried right there.

Ted Wardell, a carpenter for the Briggs Beach Association, said the last time a whale stranded there efforts to drag it away proved fruitless. In the end, a hole was dug next to the carcass and it was rolled in.

In the meantime, the new carcass, rolling in the water beyond the surf line is attracting sightseers -- who move upwind to get away from the stink. The beach officially opens for the summer season Saturday.

"Better now than next week," said Jack Campbell, who has been a lifeguard at the beach for 37 years.

© 2009 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
Spain finishes 5-0 Davis Cup victory (27 min)
File-sharing on rise despite Swedish law (44 min)
Corvette stolen in 1970 returned
MIT students win military balloon hunt
Your Daily Horoscope
NBA: Los Angeles Clippers 88, Indiana 72
NHL: Phoenix 3, Ottawa 2
fark
Prison plans to cut costs in December by sending all prisoners home for Christmas, makes them promise...
Merry Christmas. Go fast
Cutest baby hedgehog EVAR
Sweden holds auction of thousands of rare vintage porn magazines, although auctioneers say buyers...
The number of paper holiday cards being mailed through old-fashioned snail mail is not only holding...
The next big economy-wrecking bust on the horizon? Yup, the garlic bubble has popped