"It's not the whale that smells, it's your politics". MC
A dead whale rotting near the Malibu homes of Barbra Streisand,
Bob Dylan and other celebrities is causing a gigantic cleanup problem as
authorities try to decide who’s responsible for getting rid of it.
MALIBU, Calif.
(AP) -- No government agency is taking action to remove the decaying
carcass of a whale on a California beach, making it appear the job will
be left to Mother Nature.
The corpse of the
huge fin whale created a spectacle on Friday as people wandered down the
narrow Malibu beach to look at the remains - white bones, rolls of
blubber and the tail flukes trailing along the water's edge.
The homes of movie stars, celebrities and others line the cliffs high above the slender beach.
Looking over the whale, Malibu resident Ben Dossett suggested there was now no need to try to remove it.
"You
look at the difference between what it was on Tuesday to what it is
today. I think they can just leave it and let nature take its course,"
he said.
The smell had largely faded away, but
still attached to the shoes of those who came near. Some people took
pictures, a boy poked the bones and dogs sniffed it.
"It's
really sad that this is my first time seeing a whale," said Ingrid De
La O, a Malibu resident. "It's mind-boggling to see this immense huge
thing that lives in the water."
The
40-foot-long, 40,000-pound juvenile male washed ashore Monday near Point
Dume, which marks the western end of Santa Monica Bay, about 30 miles
west of downtown Los Angeles.
"From the
evidence that we have so far, it appears that it was hit by a ship,"
said Jonsie Ross, marine mammal coordinator for the California Wildlife
Center.
James Respondek, a real estate agent
who lives in the area, worried that the carcass would draw sharks that
could pose a threat to his young daughter, who swims in the cove, and to
his favorite surfing spot down the beach. He said he was frustrated
that no agency would remove the carcass.
"There
seems to be no readiness to take responsibility, to take action, just a
lot of excuses. `I don't have a boat, I don't have the money, I don't
have the resources,' they all told me," he said.
Fin
whales are endangered, and about 2,300 live along the West Coast.
They're the second-largest species of whale after blue whales and can
grow up to 85 feet, weigh up to 80 tons and live to be 90 years old.
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