April 12, 2001 - The Province Newspaper
Vancouver, BC Canada
by Lora Grindlay, Staff Reporter
BYE BYE BJOSSA It's your last call to visit Bjossa (she's leaving
April 21)
Only nine days remain to bid farewell to Bjossa, the killer whale that
has lived at the Vancouver Aquarium for 21 years. Bjossa will be flown to
SeaWorld San Diego on April 21. The aquarium has fielded dozens of call
from people wishing her bon voyage. Cards and letter have been flooding
in. One child wrote: "Dear Bjossa, I love you and hope you live a
long and happy life. I am going to miss you a lot. Love, your best friend,
Thalia." Jessica sent pencil drawings of Bjossa and wrote: "To
Bjossa, You are my most favourite animal in the world. I love you." A
woman sent a long message that says, in part: "Give Bjossa a hug for
me. She made us feel special." Aquarium staff are preparing
themselves for a teary farewell. Bjossa's head trainer, Brian Sheehan, who
will travel to San Diego with Bjossa, said: "It's going to be a big
hole in my life when she is out of it. It's saying goodbye to a special
friend." Aquarium executive director John Nightingale said: "I
don't think anyone in the building won't miss her. I've heard so many
stories from parents about their kids and Bjossa." The aquarium
announced an end to its killer whale display last year after an
unsuccessful search for a companion for Bjossa. The 23-year-old whale has
been the lone killer whale in Vancouver since the death of Finna in 1997.
Bjossa was captured in Iceland and brought to Vancouver with Finna in
1980. The operation to move the 2,500-kilogram whale began last spring
with Sea World applying for an import permit through the US National
Marine Fisheries Service. The permit was issued last month and allows
Bjossa to be moved any time before next March 31. SeaWorld has reserved a
Hercules cargo plane for the trip. A crane will be used to lift Bjossa
from her pool and into a SeaWorld-designed transport crate. Once in the
water-filled crate, Bjossa will be trucked to the airport. The move will
take about eight hours, from the moment she is lifted from her Vancouver
pool to her release at SeaWorld. Clint Wright, the Vancouver Aquarium's
vice-president of operations, said although plans are in place the move
could be postponed at the last minute. "If for any reason Bjossa is
not fit to travel then she won't go." Wright said, "if there's
any problems with the equipment, we won't be able to move her."
Bjossa, who currently has the medical clearance to travel, will be
re-evaluated by the aquarium's Dr. Dave Huff and a SeaWorld veterinarian
the day before the move. For any reason that she's not fit to travel they
could pull the plug at that point," Wright said. Bjossa has been
given to SeaWorld and it will pay for the move which could cost $200,000
US. Bjossa will join eight whales in San Diego. Meanwhile, the aquarium is
to meet privately today with the Vancouver Parks Board to discuss plans
for redeveloping the whale habitat. Park commissioners will be shown
artist drawings of the renovated area that will focus on the wild West
Coast. Annelise Sorg, of the Coalition for No Whales In Captivity, said
the meeting should be open to the public. "That is public
business," Sorg said. "There should be public
accountability." A clause preventing the aquarium from bringing in
whales or dolphins from the wild is written into its lease with the board.
But under the lease the aquarium can bring in cetaceans - whales and
dolphins - caught from the wild before Sept. 16, 1996, or that were born
in captivity.
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