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In early March of 2020 two Common Dolphins were observed swimming around in Hither Creek in Madaket. They were monitored for a couple of days and determined to be unable to leave due to shallow water, twisting and turning currents and likely weakness of one of the pair. Photographs revealed one being much thinner than the other and it is likely the healthy dolphin did not want to leave the sick one.
MMAN’s Stranding Coordinator at the time, Scott Leonard, contacted Misty Niemeyer, Stranding Coordinator for Marine Mammal Rescue and Research at IFAW over on Cape Cod. Misty and Field Biologist Michaele Wellman deployed to Nantucket the next day with stretcher, transport tent, medical and data capture supplies as well as dry suits for our team. Several of us had completed a cetacean stranding workshop just a few months prior at IFAW, so it was exciting to be able to put that education to use and help a live animal. Sadly, the weak dolphin was nowhere to be found, presumed dead and sunk, but the healthy one was still stranded in the Creeks area and needed assistance. MMAN Team members Scott Leonard, Hugh Lloyd-Thomas, Rain Harbison, Dan Simonds, Pam Murphy, DVM Steve St. Pierre and Captain Blair Perkins all responded.
Our options were to try to guide the dolphin out – an option quickly dismissed by veteran boat captain Blair Perkins, as the way out was long, twisty and presented too many occasions for the animal to beach. Instead, we chose to guide the animal to shallow water where team members could gently capture it. Using the boat, two kayaks and a device called a hookie lao (a long rope with smaller ropes hanging from it with small balls which would reflect the dolphins sonar to indicate a solid wall and no way out). Under Misty’s guidance, the animal was corralled and team member Dan Simonds leapt from the boat to make the capture. Securing the animal, we then maneuvered him onto a dolphin stretcher and brought him ashore for assessment. Vitals were monitored while blood samples were taken and a satellite tag placed on his dorsal fin. It was determined this dolphin was healthy enough to be transported to another section of the island where he could be released without risk of returning to shallow water. Secured in a three sided, fully padded tent made just for dolphin transport, he was loaded into Dr. Steve St. Pierre’s pick-up truck and driven to the Atlantic Ocean at Hoicks Hollow. Team members carefully walked the stretcher down to the water and, secured with safety ropes and throw bags, walked the tent into the water where the animal was released. At first he appeared to head right back toward shore, but after a few twists and turns headed out to the great Atlantic. All present were overjoyed and waited anxiously for news each evening of where Ping, named for the anticipated ping of his sat tracker, would be next. We were able to “watch” him head to known dolphin feeding areas so we felt confident he had found a pod to commune with. It was a wonderful, exhausting, uplifting 8 hour day for all involved. We couldn’t have done it without the expertise and quick response of SC Misty Niemeyer and her team from IFAW.
P.O. Box 3625
Nantucket, MA 02584
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