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Reuters Whale Watchers Flock to Delaware River to See Whale

Date: 15-Apr-05
Country: USA
Author: Jon Hurdle

The whale has been patrolling a stretch of the river between New Jersey and Pennsylvania since it was first spotted near the New Jersey capital of Trenton.

Wildlife experts say the whale is probably feeding on shad and herring and appears to be in good health despite being in unfamiliar, fresh water.

People anxious to see the whale gathered at access points on both sides of the river, some 70 miles (110 km) from the Atlantic Ocean.

A riverside parking lot at a scenic overlook near Bordentown was overflowing with vehicles as about 60 people waited for a sighting of the creature late on Thursday.

"We're determined to see the whale," said Erica Millemann of Bordentown, who was waiting with her husband Keith and their 4-year-old son Bailey.

"This is not where he belongs so it's a really cool thing to see," said Keith Millemann.

Teri Frady, a spokeswoman for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration of Woods Hole, Massachusetts, which is helping to monitor the whale, said the whale is a male measuring about 12 feet (3.7 metres) and aged between 25 and 35 years.

Some belugas are known to be solitary and so while the sighting is rare it's not unknown for some of the whales to stray far from their normal Canadian ranges, Frady said.

This is the first record of a beluga on the Delaware, Frady said.

The last whale of any kind to be seen on the Delaware was the much larger right whale seen at Pennsauken, New Jersey, in 1995.

Frady said the authorities would try to avoid coaxing the whale back to the ocean, and hope that it makes its own way back when its food runs out or the water gets too warm.

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