Showing posts with label Killer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Killer. Show all posts

Friday, 24 June 2011

Run of Killer Whales Coming Soon to Central Oregon Coast

Covering 180 miles of Oregon coast travel: Astoria, Seaside, Cannon Beach, Manzanita, Nehalem, Wheeler, Rockaway, Garibaldi, Tillamook, Oceanside, Pacific City, Lincoln City, Depoe Bay, Newport, Waldport, Yachats & Florence.

03/26/08

Run of Killer Whales Coming Soon to Central Oregon Coast

Killer whales off Florence's cliffs (photo Tiffany Boothe, Seaside Aquarium) (Depoe Bay, Oregon) - It’s been happening for years on the Oregon coast, and yet it still remains a bit of a seasonal secret.

Each year, around April 15 or so, killer whales approach the area and patrol the central coast waters, looking for baby gray whales and maybe a few sea lions or seals to munch on. They are rarely seen in these waters, except at this time of year. And when it does happen, it’s in the Depoe Bay and Newport areas, but it’s often seen from Cascade Head all the way down to Florence.

The killer whales are what are known as “transient” whales, meaning officials don’t know where they come from. They’re also more predatory, living off seals and baby gray whales.

Photo Tiffany Boothe, Seaside AquariumMorris Grover, with the Whale Watch Center in Depoe Bay, says these are smaller and more shark-like in appearance than what are nicknamed the “friendly” whales, which visit here from the San Juan Islands and live on salmon.

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“We see them in our waters every spring, usually arriving about April 15,” Grover said. “But some have already been spotted during the previous whale watch week. They are here to intercept the baby gray whales, as that is the time they usually arrive along the coast. They are usually here for a few weeks.”

In 2006, the killer whales lingered until the middle of July.

“That is a very long time for them, but it was obviously supported by local food for them,” Grover said. “We watched a pod of five around Depoe Bay and actually filmed them taking what we believed to be a seal in the south end of the bay. Seals and sea lions are fast in the water and orcas have to burn up a lot of energy to catch them. After all that work, only one seal will feed one orca. When they kill a baby gray whale, the whole pod can eat for a week.”

Sea lions lounging without fear near Orcas cruising around (photo Tiffany Boothe, Seaside Aquarium) Grover said they sometimes can be seen coming into Yaquina Bay in Newport when they can’t find baby whales, attracted by the proliferation of seals and sea lions in the bay. Some years, they have also been known to linger at the edges of the bay’s jetties. One sighting in recent years was of a killer whale chasing a seal all the way through Yaquina Bay, almost as far east as Toledo.

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“It’s all food related,” Grover said. “They come up here all the time. Basically, they will take the easiest prey.”

Grover said they are sometimes seen apparently “playing” with their food by tossing it back and forth, or slapping it with their tails. This unique behavior has to do with teaching their young how to hunt.

To catch sight of these killer whales, just like spotting any whale, Grover suggests patience, and head to a high vantage point. The Newport area has many of these, such as the lighthouse at Yaquina Bay, the Yaquina Head area, Don Davis Memorial Park in Nye Beach, and nearby at Cape Foulweather. The headquarters for the Whale Watch Spoken Here program is in Depoe Bay, at the seawall, and another good spot for seeing them as well.

Cape Foulweather, a favorite whale watching spotOne theory about why the killer whales have been more frequent in these waters in recent decades is that the sardine population has recently begun to recover from over fishing in the 30’s.

Grover said sardines come up through this region in what are nicknamed “bait balls,” where their numbers are so condensed they form a wall of fish, partially out of an instinct to protect their young. Staff at the Whale Watch Center in Depoe Bay can see them at times: they appear as a large, dark mass in the ocean.

Orcas here have been seen swimming around them with great frequency, forcing them to coalesce together even closer. Then, the whales will simply start to swim through them with their mouths open, sucking down this wall of fish in a kind of underwater all-you-can-eat buffet.

Gray whale and its tail on the central coast (photo Whale Watch Center) Grover emphasized that even once the Whale Watch Week is over – which is happening now until March 29 - there are still gray whales aplenty to be spotted, along with the coveted killer whale sightings. Gray whales are still migrating through here in great numbers until June. Then, the “summer” whales begin to show up, which tend to loiter on the central coast in large numbers for the summer before migrating again, because of the abundant food supply here. These really put on a show by coming quite close to shore.

“If you sit there for only five minutes and you spot a whale, then you’ve won the lottery,” Grover said. “It’s not likely. If you sit there for a half hour, it’s possible you’ll see one. If you sit for an hour, you’ll probably see one.”

In late May of 2006, Tiffany Boothe of the Seaside Aquarium photographed a pod of killer whales near the Sea Lion Caves. That event was a few days after a much publicized sighting of the same pod by staff at Sea Lion Caves.

Yaquina Bay: every once in a while the Orcas wander into the bay at Newport.What staff there noted was that the orcas were swimming around the sea lions, but they weren’t disturbed by the presence of their usual predators. Grover thinks this was because either the whales were full and were not interested in the swimming sea lions, or they were trying to fool them into complacency so they could make a meal of them later on.

Boothe also noted the sea lions didn’t seem to be scared by the killer whales swimming around them.

For more information on whale watching, contact the Whale Watch Center at (541) 765-3407.



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Thursday, 17 February 2011

Killer who hid bodies in hollowed-out tree details crime in chilling confession

Matthew Hoffman confers with his attorney during his arraignment in the Knox County Court of Common Pleas in January. Matthew Hoffman confers with his attorney during his arraignment in the Knox County Court of Common Pleas in January.

He claimed he wasn't looking to hurt anyone.

Yet Matthew Hoffman's planned burglary in November quickly became a twisted nightmare, during which the Ohio man killed two women and an 11-year-old boy, then hid their bodies in a hollowed-out tree.

The sicko also kidnapped a 13-year-old girl and sexually assaulted her for several days in his leaf-lined basement.

The details of the crime, for which Hoffman is spending the rest of his life in jail, emerged with the release of his lengthy confession on Monday. Excerpts were published in the Columbus Dispatch the next day.

"I did not enter the house to kill those people," he wrote in a four-page confession offered days after the crime to avoid the death penalty. "I did not know a single one of them."

The 30-year-old's brutal crime began shortly before midnight on Nov. 9, 2010. He walked to the home of Tina Herrmann, who lived there with her two young children.

"I slept across the street from the house that night in a sleeping bag," Hoffman said in the confession. "I woke up at daylight."

The two vehicles that had been parked outside the house the night before were gone, so he slipped in through the garage door, which was ajar.


Victims (l. to r.) Tina Herrman, 32, Kody Maynard, 11, and Stephanie Sprang, 41. (WBNS-10TV)

"There was a certain amount of excitement in being in someone else's home without them being there," he said. "I was looking for anything of value that could be carried out easily."

After about an hour, Hoffman said, he found nothing worth stealing, and was about to leave when Herrmann returned home. He hid in a bedroom, and claimed to be unable to escape without jumping out a window.

Armed with a blackjack and a knife, which he had brought "for a certain amount of intimidation," he confronted Herrmann.

The two fought. Hoffmann knocked the 32-year-old woman to the bed, facedown.

"I hit her a couple of times in the head [with the blackjack], but this would not knock her out," he said. "It was not doing the job, and I started panicking."

That is when he claimed Herrmann's friend Stephanie Sprang arrived.

"I have no idea when she got there, what she was doing there, and how she gained access," Hoffman said. "The other woman yelled at me, there were now two to deal with, and I did not know what to do."

The ex-con grabbed his knife and "stabbed the woman on the bed, through her back, twice."

Sprang ran into another room. Hoffman found her and stabbed the 41-year-old several times in the chest. He went back to Herrmann and stabbed her several more times.


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