In a recent email discussion with a local whale expert I gathered the following:
The person who was onboard HSF and reported the whale strike to NMFS yesterday has lived his whole life on Maui, knows the ocean and feels that his observation of a whale strike is being dismissed and covered up.
He reportedly said
“I know a collision. That was a strike. That was no wave. The entire boat shook underneath where I was sitting. They hit a whale. This was no calm maneuver. The boat slammed into a whale and came to stop. This is a cover up. They are covering this up. Other passengers around me felt the same impact. Other people in other parts of the boat did not."Apparently divers were ready to survey the hull yesterday but were told to stand down due to lack of ‘credible evidence’.
Individuals who have spoken with the passenger (who reported the strike) all agree he is credible, sincere and concerned.
It is possible the HSF veered to miss a whale and the action of a hard turn resulted in a wave slapping between the hulls creating an impact sound/vibration that the passenger interpreted as a whale strike.
Then again, the average pod size in HI is about 2.2, so if they ‘missed’ the one they saw, what about the other one or two they didn’t? The concern here about reducing strikes, but really about the result when HSF strikes whales. This should be a wake-up call to HSF to abandon the ‘summer route’ and slow down.
Experts are now collectively wondering: “will HSF even know if it hits a whale?” At 355 in length, the aft portion is some 200 feet from the wheelhouse. The vessel can strike a whale anywhere on its length. A direct strike with the bow or keel is no different than a ‘glancing blow’ from the ship’s side. A strike is a strike. But in the latter case, it may never be felt in those roiling seas. Ditto for a direct strike. No one knows. And no one has an answer. In part, this is what the IT Permit will determine — probability of strikes and number of takes (strikes, kills) before the operation is suspended.
One whale expert is willing to withhold judgment on whether there is a cover up in progress, but there is at least one passenger on yesterday’s trip that claims that a whale strike is being covered up.