After weeks of strandings in the Wismarbucht area of the Baltic Sea and a dramatic barge transport, humpback whale Timmy (aka Hope) has been sighted swimming freely in the North Sea. The release caps an saga that gripped the public amid intense media coverage and controversy.
Continuing its odyssey first reported in the Wismarbucht strandings, the humpback whale—nicknamed Timmy by media—underwent a privately funded rescue after public outcry reversed initial plans to abandon it. Following multiple groundings, including the last off Poel Island, the whale was loaded onto a barge on April 28 and towed to deeper North Sea waters.
On Saturday morning, May 2, it was observed blowing a spout and diving, signaling a successful release. Researcher Stephanie Gross had earlier noted the animal's stress during strandings near Timmendorfer Strand: »The whale, for him this is naturally a stress situation.«
The operation drew global reporters, livestreams for tens of thousands, and on-site visits from Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Environment Minister Till Backhaus, who said: »I have looked into the whale's eye.« Supporters like Susanne Somma mobilized: »We wrote thousands of emails.« However, experts faced online harassment. Whether Timmy reunites with a pod remains open.