You're Wrong About - Keiko Part 3 with Brianna Bowman

Episode Date: February 17, 2026

Would you ride on the back of a random orca at the beach? For the final part of this series on Free Willy star Keiko, deep sea correspondent Brianna Bowman tells Sarah about his rewilding and return t...o the open ocean -- something that up until that point had never been done before. Digressions include introducing adult cats to each other, Fyre Fest, and the 27 club.Produced + edited by Miranda ZicklerMore Magpie Cinema ClubMore Brianna Bowman:Brianna's WebsiteSupport Brianna's new podcast Rewilding Keiko on Patreon Submit a voicemail with your memories of Keiko at rewildingpodcast@outlook.com (Brianna's Note: yes, Outlook! I’m a weirdo)Linkedin (Brianna's Note: yes I am a double weirdo)@rewildingkeiko on InstagramBuy her a coffee!Watch Kampen Om KeikoMore You're Wrong About:linktr.ee/ywapodBonus Episodes on PatreonBuy cute merchYWA on InstagramSupport the show

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Starting point is 00:00:00 It's a hell of a day at sea to quote the movie overboard. Welcome to your wrong about. This is the grand finale of our Keko trilogy with Brianna Bowman. And we cannot wait to share it with you. We have a bonus episode out now about Ishtar, the worst movie ever made, or is it with Paul Shear and Amy Nicholson of the Unspooled Podcast. And that's about it. Let's go hang out with that whale.
Starting point is 00:00:37 So Kako's the dancing queen. Yep, he really is. They were working on his physical health on, you know, improving his stamina because, as I've mentioned, a few times, wild whales swim, tens, if not hundreds of miles a day. So they need, he needed to work on that. Oh, right. And he doesn't know how to do that. Yeah, he's never done that. Oh, no. Except when he was like two, but yeah, he hasn't done that. So he's got to, yeah, he's got to work on his health.
Starting point is 00:01:09 I mean, it's like you taking me. who like is you know within like a 12 foot radius of my couch most days and be like Sarah you're going to walk the Pacific Crest Trail and then you're just going to keep doing it for the rest of your life because that's what you do yep yeah that's a that's a very good analogy yeah he's been in a tank since he was two years old he hasn't gone further than really a few feet for his whole life and so this is it is quite a big undertaking to improve his his physical stamina at this point. So they were working on that. And again, apparently basically unprecedented, you know, because like you've been researching this for years. If there was some,
Starting point is 00:01:49 like, major obvious precedent, you would know about it. And I really think. Yeah, I would, I would think I would know. I'm sure there's things that, like, kind of apply. But like, yeah, this thing of like, it feels like can it be done the way we're envisioning it is like a very major question this whole time. Yes, absolutely. And then the other big thing, and this started in Oregon was training Keko to eat live fish. Both, well, Kenneth Brower, you know, he's an author. He wasn't directly involved with a project, but he would dip in and out and met Kiko in person a few times and saw how the project was going. And even he said in his- I'm sorry, the phrasing is just so great because it's like, I don't know, it makes me think
Starting point is 00:02:29 about other celebrity memoirs. And it's like, yes, they had three meetings at the Beverly Hills Hotel. Like it's like Nancy Reagan or something. Yeah. Yeah. I like the idea of Kenneth Brower sitting by the side of Keiko's tank and like holding up a microphone. Yes, exactly. Oh. But he even he said like when he went to Oregon Coast Aquarium and supposedly Keiko was kind of eating live fish then Brower said he wasn't too impressed with what he saw. And it was mostly that Keiko wouldn't eat a really vibrant alive thing.
Starting point is 00:03:10 fish. They would usually have to stun it first. He would eat a fish that had been really depressed for a long time. Yeah. You know, that was like moving a lot slower and yeah, had been like kind of smacked on the head or something. And so yeah, I think he would kind of like mouth them. Like he wouldn't really eat them. But then sometimes he would and people would be like, oh my gosh, he's eating live fish. But it wasn't very convincing to a few people. Or just like maybe not. not super consistent behavior. Like, he could. It's like, I could eat a bell pepper maybe on a whim one day, but like, I hate them.
Starting point is 00:03:48 I'm not going to start eating them all the time. Yeah. And if something was like dependent on you eating a bell pepper. Right. If everyone was staring at me and they were clearly going to be really happy if I ate that bell pepper. Like, I'd do it. But I'd be like, all right, you enjoy that.
Starting point is 00:04:03 I'm not doing that tomorrow. That was weird. Yeah. Yeah. It would take time. Again, not that we know what he was thinking, but the consistent. The consistency of him, like, seeming to not pick up that behavior is interesting. Right.
Starting point is 00:04:15 Yeah. You know, and they worked on this at the Oregon Coast Aquarium. And then they worked on it more in Iceland. But there seemed to be some people that were really excited by Keiko demonstrating. Yes, he's eating live fish. But then there are other people. And notably, Mark Simmons, he writes a few times in his book that he wasn't very convinced by Kako's enthusiastic.
Starting point is 00:04:40 for eating live fish and being able to feed himself. Because that was such a big, that was like one of the main questions that persisted throughout the project was whether Kaka was eating live fish and whether he was hunting or showing, you know, the capability of being able to hunt and feed himself. And Mark made an interesting point. He felt that it was actually less important to emphasize whether or not he was able to feed himself because he felt that what was more important for Keko survival was his ability to integrate with other whales. And if he was able to integrate with other whales, then he would be
Starting point is 00:05:21 able to learn from them how to hunt or, you know, at the very least, they could help feed him somehow, you know, when wild whales, like whales in Iceland, if they go after a school of Herring a lot of the time there, I believe the Icelandic whales kind of use this tactic of smacking their tail through a herring school. So they just stunned a bunch of fish at once. And then they swim back and able to just eat the stunned fish, which is kind of funny when you think about it, because that's actually what Keiko wants to eat is stunned fish. So I never really thought about that. Just got there a different way. He's like, this is the goal. I already have it. Yeah. So even if he didn't know how to do that. He would maybe be able to like pick up little scraps here and there or
Starting point is 00:06:09 something like that. But yeah, so Mark Simmons and I believe Robin Friday as well, they felt that it was much more important for Acaco to integrate with wild whales. Other people didn't seem to think that was like as important or just didn't prioritize it. Which is interesting because I would say, again, knowing nothing, I would say that learning how to integrate with other whales does seem like the most important to me because as a social animal, it's like as a species who kind of doesn't have a choice but to be social generally, it seems like, you know, with like some rare exceptions, that if he can't integrate with other whales, then that would be really bad. Right. It's not that other people thought that he didn't need to integrate with wild whales.
Starting point is 00:06:55 I think it was more that they felt that that wasn't something that would need to be taught. or need to be guided by people, that it would be something that Kako would figure out. I mean, I guess it would be convenient to come to that conclusion because how would they teach it if they decided to do it? Well, exactly. But also, I would not necessarily have confidence that he could figure it out. Yeah. Because it's not like we've seen a whale do that before.
Starting point is 00:07:23 Right. Yeah, there's a lot of like these really unknown paths of how on earth are we going to get to this goal. Right. Because also how often do pods of whales like adopt solo whales is a relevant question? Is that a behavior that they have or would they be like, who the fuck are you? I'm not aware of a pod adopting another whale. There are instances of like killer whales coming together as large groups. I'm thinking of Southern Resident Killer Whales. There's J.K. Nell Pod. And they for the most part, you know, don't interact with each other. But then you'll have these. Super Pod events. They have Camberies. And they come together and they hunt and socialize. There was actually a Superpod event back in like November, I believe. Superpot. So in that environment, in that environment, you could possibly have individuals that like don't know each other that well interacting with each other. But I'm talking about these super pods specifically because that was seen as a possible route of like how to
Starting point is 00:08:32 introduce Keiko. And I'm kind of like imagining a situation where he's like a wedding crasher. It's just like everybody assumes like he's a part of somebody else's family. And they're like, I don't know, he's cool, whatever. Anyway, so there's these different attitudes. And then I'll say to a person that I've mentioned a few times is Dr. Lanny Cornell. He was a veterinarian. He was specifically a killer whale veterinarian at SeaWorld. I believe he was currently at the time of the story, still working at SeaWorld as a veterinarian. He is often described as a kind of challenging personality to work with. And Mark Simmons definitely had his own opinions that he is very explicit about in his book about Dr. Lanny Cornell. Obviously, he had extensive experience
Starting point is 00:09:22 working in this field. Very few people, again, going back to like how many people have direct experience with killer whales and then how many veterinarians have direct experience with killer whales? Like, not very many. So he was the right person to be involved with this. But he, from what I can tell, has a very strong personality and he had a tendency to rub people the wrong way. And he was a very strong voice in what he thought were the correct ways to go about with the release side of the project which, if you think about it, he's a veterinarian. It's not to say he doesn't have experience with killer whales, but he has it in a very particular setting and with very particular goals and outcomes in mind that are really different than the question of how do you release a
Starting point is 00:10:15 wild whale. But he had his own opinions and his approach from what I can gather. He strikes me as a guy that would think like the best way to teach a dog to swim is just to just throw them in a pool is like they'll just figure it out like you just throw them in and I've met I have met people like this like oh yeah you just god I thought you're exaggerating for comic effect yeah I like I have yeah I I don't interact with these people anymore but they just think like yeah if you if you want to teach a dog to swim just like throw them in and they'll figure it out and it's like yeah or else or you might actually just severely traumatize an animal. Right.
Starting point is 00:10:56 They can be scared of water for the rest of their lives. That could be good. Yeah. Just like get a, get a kitty pole and chill out in there to begin with. Right. So anyway, Lanny Cornell, I believe from a few different sources I've read, his attitude about releasing Kako was to just cut the net open and let him go and just see what happens. No handouts. When I was a young whale, that's what I did.
Starting point is 00:11:24 And I liked it. Yeah, I think that was his attitude. I find it funny because I, in reading about Kako and how things went, I think if they had immediately put him in a bay, I think he would have just hung out in the bay. Like, I don't think he would have gone anywhere. Yeah, I was wondering that earlier. I probably would have just hung out where the people and the food was. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:11:47 Maybe he, you know, he would have wandered off. but I do think, well, we'll see that, like, Keiko does tend to gravitate towards people. So that approach just seemed a little bit not realistic or really what was appropriate for Keiko. And so anyway, Lanny Cornell had this attitude. Mark Simmons and Robin Friday had a much different attitude. And then there were people that were kind of somewhere in between. So there was a lot of people with really strong feelings about. what was best for Keko.
Starting point is 00:12:22 And they were kind of at odds with each other. And I believe this kind of contributes to the kind of fraying of the narrative thread at the end of the Kiko story. Okay. And when is that? Where in time are we at this point? So he went to Iceland in 1998, in September 1998. They arrive in Iceland.
Starting point is 00:12:47 It's immediately winter. it takes a while for them to kind of get their bearings with this new stage of the project and everything. Kako's in his C-Pen. They're doing some training with him. All this like interpersonal nonsense is happening above the water. Keiko's just chilling out below the water. But they're making forward steps in the project. It's just a matter of like with every step forward, there's just this sense of for some people. And when I say step forward, I mean like going, like Keko going from being in the C-Pen to then being in the larger Kletzvig Bay. So they actually were able to wall off part of the bay with a net. So we went from a little sea pen about like, I want to say, maybe it was like half a football field or something like that. So it was a little contained area to having this wide open bay that was still closed off, but certainly the large.
Starting point is 00:13:48 just area Keiko's been able to swim in since he was little. And there's a lot of attention with each step of like, oh my gosh, he's getting this much closer to being out in the wild. And we got to have a lot of media involved and a lot of people documenting it. And the big next step that took place was going out of Kletzvik Bay and into the open ocean for the first time. Oh, boy. And the main reason that that happened when it did, which I want to say that was in like spring of 2000, I believe, that step of the story happened when Keiko finally went out into the open ocean, mostly because there was construction happening in the harbor. And there was going to be explosives going off. There was going to be pile driving. So they were worried about Keiko's hearing.
Starting point is 00:14:42 Hearing's really essential for whales. This is a conservation issue around the world, with marine noise and traffic and all that interfering with their ability to hear, which for an animal that uses sound to get around, it's pretty devastating to not be able to hear anymore. So they wanted to protect Keko's hearing. They're like, oh, crap, okay, well, I guess we got to push this permitting process through quicker. That was the thing that was kind of slowing things up was they hadn't gotten the permits to actually release Keko, but they reached a compromise with fisheries people, and they were able to take Keiko out into the open ocean.
Starting point is 00:15:23 They took him around the corner, which would kind of protect him from some of the sound. And that was successful as well. But there was even at that stage where Keiko was, had been trained at that point, to follow another boat. They called it a walkboat, and they called him taking him out to the ocean,
Starting point is 00:15:40 his ocean walks. So like walking your dog. He was trained to, follow this boat, the drop near. And even with that, there were a few people that were not just hoping, I think, but expecting Keiko to just take off, which I don't know, I guess, yeah, that was possible, but also just seemed kind of improbable just knowing Keiko as an individual. Right. And it feels like there's a sort of like this wishful thinking at play that humans have the ability to completely undo what humans have done to an animal. Yeah, yeah. You know, that we made him
Starting point is 00:16:20 captive and now we can make him uncaptive. And it feels like, you know, yeah, that like there's, there needs to be room at the table for the question of if we can't undo what we've done, what, what else can we do? I actually like thinking about Murphy earlier. I was like, maybe actually Murphy and Keiko's personalities were really similar. Because I think so. Murphy's a sensitive soul and very sweet and loves people. And he wouldn't want to have Murphy try and go live in the forest. No. Like actually, this is specifically the thing I thought of was one time the gate to the backyard
Starting point is 00:16:56 got left open. And, you know, some dogs, again, like speaking about individuals. Some dogs will get to end up in another town if you do that. Right. Yeah. But Murphy, Murphy just went and sat by the front door. Like, she went out and was like, She was like, I did all my homework already.
Starting point is 00:17:15 Yeah. And she just sat by the front door. She was like, Mother, you left the gate open. So I feel like Kiko's actually very similar. There are stories about how even in the bay, you can imagine there. It's like concentric circles. So there's the C-Pen, the small place he started at. Then there's the big bay that he had access to after.
Starting point is 00:17:42 a certain amount of time. And then he would go out of the bay with his people on ocean walks. And even when he was like in the bay and he had access to the whole bay, sometimes he would go back to his sea pen and just like hang out there. It was like his, I don't know, like a like the equivalent of a kennel. But yeah, so he's he's going out on these walks and part of the permitting process too, he had to have two tags attached to him. So you mentioned that earlier that like part of being able to determine whether he's successfully released or not, we would need to be able to track him and make sure he's okay afterwards. So he had a VHF tag and a satellite tag. So the satellite tag would give his position from anywhere. But this being, you know, in the late 90s or actually 2000,
Starting point is 00:18:32 the satellite tag would only give a position once a day. And I think he would have to be be at the surface, I believe, to be able to, like, transmit to a satellite. So they would only be able to get a position once a day. So if you were trying to really hone in on where KACO is, specifically, the satellite tag would give you the general area, but then to get him more dialed in on where he is, you'd use the VHF tag. So the VHF tag, that would transmit a signal over a radio wave, essentially, that was a line of sight. So you might not be able to physically see Keko. He might be pretty far off and like, you know,
Starting point is 00:19:17 behind a wave or something like that. But the person holding a piece of equipment that would receive the signal from his VHF tag, they would like scan their horizon with it. And if it was lined up with Kiko's tag, it would beep. So they could be like, oh, he's in that direction. And that's how they could like hone in on where he was if he wanted off. So these tags were a condition of his release as well.
Starting point is 00:19:41 But they got that all figured out for that first time out when he was, when they were trying to avoid construction. And then shortly after that, they got the full permits to actually take Kiko out and start introducing him to wild whales. And I have to say, like, even this step of him going out into the wild ocean is really incredible. Like, I mean, every step of this story is amazing. And I really admire the people that like really put their heart and soul into getting this whale to this point. Yeah. And I don't want to come across as too critical about it for my part because I really don't know anything. And it is amazing.
Starting point is 00:20:21 And especially the degree of dedication happening here. It is. And to think like Keiko was now swimming in an environment without walls and without borders. and in water that, you know, he hadn't been in since he was little, like, since he was two years old, and hearing things that he hadn't heard in 20 years. And, you know, I guess even like, even being in the Bay, like, he, the first day he was there, there was like a harbor porpoise that swam by. And apparently they were vocalizing at each other.
Starting point is 00:21:02 Like, that's really incredible. And the fact that he got to swim for, you know, miles and miles instead of just in a circle in a tank. Like, it's really all really wonderful. And it makes me a little emotional thinking about it. How dare you. I know. I just think it's such a beautiful thing that we did for one creature. And it just goes to show how much we can do for creatures sometimes.
Starting point is 00:21:32 Right. How much we can do for the natural world for... Of which we are a part. Yeah. Yes, exactly. We have the potential to address these issues. It's just it's a matter of... It's a matter of money a lot of the time,
Starting point is 00:21:49 but it's also just... It is a matter of will, like really getting people behind a singular goal and message. Yeah. And the beautiful thing about the Keko Project, Like there was a lot of criticism throughout the project of like just how much money was being spent and resources being used on one whale when it could have been used on that money could have maybe been. Many smaller fish. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:22:18 Or even just whales as a whole, you know, across the world. You know, it was that issue that David Phillips brought up of like he wanted to help the larger population of whales. But people love what they know and they felt like they knew Kako and they wanted to help him. Yeah. We love what we know and we love what we love to quote the last unicorn. Oh, yeah. But yeah, it's just, it is incredible what we can accomplish. And Keko, I mean, he was just one really, he was just a very lucky whale that he got to.
Starting point is 00:22:58 even to this point of just being able to swim in the open ocean that where he was born is really pretty spectacular. Yeah. But so he had his first encounter with wild whales in June 2000. And like I explained before, Mark Simmons and Robin Friday, they wanted this to be a low-key event, which makes sense to me. Like you're just being real chill about taking your indoor kid to the mall, you know. Yeah. Like Kigo has not encountered another orca since, you know, since he was in Canada all those years ago. And also something I thought about that I didn't see pointed out was that the last time he was around orcas, he was bullied.
Starting point is 00:23:45 So, you know, this introduction was going to have to happen pretty carefully. The other people involved the leadership and the donors and the media. all saw this as Keiko's going to find his family and he's going to swim off into the sunset. And we just need to let him do that. And because it was seen as like, oh my gosh, this could be it. This could be the moment that he leaves. There was like a bunch of people that wanted to document the whole thing. There was, I think two boats that were just full of VIPs and like, you know, mostly like donors for the project. And then there was two additional boats. One, with Mark Simmons and Robin Friday and a couple others, like on the training side of things.
Starting point is 00:24:29 And then another one with Dr. Lanny Cornell and then a researcher, a whale researcher, and another couple of staff. And Mark Simmons says what happened was, oh, in addition to these four boats, there's also a helicopter. So it's already like not low key. It's a hell of a day at sea to quote the movie overboard. Yeah. There's just a lot going on. Mark Simmons describes that they wanted to do this in a very specific way where they would stop Kako kind of near the whales and kind of let the wild whales pass by.
Starting point is 00:25:05 And if they interacted, great. If they didn't, whatever, you know. The goal was just to have a positive interaction. Like he's a reactive dog at the dog park. Yeah. Yeah. Like you just, he got to go about it with little baby steps. Yeah, which I agree with for most things in life. Yeah, I think it made sense, especially for the initial interaction. So what it sounded like was that Lanny Cornell and the other people on one boat, they spotted wild whales and were essentially guiding them, I guess, towards Kako. And the researcher on that boat was also trying to collect genetic samples from the whales, which involves a tool that is used by many whales. whale researchers. It's a crossbow essentially and you're to get a, yeah, it's a little intense. But that's how you get a genetic sample from a whale. So do you like crossbow in a big syringe and
Starting point is 00:26:05 then you like yank it out and you're like, thank you. Kind of, not a syringe. It gets like a little just like tissue sample from the whale. Okay. And it is what whale researchers use to get this kind information. And I can see where the researcher was like, yeah, if we have this information, then we can like figure out if these whales are related to Kako and that would help us. Okay, I see. You know, like, I get it. But also, I totally understand Mark Simmons' frustration in that you are, I don't want to say harassing the whales, but you're not exactly like creating a calm environment. Yeah, exactly. And it's like a couple of mothers and calves and a bull whale, I think. And, and, and, like, that wasn't ideal either because, like, mothers and calves don't really
Starting point is 00:26:51 love having a stranger around. Yeah. And again, like, I don't ever want to question the dedication of this, but, like, yeah, nobody knows how to do any of this. Right. Yeah. Everyone's, you know, everyone's figuring it out. And that's fair of the mothers and calves. Yeah. Yeah. So, they kind of guide these whales towards Kako in a manner that was not really what had been planned in advance. And from what it's sounded like from Simmons account, Keiko had no idea that these whales were coming and the whales had no idea that Keiko was there. Because what were they going to do? Take him aside, be like, hey, Keiko. Right. Today's going to be kind of a big day because we're going to try. Oh, you don't know what I'm saying. I know. If only, if only we could have explained it to him. But, you know, I think, I mean,
Starting point is 00:27:38 the idea was just to have him in the vicinity and then he would like hear them vocalizing and just like from a distance be like, oh, what's that? And that. And the idea. I mean, the idea was just to have. And And then like in the movie, he would just kind of run right on over there. Yeah. Because, yeah, that would be nice. But apparently what happened was Kiko and the Wild Whales surprise each other. And how Simmons describes it, because he was right there. He was like with Keko.
Starting point is 00:28:03 He was like staring at him. Like Kiko was waiting for instruction from Mark Simmons. And he said that Kiko plunged explosively into the depths. and this other whale did too, and they don't know what happened under the water. But for a few minutes, there was nothing. And then this group of whales, they spotted a few hundred feet away. They were taking off in a different direction,
Starting point is 00:28:30 but they couldn't find Kako for a little bit. Eventually, they did find him, but he was taking off in a different direction. And some people interpreted this as, oh, Kiko's going free. He's going. He wants to go and be free. He's leaving. We should just leave him and let him do his thing. Mark and Robin, they did not see it that way. They saw it as like a scared animal. So he was like booking it by his standards? Yeah, I think he was booking it and then the helicopter spotted him and apparently he would like swim a little bit and then he would like swim in a circle
Starting point is 00:29:10 and then he would swim a little more and then he'd swim in a circle. And it kind of reminds me of like Dory in finding Nemo at the end where she's like oh, oh. And like, again, I don't know what Keiko was thinking, but that's what it made me think of. We don't know. But it does feel a bit overly optimistic maybe to be like, wow, Kako had one interaction with a whale briefly for the first time of 20 years. And then he thought to himself, gee, fuck all these people. I'm leaving.
Starting point is 00:29:42 I'm going to go in the opposite direction of everyone and be free on my own. Right. Yeah. And so Robin and Mark and then a couple of the other people involved, they actually went to find Kiko. And a few people on the other side of the project were saying, like, don't go after. after him, you're supposed to leave him be. And they're like, no, he's, he's not doing well. He's still in our care. Like, we still need to take care of him. I mean, it makes sense. No one can agree on what human
Starting point is 00:30:11 children need and we raise billions of them. Oh, absolutely. Actually, even Kenneth Brower in his book, you know, he inserts his own opinion often in the book. And he expressed that he felt like some of the trainers that were involved with the project were kind of like a overly doting mother that can't let go of their child's hand or, you know, I think he described it as like a mom showing up at their son's college dorm room ready to clean their room for them. Like he just, he thought the trainers were just a little too attached to Keko and were reticent to let him go. Yeah, but arguably by the same token, I, it does feel like a kind of attachment to sort of be, maybe not attachment exactly, but to be invested in a certain outcome and in the idea that that is definitely what the
Starting point is 00:31:02 animal, because there's like intent implied by the idea of like, oh, he's swimming away, he's being free. Right. It's like where there's some kind of a belief that you're interpreting in animals' emotional state in a way where it doesn't seem like you have enough data to say that necessarily. I mean, that's very true. And I agree with that. And but I guess you can make the argument that that's exactly what the trainers were doing, too.
Starting point is 00:31:24 they were arguing like, well, I guess really it's that everyone including me right now is doing that. Yeah. Yeah. It's just, it's a, it's a hard situation. That's the beauty of the beast. Yeah. Yeah. So anyway, they go and retrieve Kako and, you know, he seems to them really distressed. And the other part of the team, they're ready to like bring him back out with more whales. And Robin and Mark are like, no, like, Kako, he's like tired. He can't, he can't keep up with us. He's exhausted. He seems totally wigged out and stressed. He, he just needs to, you know, recuperate a little bit. So when Robin and Mark get back to the headquarters back in the, in the bay, they have a conversation with the project manager, a man named Charles Vinick. And Robin and Mark are basically like, look, this was not how we
Starting point is 00:32:18 wanted it to go. This is not how we believe as experts in our field that we should be introducing Keko. This needs to be a calm, iterative process. It's going to take months, if not years to accomplish. This is not a one and done thing. And we have like these demands, one of them being that the next time we do this, only like a maximum of two boats can come out. We can't take out everybody who has enough money to pay for it. Like we just, this has. This has. This has. to be just about Keiko and the Whales. And their new hit single. Keiko and the Wales.
Starting point is 00:32:59 But and Charles would kind of relay this to the board. And apparently it was like going back and forth between like hotel rooms, like being the messenger. And there was a couple other people that were on Robin and Mark's side of it. But at end of this discussion, the board did not want to concede to. what Robin and Mark wanted to do. And so they ended up resigning from the project right then and there. Oh.
Starting point is 00:33:25 Yeah. That's interesting. I didn't expect that. Yeah. They were really, really unhappy. And I guess I don't have enough time today to go into the level of just. Yes, but perhaps on another investigative type multi-part program, if you will. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:33:43 And another project in my rewilding podcast, I'll give more. the details. But yeah, it was quite dramatic from Mark Simmons' point of view of how this went. Yeah, boy feelings. But yeah. So, yeah, they decided to not be a part of a project. And they, and honestly, they were kind of using that as a, their resignation they were kind of using as a bargaining chip of like, okay, well, we'll tell them this is what we want. And if they don't, you know, give us what we want, then we'll resign. And they thought that that would convince the board. But apparently it didn't. So the board felt they didn't need them anymore. more. And he just describes in a lot of his book how he just felt like the conflicting motivations
Starting point is 00:34:27 and agendas of people involved were really frustrating to him. And he felt like led to this kind of, like I said, like this kind of narrative thread sort of starting to fray a little bit. Like, it's just not as clean. It's not as satisfying. Like people have. have differing kind of versions of what they say happened maybe. Yeah. Yes, exactly. Yeah. And also, and not to say like, not to say this cuts across the board at all, but it does seem like, you know, with Mark Simmons and Robin Friday that you do have two people who are like pretty well qualified to know what they're talking about, but who because of that are not even pessimistic, but maybe like less convinced that the specific goal that was stated from the outcome, like, is achievable.
Starting point is 00:35:17 than people who know less. And maybe there's a name for that distribution. I'm sure there is. But that seems noticeable to me, right? But the more you know generally in any project, I mean, this is like a, you know, not to compare this to Fire Fest, because again, it's, you know, like people were dedicated.
Starting point is 00:35:39 They knew what they were doing to the greatest extent possible in many ways. And like the amount of love and care that went into this is really clear. But like, there are projects that people, people can take on with great confidence because they don't understand how hard the different elements of it are going to be individually or to bring together. And like, that's not the kind of confidence you want usually. Like, sometimes it works out. But like, that's just maybe the same thing as luck when that happens. Yeah. Or guess that beginner's like of not psyching yourself out too much. But like, that's such a big part of the American character that like you can come in as a
Starting point is 00:36:11 novice fake your way through and be amazing at it. And it's like, yeah, I mean, kind of like for some things. Like, there's definitely sort of workplace cultures that, like, require fresh eyes kind of continually. And that's, you know, there's a certain logic to that. But also, that can also just be ego talking, right? That can just as easily be someone who's like on a kind of a power trip and chooses to believe that about themselves. I think it really, it goes in both directions. Right. And I think that's especially true for a project like this where there's like such a specific science background that you need. Yeah. A specific. science background, but then like the project as a whole has this almost like fairy tale quality
Starting point is 00:36:51 to it. And so being able to pull it off, like the appeal of that, I totally understand. Like I, I would love to be involved in a project like that now. Like I'm not saying like it's not worth pursuing, but it's just like. It's very worth doing things imperfectly. That's the only way to do it. Yes, exactly. Yeah. And it's just a matter of maybe being a little bit more observant of like how things are actually happening in front of you rather than how you think they should or you want them to play out in your head. Because reality is always messier. And this is maybe, I mean, okay, not to get into like what is science, but just a sec, if we may. Just for a quick sec.
Starting point is 00:37:40 Because I feel like this is such a, you know, kind of a running joke at this point. And I love the sincerity of this. When people have a sign that's like, in this house, we believe science, etc., etc. You know. Science is real. Yeah. And it's like great. But also like the point of science is not to be believed unequivocally.
Starting point is 00:37:58 Like that's what's great about it. Like the point of science is that it's not a practice of faith or a belief, but of constant like iterating and experimenting. And that doesn't mean that evolution is a theory. Like it is a proven theory to the extent that we can ever. know anything as human beings. But it feels like that is part of why science, I think, is like, I don't know, that we have this fallacy that like kids can only learn something if they're going to do it for their whole lives and be really good at it. And it's like, no, there's like aspects of the things that we do that just help us to be happier and better people and to, I would say,
Starting point is 00:38:34 actually adapt better, speaking of what we've been talking about to our situation as humans. And one of them is this thing of like teaching people the kind of, I don't know, like mental and an intellectual resilience to be able to like have theories and ideas and then use those ideas and those passions to gather information to have experiences to collect data and then to analyze that and revise their viewpoints based on what they learn and see which is a wonderful thing to do and not as many people seem to think a shattering blow to your ego that you could literally die because of you know like it's a delight to be proven wrong yeah it's a It's definitely hard at times and it's definitely like a major act of bravery, especially if you're talking about a belief system that you've been raised within or something on that scale.
Starting point is 00:39:23 But just in terms of like day-to-day life, just like realizing how little you know about something and getting to learn something. Like it's a delight. Yeah. It is. And what you're saying too kind of reminds me of this thing that I think of often when people say, I love science or, you know, science is real or kind of. kind of leaning into that, oh, science is a representation of unequivocal facts or something like that. Right. It's that the word science defines a process.
Starting point is 00:39:56 Right. It's not like a set of beliefs. Yeah. It's like a way of interacting with the world, maybe more accurately. Right. It's almost like, I feel like science, instead of it being a noun, I feel like we need a verb. Because I think science is an action. Oh, you're science.
Starting point is 00:40:14 You're scienceing pretty hard. Right. You're sciencing right in front of me. Your science is so hard. It should be a verb. Right. It's an active thing that you do. It's not, I think when people say I love science, they love facts.
Starting point is 00:40:27 And that's great. I love facts too. And like there's really interesting facts about the world. But I think we need to kind of distinguish between facts and the process at which you. But maybe like if you love science, then like you're loving science in the way that I loved science when I was on a really long road trip and I drove away from a gas station. And then I think there was like a bandana or something that I wasn't sure what it had happened to it. So I wondered if I'd left it on top of the car. And so to test my theory, I found like a microfiber
Starting point is 00:41:01 cloth and put that on top of the clark and then drove around to see if it would fall off. Like, that to me is science. Yeah. It's not even useful or productive or relevant science. But it's It's perhaps science. I had a theory and I tested it. Exactly. And then I was like, well, I don't know. Which honestly is most of science is testing something and be like, huh, well, hard to say. That didn't work.
Starting point is 00:41:29 Come see, come saw. A little of this, a little of that. Yeah. And the hard to say is they're kind of the best because the pressure to produce results. I mean, it's like the process of questioning and learning is a joy unto itself, I really think. I mean, not always. And especially, you know, if it's your work, then like, work isn't always fun. If you're in academia, if you're chasing grant funding, like a lot of stuff in any profession is druggery. But like that, that act of trying to learn and that spark that you feel, like, that's the point.
Starting point is 00:41:57 Yeah. And that process of learning that was integral to this Keko project. This really was a process of trying something new and doing something that hadn't been done before and getting the best people. on it that you can find with the best expertise, but still kind of stepping into the unknown. And I think there were a lot of people involved that were very grounded and understood like, okay, like this could go in a lot of different directions. And then there were some people that were really hopeful and aspirational and perhaps clung onto the idea that Keiko would swim off into the sunset with his family, maybe a little too, you know, they clung. on a little too hard. So where we are at right now in the story is that after this negative
Starting point is 00:42:50 interaction, it seems as though Keiko had a few more interactions with Wild Whales that year and the following year as well. And for the most part, from what I can tell, Wild whales would kind of swim by Keiko and he would kind of look at them and watch them and maybe follow a little bit, but he was never, you know, really going off to swim with them. I mean, that was about as much as I knew about socializing in middle school. It, you know, took time for me personally. Yeah, he was probably like, okay, this is interesting. But I can imagine, I don't know, maybe it was scary.
Starting point is 00:43:28 Like, for a social animal, social anxiety exists. I mean, you sure can't introduce adult cats to each other. Right. That's neither here nor there, but it's very true. Yeah. I mean, you can. But as anyone who's done it knows, it, takes sometimes forever.
Starting point is 00:43:43 Yeah. And so they're doing this over the year. But I think over this time period, well, I think the morale of the project started to lessen a bit. Like people were a bit like, oh, okay, maybe Kako won't make it. And then this starts to translate into, well, notably Craig McCaw, sort of being like, all right, well, we got to wrap this up. Like, do you?
Starting point is 00:44:09 Why do you? Just stick it out. Right. What else are you going to spend that money on? You're going to buy yourself some more wine. Well, apparently he was going through some of his own financial troubles at the time. He had to sell his yacht. Got it together, Craig. And his island in Vancouver, B.C. Oh, no. Oh, my dear. I know. I think he's doing okay now. But, you know, it was hard times on the farm then. Yeah, he was, he was weeping into his bleak, moonlit pillow. Yeah. But anyway, he was looking for his way out of the project. And he asked Phillips like, hey, do you, do you want your whale back? And Phillips was like, sure, whatever. And also, a part of this was, sure. He left this whale at my house. No, I'm sure he was more enthusiastic than that. But they had this benefactor. And now he was
Starting point is 00:45:04 walking away. And part of that was Craig McCann, his wife. at that time had recently gone through a divorce, and it was rumored that Wendy McCaw was the one more invested in the project. So as soon as they got divorced, Craig McCaw was like, okay, I'm doing other things now. I mean, look, it would not be the most shocking thing that I had heard today if that was true. I'll tell you that. Yeah. But anyway, so that was kind of the atmosphere of the project. It was sort of, in my sense, it was almost like this feeling of not completely yet, but like this like winding down. So there was a big changes in staff because there were huge budget cuts.
Starting point is 00:45:45 And it was funny because they, I don't think they wanted to actually lay anyone off. So they made very significant cuts in other departments. And it just put a lot of stressors on the project. And then the people that were most qualified to be involved with the project stepped away because they were like, well, I can't do my best work with. not enough resources. Like, you guys need to figure this out. So that was kind of the attitude or the atmosphere of project. And this was around 2001 and then into July 2002. And they're continuing to bring Kako out to interact with wild whales. They have a new setup where they actually have
Starting point is 00:46:26 a large boat that they can stay on for like, I guess, weeks at a time. It's like an old fishing boat. And so then they can actually stay out at sea for long periods if there's whales around and not have to return back to the bay all the time. And then they had their smaller vessels that would kind of go out with Kako. And are they still feeding him while they're on these excursions? I believe so, but they're like also really reducing the amount of food that they're giving Kako to. Yeah. They're like weaning him kind of. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:46:59 And they also had the attitude. There was an attitude like, well, we can't keep feeding him. because then he'll keep relying on us for food. Like if he gets hungry enough, he'll go and get his own food. But sometimes that kind of backfired and that kind of just made him hang out around people more. There is, again, just this apparent misunderstanding of just animal psychology and like what the best way forward was to actually train Keko to do what they wanted him to do. Yeah. I guess like a lack of consensus.
Starting point is 00:47:29 Yeah, yeah. Yeah. But somewhere around this time and about like July, 2000. He has been kind of on the outskirts of a pod of wild whales and has been kind of, you know, doing his thing where he's kind of watching them from a distance and kind of wandering off, but then eventually wandering back. And then at one of these points where he wanders off, and he would wander like, you know, a few miles away and they would just kind of let him wander. But he would always eventually wander back. A storm comes in and is coming in really fast. And the crew is like, oh my gosh, we have to.
Starting point is 00:48:03 to get back to shore, like now. And they all go back to the bay, and they try to signal Keko to come back to the boat. They have this little, this thing that makes a tone underwater that calls Kago back, kind of like a whistle for a sheep dog or something, but he doesn't come back. So they go back, and then they start tracking him with his satellite tag. And they see that he's moving east. So from Iceland, like moving out east, he goes towards the Faroe Islands and then he... He wanted to get a sweater. And then he eventually makes his way to Norway. And they're kind of like keeping an eye out, like seeing if they hear anything.
Starting point is 00:48:47 The people are seeing if they hear anything. They're like, okay, I don't know. Maybe he's with whales. Maybe he's swimming with whales. But they're like separated from him kind of unintentionally, basically. Like they weren't planning for that. to be it? No, I don't, I didn't get the impression that that was intentional. I think they were like hopeful and very, you know, they were like this, it could be it, but it wasn't, they'd had so many
Starting point is 00:49:10 instances of this happening of like, Kego kind of wandering off, but always wandering back that I think it was hard to, you know, believe that this could be the time that they don't see him again. Yeah. But anyway, he wanders off to Norway and Keiko. And this is like three weeks later. So there's three weeks where Keiko is maybe with other whales, maybe not, but he's out in the open ocean, which I don't know. That is also just an incredible thing for me to think about for this whale that was in a tank. And now he's literally traveling across the ocean to, I believe that part of the ocean is called the Norwegian Sea. And he's making his way to Norway, whether he knew it or not. And he gets there and he immediately finds a boat with a family that's out for a day of fishing.
Starting point is 00:50:02 Well, what do you know? And the family apparently was like really freaked out. They're like, what the hell is this whale doing? You know, killer whales have a reputation. If they're Americans, they would have called the cops. Oh, don't call the cops on Kiko. That really happened once. There was like this viral video like 10 years ago of a couple calling the cops on a whale. Really? Not that they wanted the whale to be arrested. But yeah, they're like freaking out and they like called the police. Oh my gosh. That's like what my, I love my dad, but he did, I mean, actually, actually don't think this is totally misguided, but my family has a boat. And they were on the Willam River in Portland. And the engine cut out, they lost power. And my dad called
Starting point is 00:50:51 the Coast Guard. And that does seem hasty. And the Coast Guard was like, no, you got to try a few other things first before you call us. Also, like, are you in immediate danger? It's like, no, we're just kind of like floating here. And we can't get to shore. Okay. Do you want to hear about the whale video from Time magazine or scuba diving magazine? Oh, scuba diving magazine.
Starting point is 00:51:21 I figured. Yeah. Okay. Let me read this to you. I feel like you like this. Okay. A beautiful humpback whale encounter turned into fodder for a viral video after a woman called the cops on the cetacean. A group enjoying the day on Washington's Puget Sound got spooked when a whale came close for a visit.
Starting point is 00:51:40 The video, which is drawing laughs and some criticism after going viral online, ends with one woman calling the police. I'm out in Puget Sound and there's three huge gray whales underneath our boat and I'm afraid that we might get flipped over, the woman says on the phone. I don't want to die right now, says another passenger in the background. Oh, my gosh. So if you're kayaking around and you see humpback whales and if you feel scared about that, what should you do, Brianna? Oh, my gosh, just watch them and enjoy them. They're not going to do anything.
Starting point is 00:52:14 I mean, there is a very small risk that a humpback whale could jump out of the water and hit your boat. That has happened. There is, like, instances of that. That is so incredibly rare. Just enjoy being in the presence of like an amazing animal who's also probably looking at you like, oh, you're pretty interesting and acting really strange. And it's probably just curious about you too. I would just, I would love to be there and see these humpback whales. I would too.
Starting point is 00:52:45 Yeah. Yeah. So there, so Keko finds a family in Norway. He finds a family and they basically, he basically follows them back to their village. and like their little fishing village. And he just like hangs out in this bay or in this fjord. And immediately the whole town is like, oh my gosh, there's a whale here. And there is incredible footage and pictures of kids like, you know, nine, 10 year olds riding on Kiko's back.
Starting point is 00:53:17 What? Wait, could we watch that? Yes, I've got it. It's a Norwegian documentary that was made called Kampen. Om Kako. I'm so excited. Oh my God. Oh my God.
Starting point is 00:53:33 Oh, my God. Oh, look at him go. He's so big. I know. He's got three little spots on his chin. So this was all... I think this is all footage in Norway of him swimming. So he's like jumping out of the water.
Starting point is 00:53:49 Oh, no. He's like near a pasture with cows. He's like a pasture next to a bay, which you don't really think of. Yeah. And there's a person on a boat. And can you see his tag? There. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:54:02 And Kiko's like swimming alongside the boat. Yeah. The person like reaches out to touch him when he like comes up for a breath. This is beautiful footage. I know. We'll put a link to this in our description. Okay. Here's the kids playing.
Starting point is 00:54:18 Oh my God. Oh my God. I know. Isn't this incredible? It is just a Bobby Hill looking. child just literally in the water on Kiko's back. Yeah. And now there's like kids in a boat. They're going to like row out to him or something. And the kids are like kind of partially submerged too. So they're not like standing around on him or
Starting point is 00:54:42 something, which feels different. But he's just kind of hanging out near their little rowboat. Yeah. And we have like two kids in the water kind of treating him as like a like a floating dock a little bit. Yeah. Just kind of like lying on. his back in their bathing suits? Yeah. Yeah. Oh, my God. And he's just sitting there. Like, he could, he is a large, powerful animal. He could easily just toss them off. This is an amazing. This is a 12-year-old girl in a bathing suit, just, like, lying across Kako's back while he's and I have no, you know, but yeah, like, not that I know what he's feeling, but he sure is lying very still allowing this to happen. I know. He's, yeah, I think,
Starting point is 00:55:27 I don't know. I think it's safe to say he's really enjoying it. And he like, you know, he's been through all these. He just swam, you know, maybe by himself, maybe with other whales. But across the Norwegian Sea, he was when he was in Iceland, you know, there was all these protocols about not interacting with Kako very much, like trying to detach from him. And then he arrives in this town. And immediately, all these people are just like giving. him all of this attention and love and affection and to the envy of every Oregonian child. I know, seriously. I know. I know. But, yeah, this whole video is worth a watch. It's like 45 minutes long. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:56:14 And again, like a case here where like he's giant compared to these children, you know, like it's because it feels, I don't know, it's actually very much like Sam Neal and the triceratops. Yes, it is. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, he could easily swim away. Like, I mean, if anything, that kids may want to be a little concerned that they might get hurt. And again, like, and it gets us in trouble that we see in Orca and we're like, I want to lie on top of that guy.
Starting point is 00:56:42 I know. I know. I know we definitely shouldn't. Because it's like, we want these things. We don't want to want them. And maybe we don't want to want them so much that we project that sometimes. And like, I mean, in your opinion, do. Did Keiko get separated from his people during the storm and just like keep on swimming until he found some kids to play with?
Starting point is 00:57:03 Honestly, that is what I think happened. I don't know. That's my opinion. My opinion is that maybe he followed some whales for a while. But I think he ended up on his own. I mean, when he was found in Norway, he was by himself. And I think he saw a boat and was like, oh, that boat probably has people on it. And he just, he's just conditioned. to want to socialize with people. Right. I'm not sure at this point in his life that that could have successfully been deprograms from him. Right. You know, and this was something that we learned in this project. I think that was a big learning step.
Starting point is 00:57:43 Like, people were hesitant from the beginning. They're like, wow, he's been in captivity a long time. I don't know. I mean, it's kind of like the genie experiment in linguistics where you have this child who's been a victim of terrible abuse where she's been isolated and not taught how to speak, literally. And then the question is, can you teach someone how to speak after this kind of theorized critical period of language learning has ended, like kind of mid and post-puberty? And it's this weird thing where you don't really have, it's just this one isolated study, but it does still, there's like the thing of being able to test a question and then the phenomenon of people kind of moving on when the answer turns out to be no.
Starting point is 00:58:22 and then the question of what happens to this test subject who is stuck the way they are for better or worse. And can they be protected for being exactly that thing and whatever those needs that they have now are, you know? Right. Yeah. I think that was, you know, at the end of the Kako project, that was the question that kind of needed to be answered. And it was written into some of their protocols. It was like, okay, well, if he shows that he can't successfully integrate with wild whales, then he's going to need care. Like, we're going to need to take care of them. We can't ethically release him. And also, it's just for his safety because obviously he's going to seek out people. And the thing is, like, I think some people are like, well, what's the big deal if he, like, wants to seek out people? Like, isn't that okay? And the issue with that is that it can be a safety hazard for Keko. It could be a safety hazard for people, too, depending. But, I mean, Kako was such a friendly whale. I don't think he was, well, I don't know. He wasn't at risk of, like, being aggressive, I think. But. But the issue was, you know, people are weird in like if there's this whale hanging out, who knows, someone could try to hurt him or someone could hurt him unintentionally. That unfortunately happened with the whale Luna, who was a little killer whale off of British Columbia that it was a wild whale that became very friendly and was kind of similar to Kako. Wasn't letting people ride on him and wasn't allowed.
Starting point is 00:59:51 but he was interacting with people like this, like coming up to boats and everything. And there was a lot of debate on what to do with him because he was a wild whale, but he was interacting with people. And then in the end, he got hit by a boat in the harbor. And it wasn't intentional. It was just that he was hanging out near a boat. And the guy didn't see him. And the guy who did it felt terrible.
Starting point is 01:00:16 Yeah. But our environment is very. I mean, humans have a very hard time surviving. the environment that we built for ourselves. So imagine how much harder it is if you don't, you know, if you don't even have that going for you. Yeah. How do we strike that balance of wanting to give this animal as much as their own autonomy as we can while also still providing for them because we've kind of taken away their ability to take care of themselves. Right. And I don't know. I don't know that anyone could ever have like a really clear
Starting point is 01:00:50 articulate answer to that. You know, it's just something you have to feel out and do by trial and error. And I think actually, you know, I'm saying that the end of the Keko story is like a little sad. The project continued and people stayed involved and continued to care for him. It was just that the level of resources that were there previously weren't there anymore. So like the amount of staff involved was really reduced. And that kind of translated into.
Starting point is 01:01:20 okay, well, was he getting sufficient veterinary care in the end? And like, what would be sufficient veterinary care, you know, if you're like trying to kind of have this half wild whale, like, what does that look like? So when Keko showed up in this town, some new staff and trainers, a couple of people showed up and found Kako. And they were like, oh, Kako. Why did you do this? But, you know, they were like, well, we got to find like a plan B. Obviously, he's going to try to seek people out. We'll try to set up a station here in Norway somewhere. So they brought him around to a different bay nearby that was more isolated.
Starting point is 01:02:03 And that sort of became the base of the Kako project for the remainder of Kekos days, which wasn't really much longer. It was like, so he arrived in Norway in August, September 2002. and he was there for about a year and a half. And, you know, they continued with his ocean walks. They'd take him out. He would interact with some of the whales coming by, but again, in that kind of distant kind of way. He would wander off occasionally,
Starting point is 01:02:34 and they would just follow him just to make sure he was okay. He had a incident where he got trapped under some ice in the winter. Okay, go. I know. And he, it's really sad because he like, he got trapped under the ice and yeah, he couldn't figure out like where to go to breathe. And apparently he was like punching holes through the ice. And he ended up just mashing up his head. Like it became really bloody and scarred, I believe.
Starting point is 01:03:07 Yeah. Like he was in a really, he was in a very desperate situation in that moment. But they're doing his thing. there's a couple of people, an Icelandic woman named Toba and a man named Frank and another guy named Dane, I believe, and Colin, Colin Baird. They were the kind of remaining staff during that last year with Kako. And they really loved him. Everyone who worked with Kako loved Kiko. They just like, he was a creature that they had a personal connection with and they would really do anything for him. And I really mean like they would do anything. And so they're doing.
Starting point is 01:03:45 the best they can, taking care of him. And the leaders of the project are trying to figure out, you know, what they're going to do next, trying to keep funding going. But, you know, the motivation and the enthusiasm for the project has kind of waned at this point because it's just kind of clear that it's a messy ending. It's not the clear ending that everyone wanted. And it's easy to fundraise to make a great leap or do something heroic and it's harder to fundraise for, we just kind of need to take care of this whale for the rest of his life. Right. it's our responsibility. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:04:17 And people get less excited about that. But they should get excited about it because it's very exciting to keep taking care of creatures and places in an ongoing way. Yeah. Like, I believe it was in Mark Simmons book, he made the point that not to be too cynical, but there was a financial incentive to have Keko go free. Well, yeah. You know? Say more about that.
Starting point is 01:04:41 What is the incentive for people? that if Keko goes free, then we don't have to pay for his care anymore, you know? Yeah. And also everybody gets to pat each other on the back and feel really accomplished as opposed to feeling immersed in the complexity of like interspecies relationships, which is where we got stuck here. Right. It seems like. I want to say that when it was brought up like, well, there's a possibility that he won't go free and that we'll be having to take care of him for, you know, potentially the rest of his life. I feel like the attitude about it was sort of like like, yeah, yeah, that's a possibility. But he's going to go free. Like, it's going to happen.
Starting point is 01:05:18 But it's like when you're signing a pre-up, when you're marrying that billionaire whose family seems so nice. Right. Yes, exactly. Yeah, you just, you don't want to think about the kind of negative outcome, I guess, even though it wasn't necessarily, it's not a negative outcome. It's just, yeah, it's not what we wanted necessarily, but again, it just ended up being messier. And so I kind of remember that. And so I kind of remember this period of the project because my ears would always perk up if I heard anything about Kato. And I remember feeling as a kid that there was kind of like radio silence for a little while. And I was sort of like, okay, I don't know, maybe he's, maybe he's fine. I don't know. And then later in 2003, Kako throughout his adult life had been kind of plagued with.
Starting point is 01:06:12 a recurring respiratory illness. I want to say they saw symptoms of it as far back as in the Oregon Coast Aquarium, but definitely in Iceland, they would see this kind of flare up of a respiratory illness. And when he would get sick, he would get antibiotics. They would be taking blood samples to monitor his white blood cell count and making sure that he got the care that he needed. And the thing with animals, and I think especially with a not domesticated animal, because even though Keko was captive, I don't know if I'd say he's necessarily domesticated. He's not born of thousands of generations of creatures that are used to living with people, yeah. Yeah. Animals are really good at hiding symptoms because they don't like chickens. Yeah. It's just, it's amazing how far along an animal is
Starting point is 01:07:09 in an illness before you really start to notice. that they're not doing so well. And especially with a whale, because even though, as you and I have talked about a few times, like we feel like we can sense their feelings and maybe project our own feelings onto them, it would be hard to look at a whale and be like, hey, buddy, are you feeling okay? Like, how would you, you know, like the demeanor of a whale? I'm sure people that spend time around whales would be able to tell. Yeah, but even so, yeah.
Starting point is 01:07:37 But even so, and that's the thing, too, that the people that were involved, that were taking care of Keiko at the end. Like Tobush, this was her first time working with a killer whale. She had worked at an aquarium in Iceland, but she had never worked with killer whales before. So, I mean, they're doing their absolute best, but they just don't have the experience. And they just have limited resources at this point. So after a year of being in Norway in this bay, they notice one day that Keiko just seems to be pretty letharthard. You know, they take him out for an ocean walk and he's lagging behind and they bring him back and they're like, oh man, he doesn't seem to be feeling very well.
Starting point is 01:08:21 They do what they can with, you know, getting whatever tests they can run in antibiotics. But it was sort of at the point where the infection had kind of reached a point of potentially no return. In December, he's getting worse and he's just kind of doing what they say. is what they call logging. So like a whale just kind of hangs out at the surface and isn't swimming. They're just floating there. And he was doing a lot of that, conserving energy. And he eventually just passed away from this respiratory illness and beached himself on the, on the shore there,
Starting point is 01:09:06 like, where it was like trying to like make his way onto the shore. but I feel like there was a net in the way. I'm a little unclear of what happened. But yeah, it was a pneumonia or some other virus that got him when he was about 27 years old. I'm not even going to make a Janice Joplin reference. That's how sad this is. Yeah, I know. I've thought about that too.
Starting point is 01:09:32 Put Kiko on the poster with all the other 27 club people. But yeah, it's a, it feels like a. really, I don't know, I guess sometimes it just feels like an overwhelming ending to this incredible story. Yeah. But that's in reality what happened. And he had some people with him that that really loved him and really cared about him. And I remember seeing the newspaper article in the paper. And I remember crying when I was a little kid. I just you know this this beautiful animal that we put so much of our heart and love and attention into
Starting point is 01:10:18 and had so many aspirations and had so many dreams for him and again like we actually did achieve a lot of that that's the thing like I think in the process of researching this story I think in the beginning I was quick to call the Kako project a failure because he didn't swim off into the sunset with his family. But in really diving into the story and really understanding all the different complexities of it and all the different motivations and what people were trying to achieve, like I really do believe that there were huge successes in the Kako story. Like we really did put a whale back in the ocean and back in his home. And I can't I can't understate how important that is in terms of understanding how we can, how we can, I don't know, try to put the world back the way we found it. And maybe we learned that we can't totally do that, but we can get really close and we can, you know.
Starting point is 01:11:30 Well, and also we don't have to give up. because we don't get to have the exact result that we imagined, you know? Right, exactly. And so one of the main things actually, I think one of the really important legacies that Keko left was all of this stuff that people learned throughout this whole project. And one of the things that we learned was like, okay, we really, really tried to put a captive whale back in the wild. And captivity just, it's almost impossible to reverse that. and their dependence on people. And so there is a happy medium that people are trying to strike with current captive orcas
Starting point is 01:12:15 in this project called the Whale Sanctuary Project, and it actually involves quite a few people that were involved with the Keiko Project. So the Whale Sanctuary Project is going to be a large sanctuary in Port Hilford Bay. in Nova Scotia, where whales and dolphins can live in an environment that really maximizes their well-being and is in their natural habitat. And so we can take animals, these really intelligent, socially complex animals, and have them live out a retirement in this whale sanctuary project. So they won't be having to perform in order to be fed. Which is what we all want, really.
Starting point is 01:13:04 Right. And we're, you know, they're going to be in the ocean again. And we can just try to write a wrong as best as we can in using what we learned. And part of what we learned is that, well, okay, full reintroduction into the wild may not be realistic. But we can still provide a good life for these animals. Yeah. when we've taken away so much from them. So I'm really happy to see that that project is underway. And of course, they're looking for funding. A big project like that, always, as we've learned,
Starting point is 01:13:45 always requires a lot of money. And they don't have a movie to put a number at the end of. So it's going to be a little trickier maybe. Oh, and actually also there's another kind of retirement, quote unquote, facility. for whales, and that's in Kako's old sea pen in Iceland. So there's a few, there's some belugas that live there now, and they're just, you know, living out their days. Would you say that they're swimming so wild and swimming so free? Yes, they are. Of having above and sea below. Yeah. Yeah, they're, you know, I think it's just, it's the best we can, we can offer. And I think it's actually pretty, it's a it's a pretty generous thing for us to do after the harm that we've exerted on on these animals with the captivity industry so the everything yeah yeah so that's the story of caco and i love
Starting point is 01:14:47 him i love him too and i know there's more to it and you're working on a podcast series about it and we're going to have you come back on here and tell us when it's out so nobody's misses it. Yeah, that would be great. Yeah, I am currently working on it. If you would like to support my work on this project, you can go to the Patreon. It's called the ReWilding Kako podcast. And also another place, I would love to get people's memories of Kako. If, you know, if you were a kid in Oregon and you remember visiting Kago or Norway. Or Norway. If you were one of those kids writing on Kiko's back, I want to hear from you. And you can email me or submit a voice memo to rewilding podcast at Outlook.com.
Starting point is 01:15:39 That's my spiel. Thank you. And that's your wail. That's my wail. That's Kako. And thus concludes our three-part journey with Kako. You're listening right now to a cover of Will You Be There performed by Magpie Cinema Club.
Starting point is 01:16:58 Magpie Cinema Club is a band featuring Miranda Zickler, who is also the editor and producer of Your Wrong About and musician A.J. McKinley. Thank you to Brianna Bowman for being our dolphin girl and orca woman. Thank you to Nicole Ortiz, our administrative assistant. and thank you for listening. We'll see you next time.

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