Five people got into difficulty in water in the Salthill area of Galway, Ireland, on Wednesday after an "intimidating" dolphin was reportedly causing difficulty for swimmers.
Galway RNLI responded to the call after Valentia Coastguard received reports of the incident from a member of the public just before 7:30pm.
Witnesses said the dolphin had circled the swimmers, then swam at them in an intimidating manner, glancing off them with his tail and nose.
Mike Swan, Operations Manager at Galway Lifeboat Station said that, by the time they arrived at the scene, a fishing boat had positioned itself between the dolphin and the swimmers.
“Before we arrived, the dolphin apparently approached the swimmers and essentially began to round them up. It wasn’t exactly an attack but the dolphin began prodding and slapping them with its flipper.”
The lifeboat joined the fishing vessel in keeping the dolphin away from the swimmers until they made it safely ashore.
“The swimmers then made their way to shore but we continued a parallel search up and down the beach (from Blackrock to Seapoint) to ensure that there were no other swimmers in the area," Swan said.
The swimmers were very shook by the incident but did not require medical assistance.
Swan added that there have been other incidents “further south than Galway at Doolin at Inis Oirr”.
However, he was unsure if Wednesday evening's incident was related.
3 comments:
It's obvious -- dolphins have decided to open a theme park called "Land World" and need some humans to keep there to do tricks for a dolphin audience.
Heh heh!
Tit for tat. It's only fair.
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