From an emotional point, it is the hug of a lifetime. A rare opportunity to hold another creature so huge who is now so helpless. To feel them tense in discomfort or fright and then relax when they have been soothed or to hear them sing is worth the hours of discomfort standing mostly in one position in chest deep water.
So far Ive worked one evening and one morning in the water and one afternoon with general and assorted duties as needed.
Some lessons learned:
Each of these precious creatures needs a LOT of man hours to heal and survive this crisis. There are not enough hours in the day and there are not enough volunteers. No, the entire operation is not well organized as they are working severely understaffed in crisis mode for days on end with no sleep.
Knowledgeable experts from other marine mammal facilities can not help because of the 72 hour quarantine imposed so that infectious diseases are not carried from one facility to another. Additionally, several of the volunteers who have come from these facilities can not go home to rest for fear of contaminating someone in their own household who is still working with marine mammals at these other facilities. Travel trailers have been borrowed so these folks can get some sleep.
If you can NOT get in the water or maybe they ask you to wait a bit until someone is ready for relief, there is SO MUCH that needs to be done. Answer phones & questions, sign up volunteers. Receive volunteers, liability releases need signing, give them a site tour. If youve done a few water shifts and listened to several briefings, you may find yourself giving intro briefings to new volunteers. Fitting volunteers with donated wetsuits, washing/hanging wetsuits. And litter patrol is ALWAYS needed. The People kitchen duty includes fetching beverages, straightening up, and making sandwiches, etc. for other volunteers and staff. In the Mammal kitchen there is washing & sterilizing dishes (These dishes are 3 gallon stainless buckets, industrial blenders, etc.), filleting herring, making sodium chloride solution, pulverizing vitamin tablets. You could find yourself running to the pharmacy for more supplies.
This was my impromptu shopping list: lecithin granules, Vitamin E, Vitamin C, Calcium, mineral oil, salt, half & half. (HINT: If there are any pharmacists with connections for donations
IJS). They also need purified water and distilled water in large quantities.
If you can donate funds, the cost of these very specific medical and dietary needs of these creatures is astounding.
The science of making gruel is extremely exacting. Some of the whales get a herring slurpy, while the calves are getting a herring milkshake made with half&half. They can not be fed just any fish, but herring from a specific Canadian region that has the optimal fat, protein, and water content per volume. Cant just fill them with junk food of the seas. These mixes are supplemented with vitamins, nutrients, and medications. The meals are liquefied so the animals can be tube fed with a hand pump. Unfortunately to get a consistency that will go through the tubes, the blenders tend to aerate the mix. Yes, whales get gas and then their gruel is supplemented with GasX or mineral oil. They have burned through several blenders in just a few days.
Vital signs are taken often, blood work is taken daily. We all know medical lab work isnt cheap. Injections are administered. Medicated salves are dabbed on their raw areas and where parasites appear, not to mention keeping them covered and wet to prevent even more sunburn.
This is a whale of task (pun intended). ANYONE can help in ANY capacity for a little bit of time or a lot of time. One thing everyone can do is spread the word. Folks from near and far are helping out. This effort will go on for weeks. You will feel needed and you will feel emotionally vested to see these creatures improve.