SeaScope 37 - Keiko - Learning to be Wild

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  • čas přidán 1. 02. 2019
  • You can now see the entire documentaries about Keiko during 2021:
    Keiko: Born to be Wild can now be seen at this link:
    watch.eventive.org/oceanfutur...
    Keiko: Gate to Freedom can now be seen at this link:
    watch.eventive.org/oceanfutur...
    -------------------------------------------------------
    Keiko the orca is being untrained. That’s right, in preparation for his release to freedom, his trainers are teaching him how to be wild by getting him physically and mentally fit for life at sea.
    SeaScope is a fun, educational video series created by Jean-Michel Cousteau's Ocean Futures Society. SeaScope has 52 different videos about the ocean and an additional 52 Question and Answer videos that can be used to test kid's understanding of the information provided.
    On our website, you can download the free Lesson Plan and Teacher’s Guide containing 22 lesson plans that you can do in your classroom or right at home! Dive in by visiting
    www.oceanfutures.org
    The mission of Ocean Futures Society is to explore our global ocean, inspiring and educating people throughout the world to act responsibly for its protection, documenting the critical connection between humanity and nature, and celebrating the ocean's vital importance to the survival of all life on our planet.
    "Protect the Ocean and you Protect Yourself"
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Komentáře • 750

  • @SH-rn6ec
    @SH-rn6ec Před 5 lety +581

    The fact that keiko takes himself and his toys to a corner of his tank to sleep is just too much for me sooo cute. Keiko was the best orca ever.

    • @DomOfSin666
      @DomOfSin666 Před 4 lety +25

      S H He rly was. My dad was apart of the crew that took care of him in Iceland during the late 90s and early 2000s. He was one of Keiko’s main trainers and would ride, pet, and play with him everyday. He ended up leaving the team in late 2001 because I was about to be born, and Keiko died about a year and a half after my birth. It’s horrible how he died in captivity without any fellow orcas to interact with. They’re very social animals and they get depressed quite easily. Poor guy died a sad and painful death. Atleast he went out as a legend and a symbol for animal rights around the world. Rly wish I coulda met him, even if I was just a baby. I probably could’ve if my dad hadn’t abandoned the job for me (which i’m very thankful for btw). Definitely considering getting a tattoo of him at somepoint

    • @DomOfSin666
      @DomOfSin666 Před 4 lety +5

      Nicky 88 Ahhh my mistake. Didn’t know he left captivity. Either way, he died a miserable and lonely death. No other orcas would/could go near him cuz he was sick. Also just finding out he died of pneumonia :// I always assumed he just died in Iceland

    • @interceptingfist5682
      @interceptingfist5682 Před 4 lety +14

      Ain't shit cute about being in prison

    • @KareBear-th6vq
      @KareBear-th6vq Před 4 lety +18

      Not cute.....that was one of his stereotypes from being in captivity alone. He gathered his toys up like that also in Reno Adventura because he was so lonely, his toys were his only friends....

    • @its_ezralol
      @its_ezralol Před 3 lety +7

      @@DomOfSin666 He wasn’t Lonely Before he Died.They Discovered him with a Pod.But it wasn’t his because if it was he would’ve stayed there or his mother rejected him.If it wasn’t his pod he probably joined it And he mated with the other Females then left.

  • @BabeDollB
    @BabeDollB Před 4 lety +311

    Gotta love the nonchalant "his teeth have to be repaired after years of chewing on concrete" 😔

    • @WendyMG247
      @WendyMG247 Před 3 lety +4

      🥺💔

    • @WendyMG247
      @WendyMG247 Před 3 lety +4

      🥺💔

    • @samsmith3968
      @samsmith3968 Před 2 lety +23

      Thats a clear sign he was stressed from being locked up. Disgusting people!

  • @shaundraevans7559
    @shaundraevans7559 Před 5 lety +449

    Kieko was such a beautiful soul.

    • @aleeciahilliard197
      @aleeciahilliard197 Před 4 lety +2

      Emily Burns yes he was

    • @aleeciahilliard6918
      @aleeciahilliard6918 Před 4 lety +2

      Very cute

    • @erindakers8356
      @erindakers8356 Před 3 lety +8

      And he did nothing wrong to be in captivity

    • @SirObadiah
      @SirObadiah Před 3 lety

      @@erindakers8356 that's just how yal do.

    • @porkypig8008
      @porkypig8008 Před 3 lety +3

      @Sarah Arshad VIII-C-A Keiko was constantly bullied around other whales. He never got along with any whales. You think that’s a good life for him? He loved humans and never wanted to be around other whales

  • @darthstarkiller1912
    @darthstarkiller1912 Před 5 lety +277

    I am so glad I was one of those 90s kids who grew up with "Free Willy" and knowing about Keiko's odyssey. I was heartbroken when I found out he died, but I am happy he died a free orca.

    • @nriq_
      @nriq_ Před 3 lety +14

      he was not really prepared to be on the open sea, that's the reason of his death

    • @thehopelesshobbit8731
      @thehopelesshobbit8731 Před 3 lety +3

      @@nriq_ he had a chance more than others get u prick

    • @clodz_7456
      @clodz_7456 Před 3 lety +21

      @@thehopelesshobbit8731 but he's right, I heard that he frantically greeted humans wanting his old life back. Or that he'd commonly stay in people's backyards with oceans. The ocean is big and scary and he wasn't ready for it

    • @porkypig8008
      @porkypig8008 Před 3 lety +31

      “Happy he died a free orca” literally the reason he died was because he was free.

    • @clodz_7456
      @clodz_7456 Před 3 lety +2

      @@porkypig8008 yep

  • @jackspry9736
    @jackspry9736 Před 2 lety +52

    RIP Keiko (1976 - December 12, 2003), aged 27
    You will be remembered as a legend.

    • @FinalLugiaGuardian
      @FinalLugiaGuardian Před rokem +2

      Though Keiko did not survive, those who helped him can all at least take comfort in knowing that, when Keiko died, the whale we once knew as Willy was free.

    • @Stevie-hn7mp
      @Stevie-hn7mp Před rokem +1

      So sad he didn’t live long . This is why they shouldn’t take the orcas in the first place . Captivity ends up killing these beautiful intelligent mammals.

  • @mandylou5813
    @mandylou5813 Před 4 lety +69

    Most of the other orca's in captivaty have snapped and hurt people... But this whale... So sweet and gentle. Makes sense he couldn't adapt. So so sad

    • @WildeMermaid
      @WildeMermaid Před 2 lety +11

      The others only snap because they aren't being properly cared for. They are being starved, kept imprisoned in tiny tanks that are way to small for them. Etc.

    • @edgartach901
      @edgartach901 Před 2 lety +6

      @@WildeMermaid Let's say then that seaworld are the real culprits that the killer whales have this aggressive behavior, fortunately keiko ended up in a place where he was not mistreated and exploited

    • @reptileloverreptile-vt6fd
      @reptileloverreptile-vt6fd Před rokem +1

      @@WildeMermaid they are not straved and the pools are 2nd biggest in the world for orcas

  • @JPF0115
    @JPF0115 Před 3 lety +286

    It’s crazy to think that even after he was set free in the wild, Keiko still picked people over his own kind. And he was happy being around people too

    • @TheChoujinVirus
      @TheChoujinVirus Před 3 lety +58

      problem is that it may be good, but the animal rights activists weren't fond of it. There's a book called Killing Keiko, that exposed that some Animal Rights organizations were obsessed with optics in saving an orca they barely understood that rehabilitating a whale that's been raised in captivity for so long is asking the impossible

    • @amyanderson9652
      @amyanderson9652 Před 3 lety +40

      Right its insane they set the most friendliest orca free but not the ones that were goig more insane from isolation

    • @WendyMG247
      @WendyMG247 Před 3 lety +52

      He was stolen from his Family! He should never have been in Captivity!!!

    • @WendyMG247
      @WendyMG247 Před 3 lety +34

      No wild animal should be in Captivity , being exploited for $$$$ animal Cruelty!

    • @umimisako2205
      @umimisako2205 Před 3 lety +20

      He was seeking help because he was dying. He died alone because of selfish idealism.

  • @andreeajewell5304
    @andreeajewell5304 Před 5 lety +76

    The definition of a gentle giant

  • @spaceballsthechannel4153
    @spaceballsthechannel4153 Před 3 lety +121

    Some say it was a crime to send him out into the open sea after so many years of captivity and that this was the reason he died. But the actual crime was to capture him out of the wilderness in the first place. That poor boy only had the option to live a horrible life in a pool, or being sent out into the ocean with no idea how to take care of himself or getting into a group of wild Orcas... RIP poor Keiko...

    • @tessdurberville711
      @tessdurberville711 Před 3 lety +6

      He had a beautiful $7m home in Oregon, people who loved him and all the fish he could eat. He should have been allowed to live out his life there!

    • @itsikabitch9005
      @itsikabitch9005 Před 3 lety +6

      @@tessdurberville711 He had two of those three things in Norway...

    • @allison9123
      @allison9123 Před 2 lety

      @@tessdurberville711 No hahaha ha

    • @AaaaNinja
      @AaaaNinja Před rokem +2

      @@tessdurberville711 Oregon was never intended to be a permanent home for him and the only reason the plan would've changed would be profit. This is a plan that was successful only because it was stuck with right through to the end and it's worth trying because of everything we learned. We don't know anything about reintroducing orca to the wild and you can only say what shoulda been done because you have the benefit of knowing the outcome. And does knowing the outcome really show that staying in Oregon would've been better than the pen he lived in in Iceland?

    • @devilzwishbone
      @devilzwishbone Před rokem

      I disagree i feel the pressure to release him lead to a premature death, but doo gooders will be doo gooders, and thats why the world is a mess with telling parents how to dicipline kids, how to deal with colleagues at work, how police are to act etc.
      They are now trying to do the same with morgan and im glad shes been looked after properly at loro parque and that she is not released as this tragedy will likely repeat itself
      Its like you having a child, then taking them to the savanah or desert or maybe the alps and saying right off you pop
      Give me your clothes, everything you have and good luck time to survive
      You would have to build shelter, know how to heal infections without modern medicine, how to hunt (and yes hunt, as first you would have to catch and kill your meal) or at least know what is poisonous and not from vegitationx how to avade predators, make clothing, how to cook and you would need to kake fire not with matches or lighters hell no thats removed from you, but rather from what nature provides you
      Lets see how you do
      Morgan was brought into captivity as she lost her pod and was tpo young to feed her self or know how to hunt and was found half dead, she was nursed to health and later discovered she is deaf and animal rights campaigners chant and campaign to put her in the wild
      Idiots the lot of them

  • @Musiklovr93
    @Musiklovr93 Před 4 lety +25

    He’s so beautiful. I can never get enough of him. Each time I see footage it’s like the first time.

  • @GandalfTheTsaagan
    @GandalfTheTsaagan Před 5 lety +154

    Too bad that in the end he still preferred to hang arround humans and got sick
    If this was done today maybe it would've been better if he had been moved to a sanctuary where he could be monitored with more freedom
    Thanks for teaching us about conservation and wildlife management, Keiko

    • @SuperAmzy1
      @SuperAmzy1 Před 4 lety +15

      I hate people who say, you can't free Orca's becayse Keiko.. We can free them, it will be tough and we'll have to go through trial and error but if we could have someone go out with them everyday and take them to spots where penguins hang out and where seals hang out and teach them how to hunt those types of prey as well as herring, I'm sure they'll do a lot better. We can only learn more and improve.

    • @aleeciahilliard197
      @aleeciahilliard197 Před 4 lety +1

      Gandalf the Tsaagan he was beautiful

    • @KareBear-th6vq
      @KareBear-th6vq Před 4 lety +11

      He was sick for YEARS in Reno Adventura. He developed a bacterial infection from the constant warm water. Keiko was not the perfect candidate for full release, but at least he was able to make his own decisions at the end...

    • @tessdurberville711
      @tessdurberville711 Před 3 lety +1

      @@SuperAmzy1 www.amazon.com/Killing-Keiko-Story-Willys-Return/dp/0996077014

    • @TheAkwarium
      @TheAkwarium Před 3 lety +4

      @@Cami_lla1 Im pretty sure his immune system got fucked up while in captivity, which made him more prone to catching diseases

  • @christinaabrahams8362
    @christinaabrahams8362 Před 3 lety +44

    Such a shame they didn't do the same for poor Tilikum , he was suffering so much more and was very lonely as all the others picked on him so he ended up in za pool where he could hardly turn and wax not deep enough for him , he had a family in the ocean too . I'm so glad they freed Keiko love his ❤.

    • @tessdurberville711
      @tessdurberville711 Před 3 lety +1

      You wanted them to kill Tilikum too? He had a family at SeaWorld and he was not alone, one of his daughters and his grandson Trua lived with him in an good sized pool. There are videos.

    • @itsikabitch9005
      @itsikabitch9005 Před 3 lety +10

      @@tessdurberville711 Before those two were able to live with Tilikum he was the victim of severe displacement by Katina, Kalina, and Gudrun. Taima was the only female to really tolerate him for extended periods of time. This is literally written in his SeaWorld profile.

    • @WildeMermaid
      @WildeMermaid Před 2 lety

      @@itsikabitch9005 ignore Tess they have been all over the comments talking about how releasing Keiko killed him which is inaccurate. They are basically defending captivity.

    • @rebeccapolzin18
      @rebeccapolzin18 Před 2 lety

      @@tessdurberville711 yeah the family/kids that he was forced to breed with & seaworld admits to constantly taking his sperm to breed with female killer whales in every single sea world aquarium they owned during his life. Under the guise of “conservation” but in reality it was to have a constant supply of killer whales dependent on humans & cannot be released back into the wild so they could in turn make more millions for the shows they put the whales through.

    • @AnaS-cm3mx
      @AnaS-cm3mx Před rokem

      @@tessdurberville711 good sized pool? The stupidity of your comment (and you) is literally making my brain ache. Jesus fucking christ, humans are so dumb.

  • @roxanneweichinger9318
    @roxanneweichinger9318 Před 5 lety +46

    RIP Keiko, now you can swim anywhere you want buddy!

  • @ethanfairweather8736
    @ethanfairweather8736 Před 3 lety +34

    I remember seeing him while he was in Oregon. We walk into the viewing room and he was right next to the glass. It was almost as if every new visitor would catch his attention.
    Like everyone else I was both shocked and saddened when I heard that he had passed away. He deserved a better life than what he had.

  • @protodominichusplay
    @protodominichusplay Před 5 lety +335

    At least he could spend his time in the ocean before he died 😇

    • @black_goddess2813
      @black_goddess2813 Před 5 lety +45

      I feel like if they really took the tine needed keiko would of made it. I dont believe he died from a disease. Keiko still wasnt hunting on his own and still depended on humans. He wasnt ready. He didnt know how to live with a human taking care of him.

    • @Funksinthehouse
      @Funksinthehouse Před 5 lety +18

      @@black_goddess2813 five years wasn't enough, he left with his pod and returned a year later.
      Where you on the team that helped him hold his breath for 18 minutes not to mention the size growth. Better then in a tank swimming in circles and chewing on paint.

    • @black_goddess2813
      @black_goddess2813 Před 5 lety +26

      @@Funksinthehouse you must not have paid attention to the eyewitness accounts of people confirming he was alone and continued to look for human companionship. And wow a human taught a whale to hold jis breathe for 18 minutes when he might to be able to last longer than that. And im not gonna give them credit for a "new N better" tank when he wasnt suppose to be in a tank to begin with

    • @Funksinthehouse
      @Funksinthehouse Před 5 lety +14

      @@black_goddess2813 sea pen vs concrete pool. How disgusting that captivity does to cetaceans.
      Secondly, he traveled for almost a year then he popped up in Norway, of course he is going to trust humans. He was sick with pneumonia!

    • @Funksinthehouse
      @Funksinthehouse Před 5 lety +16

      As well, I agree he should of never been in captivity in the first place. Any cetaceans that is.

  • @blueoceanproductions
    @blueoceanproductions Před 5 lety +143

    So glad Keiko was able swim in the ocean again after his time in captivity.

    • @aa329809
      @aa329809 Před 5 lety +5

      Keiko died a whole after he was released

    • @num1pyrogurl
      @num1pyrogurl Před 5 lety +27

      @@aa329809 actually he was living in the ocean in a seapen before his release into the wild, so he got to enjoy the ocean a lot more.
      Keiko also wasnt the best candidate for release as he did have a love for humans and didnt get along with any pods he encountered while on his 'walks' from his seapen into the open ocean where he could have just, swam off at any point

    • @spacebug30
      @spacebug30 Před 5 lety +8

      He literally slowly suffered to death...

    • @raelynnshannon8512
      @raelynnshannon8512 Před 5 lety +3

      spacebug30 he was already sick before they released him he had an illness that couldn’t be cured

    • @roxanneweichinger9318
      @roxanneweichinger9318 Před 5 lety +17

      spacebug30, Well at least he got to experience some freedom and didn’t die in a tank at SeaWorld!

  • @ginaone6601
    @ginaone6601 Před rokem +12

    Those lucky people that got to spend time with him! He‘s like my biggest star ever, I love him so much ❤️

  • @Benyosefov
    @Benyosefov Před 3 lety +19

    He was so gentle he was amazing 🙏🐬

  • @ayana9133
    @ayana9133 Před 2 lety +12

    I just feel such a strong and overwhelming love for this creature

  • @nxte1630
    @nxte1630 Před 5 lety +65

    My dad met Keiko when he was little

  • @FinalLugiaGuardian
    @FinalLugiaGuardian Před rokem +3

    Though Keiko did not survive, those who helped him can all at least take comfort in knowing that, when Keiko died, the whale we all once knew as Willy was free.

  • @sepnyte9422
    @sepnyte9422 Před 4 lety +108

    regardless of what anyone thinks, he would've died long before 2003 had he stayed in Mexico.

    • @tessdurberville711
      @tessdurberville711 Před 3 lety +18

      Sepnyte He was happy and healthy in Oregon and should have been allowed to live out his life there. He would only be 44.

    • @itsikabitch9005
      @itsikabitch9005 Před 3 lety +8

      Tess d'Urberville Even though Oregon was well-done, no male orca has ever reached 44 in captivity (though Ulises might next year). The odds of that are so unlikely.

    • @FeuerblutRM
      @FeuerblutRM Před 3 lety +2

      @Sarah Arshad VIII-C-A
      5 years, actually. Not 1.

    • @Zeeman21
      @Zeeman21 Před 3 lety +1

      @Sarah Arshad VIII-C-A how do you know ? Seriously how ?

    • @hollohuman1256
      @hollohuman1256 Před 3 lety +5

      He's likely have died around the same time due to things like sunburn and the other health problems he had. You have to look back tho. Was the first captive orca survive? We know what went wrong with keikos release, If we we're to try this again we would need to do it with an orca who has a pod. If Corky was recorded reacting to her pods call that proves they can still understand one and other. Younger orcas like Morgan can be realised. I think her and Ula could be released if we can find her pod. there is no actual evidence to her being deaf and she was captured under weights she was not beached Rescued yes, deaf and beached no.

  • @laurakelseymusic
    @laurakelseymusic Před 4 lety +67

    Yes teach him to be wild by having him carry people around.

    • @jdf9456
      @jdf9456 Před 3 lety +25

      @Sarah Arshad VIII-C-A It was just activities designed to get him back in shape similar to a person working out at the gym to get him ready for the ocean life, carrying people around was kind of questionable though

    • @czatron
      @czatron Před 3 lety +7

      Seriously! They are dumb for trying to convince us of any form of freedom

    • @SarahtheSoldier
      @SarahtheSoldier Před 3 lety

      @@czatron Lol what do you mean?

    • @kickhighdragon6652
      @kickhighdragon6652 Před 3 lety +10

      @@jdf9456 I assume the carrying people around thing was to increase his critical thinking, as most of his thinking has been limited to instruction at the aquarium rather than letting him do what he thinks is right

    • @porkypig8008
      @porkypig8008 Před 3 lety +3

      @Sarah Arshad VIII-C-A Keiko was bullied by other whales, he never got along with them. You think that’s a good life for him? That’s pretty cruel

  • @iamnaitsirk3091
    @iamnaitsirk3091 Před 3 lety +21

    I wonder what Keiko was thinking about humans when he was about to die. "You fuckers.you took me when i was young,spent most of my time in a pool.freed me,no freaking clue what the outside world is.and here i am,dying..."

  • @ann_dreaaa
    @ann_dreaaa Před 5 lety +20

    He was so handsome ☺️

  • @mini6876
    @mini6876 Před 3 lety +17

    You know what is crazy about Keiko? He was only supposed to live like 3 or 5 more months in captivity but because he got a chance to live in the wild, he lived for five more YEARS. Crazy!!

    • @tessdurberville711
      @tessdurberville711 Před 3 lety +5

      Your arithmetic is faulty. Two years in Oregon, four years in seapens, one year of "freedom". Freedom is not the "Free Willy" fantasy so many continue to think it is. That is what is truly " crazy".

    • @mini6876
      @mini6876 Před 3 lety +3

      @@tessdurberville711 Are you delusional? Keiko lived longer when he was released into the wild than he would have lived if he had continued to be held in captivity. If you think having these intelligent animals in captivity is okay when they're held in spaces too small for them and you can visibly see the self harm they've inflicted into themselves inside captivity then you have absolutely no empathy or a soul. People like you is why our oceans are suffering and our wild animals are increasingly becoming endangered. At least he got the chance to live in the wild after a life of suffering. Lolita and other orcas like her never got that chance.

    • @tessdurberville711
      @tessdurberville711 Před 3 lety +2

      @@mini6876 No, but you clearly are, if you think that your future holds anything more than contributing to the surplus population.
      The animals in zoos and aquariums are the ambassadors for those in the wild. Without them, orcas would still be considered nothing but pests.

    • @itsikabitch9005
      @itsikabitch9005 Před 3 lety +4

      @@tessdurberville711 Are narwhals pests? I don’t recall those ever being successfully held in captivity.

    • @Borninthe80s.
      @Borninthe80s. Před 2 lety

      @@tessdurberville711 what a load of shit

  • @beautifulgudrun8802
    @beautifulgudrun8802 Před 5 lety +106

    wow they really romanticised the whole situation didn't they? in actuality, Keiko didn't seem to WANT to be free. he loved humans, and had learnt to be lazy. obviously the "un-training" helped that, but it was still there, and that's why he ended up begging for food, and approaching swimmers.

    • @num1pyrogurl
      @num1pyrogurl Před 5 lety +49

      actually he didn't beg for food, he wanted human attention because he couldn't find a pod to get along with. He wasn't the best candidate for release considering his attachment to humans, like Luna. (though i know a few that would be best candidates for release) But he wasn't exactly starving himself or anything when he swam to Norway, he had been feeding himself along the way. People intervened because he missed humans, not because he was hungry.

    • @deftone4656
      @deftone4656 Před 5 lety +19

      Orcas approach swimmers on the wild all the time.

    • @beautifulgudrun8802
      @beautifulgudrun8802 Před 5 lety +10

      @@deftone4656 that's not a good thing. (also Keiko let children ride on his back. that's not normal)

    • @Funksinthehouse
      @Funksinthehouse Před 5 lety +19

      @@beautifulgudrun8802 what's normal, watching him being sunburn in the Mexican sun, chewing on paint. No one knows how much longer he would of lived in a concrete pool!

    • @beautifulgudrun8802
      @beautifulgudrun8802 Před 5 lety +16

      @@Funksinthehouse you seem to have decided that i supported his conditions at Reino Adventura. i don't. the park loved him and cared for him, but their facilities where shit. i personally think they should of kept him in the seapen, taking him out on daily walks. he craved human attention, dumping him in the open ocean wasn't the best decision.

  • @jamieohjamie
    @jamieohjamie Před 5 lety +130

    "We chose to prepare him for the wild by having him continue to interact in the water with people!!" Uhhh not a good idea?

    • @annetteslife
      @annetteslife Před 5 lety +15

      The Oregon pen he was first transferred to should not have had public access at all

    • @HereToTroll
      @HereToTroll Před 5 lety +4

      Thought the sameeee thing

    • @CyberNut930
      @CyberNut930 Před 4 lety +12

      You can’t just release a captive animal that has grown to rely on humans for food and care to the wild. It will die because it doesn’t have the skills to survive.

    • @gwendolynstata3775
      @gwendolynstata3775 Před 4 lety +7

      I COULD be mistaken on this, but some SeaWorld trainers were originally involved in Keiko's rehabilitation, but got fired for pulling stunts like that and trying to train him for food.

    • @kw.9955
      @kw.9955 Před 4 lety +4

      He was able to survive in the wild but he choose to be with other people. He seeked human interaction.

  • @deborah5212
    @deborah5212 Před 3 lety +3

    Thanks for these kids !! You rock Kieko !!! 🐋♥️♥️♥️♥️

  • @willitohernandez1094
    @willitohernandez1094 Před 4 lety +19

    I wish I could have experienced being around such an amazing creature. He was absolutely amazing.

  • @redroomsatan
    @redroomsatan Před 4 lety +8

    I met Keiko as a child and am now seeing him as a 24 year old man is kinda makes me sad.

  • @l.k.atienza3989
    @l.k.atienza3989 Před 2 lety +2

    I LOVE YOU KEIKO🐳🙏🏻🖤🖤🖤🖤🖤🕊

  • @laurenb9858
    @laurenb9858 Před 4 lety +21

    God created something rather amazing when he made Keiko❤

  • @mmsmith1777
    @mmsmith1777 Před 5 lety +107

    How the hell are they going to teach him to communicate with other orcas and join a pod? A killer whale alone is tragic and very likely fatal

    • @alternaterikku
      @alternaterikku Před 5 lety +7

      he died

    • @GandalfTheTsaagan
      @GandalfTheTsaagan Před 5 lety +34

      When killer whale pods get too big they leave their original pod to form their own or join others
      Adult males are the ones that tend to leave to avoid interbreeding
      He wouldn't be alone for long (he found a pod), the problem turned out to be that he still preferred the company of humans so he ended up leaving behind the pod to hang arround a town that his pod used to pass by

    • @-natasha-3712
      @-natasha-3712 Před 4 lety +7

      Gandalf the Tsaagan actually adult males don’t leave moms side

    • @dominicmanriquez1645
      @dominicmanriquez1645 Před 4 lety +11

      he lived for like 7 years in the wild, so he did decent, he still was friendly to humas tho obliv because he was around them all his life

    • @ThunderClanFan22
      @ThunderClanFan22 Před 3 lety +1

      mmsmith1777 he died in 2003

  • @hajirajahan.s3537
    @hajirajahan.s3537 Před 3 lety +4

    Miss u keiko...❤❤❤😭😭😭

  • @annetteslife
    @annetteslife Před 5 lety +20

    RIP Keiko at least you passed away happy and free. He should have been left in the seapen indefinitely because that was a huge mistake for putting back into the wild without knowing where his family was located.

  • @ktroberts1687
    @ktroberts1687 Před 5 lety +40

    Imagine you are from Mars and you’re placed on Earth. Communication, social interactions, and knowledge of the reality you grew up in would be completely thrown away. But don’t worry! PETA thinks you’ll be much happier on earth instead of where you grew up!

    • @itsikabitch9005
      @itsikabitch9005 Před 4 lety +6

      Keiko was captured in Iceland. So he actually was from Earth but stolen as a 3-year-old.

    • @ripplewavess
      @ripplewavess Před 3 lety +1

      It's Ika Bitch We meet again...

    • @FeuerblutRM
      @FeuerblutRM Před 3 lety +3

      Even if you don't speak their language, wouldn't you enjoy it more to live amongst humans - your own kind - than pigs or chicken, Roberts?!

    • @roselinetheroux2884
      @roselinetheroux2884 Před 3 lety +5

      peta thinks they would be happier free in the ocean, far from the every day shows, the chlorined water, the small ass tanks and the lack of food. yes, PETA is right and yes, you are egocentric and need to grow up

    • @evolutionismrequiresfaith4974
      @evolutionismrequiresfaith4974 Před 3 lety +2

      No one has ever been to Mars so dumb analogy. So you're uneducated and think PETA is wrong and animals should live in small thanks with chlorine and getting sick from eating the pools? Please give specific details.

  • @WendyMG247
    @WendyMG247 Před 3 lety +1

    God Bless these Beautiful Children having Compassion for Animals!!! ❤🙏

    • @gtamediaproductions1
      @gtamediaproductions1 Před rokem

      Yes it was. Parents money given though lots of it. It should have all come from the organizations that plucked them out of their natural habitats. They made a ton of money off these beautiful killer whales amongst other sea creatures they had taken from their homes. The crooks that are all part of this monstrosity should be the one to pay the price for what they have done. Nit ask more $$$$$$$$$$$ from the citizens. That's insane!

  • @lamontking87
    @lamontking87 Před 2 lety +3

    Keiko forever a legend

  • @biffdanielson2820
    @biffdanielson2820 Před 2 lety +1

    Wonderful that he was able to enjoy some freedom before he died. Unfortunately evil people institutionalized him and he was never able to adjust.

  • @yveslabbe9608
    @yveslabbe9608 Před rokem

    Qui a dit que le bien être de Keiko était dans l'océan. Keiko n'est pas un killer Whall Keiko c'est un orque affectueux, il a plein de vie! Il n'a pas de famille en mer pour se protéger. Pourquoi la liberté, keiko par ces comportements il était sensible, doux, et joueur. Et suivre un bateau il adore. Je ne suis pas spécialiste, mais j'ai fait plusieurs recherches sur les orques sauvages. Se sont des psychopathes. Et je suis une mère. Il était heureux dans la baie et suivre un bateau. Les vidéos sont extraordinaire. Merci! Danielle xxx

  • @bethanyribet3704
    @bethanyribet3704 Před 5 lety +46

    He died only a few months after being in the wild because he couldnt fit in a pod, his immune system wasn't prepared for the wild, and he kept seeking out humans. It can hardly be considered a successful release as he never got to live an actual life in the wild. He should have been kept in a sea sanctuary. Social pressure is what killed keiko.

    • @darthstarkiller1912
      @darthstarkiller1912 Před 5 lety +15

      Call me naïve, but I'm glad he died a free orca.

    • @user-hh2is9kg9j
      @user-hh2is9kg9j Před 5 lety +9

      it is very hard for an intelligent being to adapt to something at a late age because most of their behaviour is learnt and not primal instincts. the best analogy is human feral children who basically grow up isolated from other humans. and even after 20 years of rehabilitation, they can't even acquire the ability of speech their brains are already wired differently.

    • @phoenixmistertwo8815
      @phoenixmistertwo8815 Před 4 lety +2

      @Robert 0077 ,
      (Edited. Ahh, sorry man, just got the Komo News Reference about the trip you speak of, I had that mixed with the trip out of Cali)
      he was flown, from what I looked into. They say it took 20 plus hours, and he didnt do to well during it all. He kept sticking to one area in Iceland, and they tried many times to teach him how to be free, and stay alive; not a good job for humans it seems. In the end, he was rejected by a pod, during an attempt for an open ocean run with them, and it was downhill for Keico not long after. (I only watched another documentary about what I just said, I haven't directly researched beyond it yet).

    • @aleeciahilliard6918
      @aleeciahilliard6918 Před 4 lety +2

      Bethany Ribet very sad

    • @itsikabitch9005
      @itsikabitch9005 Před 4 lety +5

      “HiS iMmUnE sYsTeM wAsN’t PrEpArEd”
      Here’s a little lesson in dolphin vaccination. Pathogens build up more easily in tanks than the ocean. Why? Because tanks are enclosed spaces in which filtration just goes right back into the enclosed space. The ocean has way too much room and movement for that. This is why only fish in tanks can catch marine ich.
      Now with that concept in mind, also keep in mind that orcas have VERY weak immune systems. As such, any whale or dolphin which does not receive a vaccination is nearly guaranteed to die within just one week in a tank. Karen Pryor detailed this in her memoir about her time as head marine mammal trainer at Sea Life Park in Hawaii. Keiko was literally the only vaccinated in an ocean of anti-vaxxers. His death by pneumonia could’ve been enhanced by his older age, as he outlived most captive males by the time he died. Pneumonia, the illness that killed him, also killed four whales at SeaWorld in the past three years: 36-year-old Tilikum, 3-month-old Kyara, 41-year-old Kasatka, and 30-year-old Kayla.

  • @neuroticplays
    @neuroticplays Před 3 lety

    I saw Keiko in here in Oregon. It was a dream come true

  • @sophiebee_
    @sophiebee_ Před rokem

    Sorry 5 minutes is CRIMINAL I NEED MOREEEEE

  • @tayloroconnell8906
    @tayloroconnell8906 Před 2 lety +1

    RIP KEKO!!!!!!!!!!! 😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️🐳🐳🐳🐳🐳🐳🐳🐳🐳🐳🐳🐳🐳🐳🐳🐳❤️💛💚💕💞💙🧡💜💋💋💋💋💋💋💋💋💋💋💋💋💋💋💋💋💋

  • @chetyoubetya8565
    @chetyoubetya8565 Před rokem +5

    If Keiko had another Orca that he was being untrained with and was bonded with both Orcas would have been more successful. Also, the fact he was a male Orca that usually only live on the outskirts of the Orca society did not help as well as being 100% habituated to humans. That was one of the reasons they never would release Tilikum he was habituated to humans and had also killed three people in captivity so he most likely would have always sought them out.

    • @moonshine1021
      @moonshine1021 Před 5 měsíci

      That would still be impossible as each orca has their own language, culture, etc

  • @gregmicco5838
    @gregmicco5838 Před 5 lety +1

    Good for Keiko.

  • @emmbee6552
    @emmbee6552 Před 5 lety +5

    Keiko was so beautiful 🤧

  • @rachrex
    @rachrex Před rokem

    watching this in 2023 is surreal. Free Willy was the first movie I saw as a child that made me cry. This editing style is so reminiscent of the time! And the commentary very much explains how much no one gave a f about sealife at the time...nostalgia!

  • @chandraross1506
    @chandraross1506 Před rokem +2

    The level of wickedness within an individual to take an mammal from its natural habit, use it then prepare it for its natural habit again is a level of sickness beyond human understanding.

  • @holleyedmonds7815
    @holleyedmonds7815 Před 3 lety +4

    I cried when I found out he passed away but I was happy for him he got to live free for his last few years

    • @tessdurberville711
      @tessdurberville711 Před 3 lety +1

      One year and he died sick, alone and hungry. Nothing to be "happy" about!

    • @itsikabitch9005
      @itsikabitch9005 Před 3 lety

      @@tessdurberville711 He was literally being fed by the foundation that released him 🤦‍♂️

    • @tessdurberville711
      @tessdurberville711 Před 3 lety

      @@itsikabitch9005 Until they lost their funding and they were not feeding him the full amount to "teach" him to hunt. I believe the credible people, not a CZcamsr with a crude name and most likely, a ninth grade education.

    • @itsikabitch9005
      @itsikabitch9005 Před 3 lety

      @@tessdurberville711 Mark Simmons is not credible, he has severe bias due to his career in dolphin capture...
      And Keiko was proven capable of hunting after release, but you conveniently forgot that as well I guess.
      As for “ninth grade education,” I’m a marine bio major who’s getting my bachelor’s next year. What you just did is called an ad hominem, and since you don’t know what a straw man is, I’ll explain this one. It’s an uneducated attack on a person rather than the information they present, generally used by people who know they’re wrong to try to discredit any damaging factual information.

    • @tessdurberville711
      @tessdurberville711 Před 3 lety

      @@itsikabitch9005 Then neither is Ric O'Barry or the other guilty aging hippies trying to assuage their guilt for their past crimes by committing new ones in the name of activism.
      I hope you do not expect me to just believe you. It is not as if either of us will be uploading our degrees here, is it?
      Interesting. The straw man tactic is used on me at least once a day here. I never knew there was a name for it.

  • @lookbothways5104
    @lookbothways5104 Před 2 lety +2

    This is a nice interaction between humans and orcas, i wish that all of the captive orcas were helped and released like this

  • @tayloroconnell8906
    @tayloroconnell8906 Před 2 lety +1

    I LOVE YOU KEIKO MORE MOST THAN ANY PERSON OR FAN EVER COULD!!!!!!!!!!! I WORSHIP ORCAS AND KEIKO THE LEGEND!!!!!!!!!! ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍🐳🐳🐳🐳🐳🐳🐳🐳🐳🐳🐳🐳🐳🐳🐳🐳🐳💜🧡💙💞💕💚💛

  • @skuggensdam13
    @skuggensdam13 Před rokem +2

    Keiko NEVER learned to be wild. After seeing him twice while he was in Newport, Oregon I am still furious that he didn't get to stay there. His health was good and he was quite content because he had plenty of company each day. Instead the poor creature died alone in a strange place because he was lonely and confused. That was just inexcusable!

    • @FinalLugiaGuardian
      @FinalLugiaGuardian Před rokem +2

      Keiko didn't die alone. When it was clear that he was sick, his veterinarians quickly intervened. However, by that point Keiko's Pneumonia was too severe and he died from respiratory failure.
      Keiko didn't resist the medical treatment he was being given. I think Keiko knew he was sick and he knew these humans actually were there to help.

  • @stevewilliams3850
    @stevewilliams3850 Před 3 lety +6

    Keiko died on Tuesday, and my brother's big German Shepherd, Rebel, died on Thursday of the same week. That was a sad week.

  • @chaoticbeauty016
    @chaoticbeauty016 Před 5 lety +1

    If thay whale is still alive i wish i could see him now ♡ best moment of my childhood!!! Love keiko♡♡♡♡♡

  • @richelledecky1637
    @richelledecky1637 Před 3 lety

    what a day to be named keiko

  • @notinamerica_911
    @notinamerica_911 Před rokem +1

    These trainers have great jobs preparing Keiko to be wild not in captivity. I'd pay to see this..

  • @zacharybecker9635
    @zacharybecker9635 Před 5 lety +2

    Rest in peace keiko

  • @MissMarshall
    @MissMarshall Před rokem

    The flopped fin to me looks so uncomfortable. Looks like it just throws off his entire equilibrium. Thank you for the beautiful footage. 🐳

  • @shadowhamato9878
    @shadowhamato9878 Před 5 lety +3

    Gosh I love orcas so much

  • @Romulan2469
    @Romulan2469 Před 2 lety +2

    How big was Keiko? Was his length longer than Tilikum? He seems a lot lighter to me.

  • @dinoisland6554
    @dinoisland6554 Před rokem

    Lily was getting ready to be wild with other smurfs.

  • @jasonbruck87
    @jasonbruck87 Před 5 lety +5

    Google Simon et al., 2009 and Keiko. It highlights what happened to Keiko post release.

  • @debbiegubala5429
    @debbiegubala5429 Před 3 lety +2

    We wouldn't have to worry about any of this if the idiots at SeaWorld would have just left them all alone. No capturing. Not captivity. Just should have never started this nightmare... now send them to a seaside sanctuary to live in freedom and peace..they all deserve that...please....

  • @mr.microraptor2578
    @mr.microraptor2578 Před 3 lety

    I am so happy to relase keiko in wild

  • @OneMeanArtist
    @OneMeanArtist Před 5 lety +14

    Forgot to mention how he was released too soon, abandoned and left to die clueless and alone...

    • @Bubajumba
      @Bubajumba Před 3 lety +9

      That is not true, when he left Iceland he left by free will, when he was on a walk. he was never abandoned. when he arrived in Norway he was walked 3 times a week and feed 175 kilos of fish a day to the end. He was never abandoned by humans, he was different and was not accepted by other orcas.

  • @mariajosefenton3728
    @mariajosefenton3728 Před 4 lety +2

    If you ever see a killer whale with its dorsal fin like that, it means they are unhealthy and depressed. Keiko died because he had no idea how to survive in the wild and because his only family was us, humans, he did not know how to interact with his own species that’s horrible.

    • @Bubajumba
      @Bubajumba Před 3 lety

      This is not what most scientists believe

    • @aidangm7419
      @aidangm7419 Před rokem

      Of course the following comment would receive some ‘brutal’ backlash but here are the ‘corrections’ on dorsal collapse in captivity.
      1. The whale spends all its time on the surface which allows gravity to slowly cause it to bend under its own weight. The dorsal fin is also made of cartilage not bone.
      2. It’s not depression or health decline. It’s not like a killer whale would have some kind of telekinetic ability to control its dorsal fin to go up when it’s happy or down when it’s sad.
      3. There are no currents in captivity. In the wild, the currents create pressure caused by billions of molecules bumping against either side of the fin in a similar manner to when air molecules hit the underside of the wings of a plane allowing it to fly. This applies especially when the whale is often travelling. In captivity, no currents, no water pressure and the dorsal bends.

  • @volvol1
    @volvol1 Před 3 lety +5

    It is sad to see how Keiko's dorsal fin is not normal. This apparently happens only to Orcas in capativity.

    • @CleverClover2023
      @CleverClover2023 Před 3 lety +3

      It can happen to wild orcas (less than 5% have collapsed dorsal fins), but that is due to injury or stranding. 100% of all captive orcas, male and female, have either partially or fully collapsed fins.

    • @aidangm7419
      @aidangm7419 Před 3 lety +1

      @@CleverClover2023 some females like corky and Orkid have their dorsal fins still standing high

    • @WildeMermaid
      @WildeMermaid Před 2 lety

      @@aidangm7419 that is because it is more common in males. Likely die to females being smaller, etc.

    • @aidangm7419
      @aidangm7419 Před rokem

      @@WildeMermaid well it depends on the size of the males. The larger the male, the bigger the dorsal fin and the more weight it has to carry which makes it more likely for collapse.

  • @marcopohl4875
    @marcopohl4875 Před 5 měsíci

    How did they train him to hold his breath?

  • @chamorugirl70
    @chamorugirl70 Před 2 lety +1

    I don't see a link, can you post it

  • @gioiamenn
    @gioiamenn Před 5 lety +3

    free willy for ever😢♥️

  • @yornus_martinus3093
    @yornus_martinus3093 Před 5 lety +1

    It´s great to see, that his last years were more than a small tank. Does anybody knows if there is another orca who was released back to the freedom?

    • @jemzlamont
      @jemzlamont Před 4 lety

      None as far as I know. So sad to know we still steal them from the ocean.

    • @itsikabitch9005
      @itsikabitch9005 Před 4 lety +3

      Jennifer Lamont Omg I have great news for you! Russia has set the quota for orca captures at 0 for two years in a row now. All of the orcas that were illegally captured in the Whale Jail in 2018 have since been released. Russia was the last nation on Earth which permitted the capture of killer whales, which means it is now illegal to capture or kill an orca in all nations.

    • @WildeMermaid
      @WildeMermaid Před 2 lety

      Not that I am aware of but many have been & are fighting for Miami Seaquarium to retire Lolita/Tokitae & return her to the Salish Sea where a Sea Pen is waiting. She was captured 51yrs ago in Puget Sound. She hasn't seen another Orca or Whale since 1980. Her mother & pod are still alive & in that area so she could possibly be reunited with them. . . if only we could get her released.

    • @behindtheglamour
      @behindtheglamour Před 2 lety +1

      They're working on getting Lolita freed, but haven't made much progress until she was discovered to be incredibly ill. It seems like they're only willing to release them (for good company image) when they know they're really sick and probably won't make it.

    • @behindtheglamour
      @behindtheglamour Před 2 lety +1

      @@itsikabitch9005 I had no idea that it's now illegal everywhere. Thanks for teaching me something new, Ika.

  • @GinessisOrig
    @GinessisOrig Před 2 lety +1

    Помню я плакал когда узнал что он умер, я тогда не мог успокоиться 1 месяц. Помню даже эту депрессию и не хочу чтобы кто-то её испытал

  • @unoimright5153
    @unoimright5153 Před rokem +1

    You can tell Keiko was one of the youngest whales ever taken ! It’s all he remembers is humans!!

  • @addisonsunderland8074
    @addisonsunderland8074 Před 5 lety +2

    Finally free sea world should watch this

    • @philorcinus5869
      @philorcinus5869 Před 5 lety +1

      As soon as he was "released", his life became a real nightmare. Kindly shut it.

    • @philorcinus5869
      @philorcinus5869 Před 3 lety

      @Sarah Arshad VIII-C-A that wasn't even my point but ok

    • @aidangm7419
      @aidangm7419 Před rokem

      Plastic pollution, noise pollution and ship strikes have entered the chat

  • @ScarlettO-Hare29
    @ScarlettO-Hare29 Před 3 lety +1

    #EMPTYTHETANKS

  • @Jane_lotus
    @Jane_lotus Před 2 lety +2

    Orcas are definitely intelligent

  • @labreeskarogers1102
    @labreeskarogers1102 Před 5 lety +1

    It's sad to know he died but at least he got a chance

  • @kaisookimdo
    @kaisookimdo Před 3 lety +1

    es una pena que nunca lo logro ya que si fue liberada en mar abierto pero al estar tan acostumbrada a ser alimentada por seres humanos y convivir con ellos se enfermo no pudo aprender a cazar por si misma ni a vivir en libertad

  • @dinoisland6554
    @dinoisland6554 Před rokem

    Keiko is getting ready for wild orcas.

  • @valcreirrodrigreir1605

    Valcreir😭😭🙏🙏🙌

  • @badmingtonsunset1386
    @badmingtonsunset1386 Před 5 lety +2

    Rip Keiko :(

  • @shivaa3ps177
    @shivaa3ps177 Před 3 lety +6

    Did you forget training him on communication? Killer whales hunt in pods and are social animals.
    It would have been better if you released 10 killer whales from captivity (Social structure may not be similar to natural pods but at least they'd have a pod.)
    And 10 killer whales would be freed instead of 1.

    • @itsikabitch9005
      @itsikabitch9005 Před 2 lety

      This was attempted by the TINRO Center after the Whale Jail freeze-over controversy. Most of the artificial pods eventually disintegrated, unfortunately.

  • @evelynphillips8654
    @evelynphillips8654 Před rokem

    Free Willy is my most favorite movie I was born in the 90s 90s babies all the way

  • @joshay321
    @joshay321 Před 5 lety +33

    That’s a strange dog

  • @Chamorrita-rg9qp
    @Chamorrita-rg9qp Před 4 lety +4

    There's another park...Japan! Hopefully Japan will do the same as USA seaworlds.Thanks to Blackfish orcas can now be in their natural habitat---open ocean! Thank you BLACKFISH!

    • @tessdurberville711
      @tessdurberville711 Před 3 lety

      Chamorrita Jaz To what are you referring, exactly? They have nothing to do with the U.S. SeaWorlds.

    • @itsikabitch9005
      @itsikabitch9005 Před 3 lety

      Stella is too old for pregnancy and Lynn is too young, so Port of Nagoya isn’t gonna start breeding anytime soon, but Kamogawa Seaworld has expressed interest in artificially inseminating Lovey, Lara, and Ran, though the only males left who are trained for AI outside of SeaWorld are Kshamenk and Inouk. Japan doesn’t have a sustainable population, though, so they’ll have no real choice but to phase out eventually.

    • @tessdurberville711
      @tessdurberville711 Před 3 lety +1

      @@itsikabitch9005 Japan will do what it wants to do. It is not under U.S. jurisdiction.

    • @itsikabitch9005
      @itsikabitch9005 Před 3 lety +1

      Tess d'Urberville So Japan will inbreed? Taiji quotas for orcas are at 0. All 7 Japanese whales are descended from Stella. They literally backed themselves into a corner. There’s literally only 2 males available for artificial insemination right now. That’s like saying Japan will keep Commerson’s dolphins, despite all of them being descended from one of three females (Aura, Haruka, and Tierra).

  • @BS-pn1iy
    @BS-pn1iy Před 5 lety +7

    Theyre doing it very wrong. This needs to be done by a team of scientists and experts. Good attempt and happy to see him in the ocean

    • @SealegsSam
      @SealegsSam Před 5 lety +1

      Yeah obviously. Considering he died a month later.

    • @yaranieuwenhuis9462
      @yaranieuwenhuis9462 Před 5 lety +4

      They had to rush it because their sponsor went bankrupt I believe

    • @jemzlamont
      @jemzlamont Před 4 lety

      It was a year later as far as I read he disappeared for a month but was properly released in the ocean over a year.

    • @jemzlamont
      @jemzlamont Před 4 lety

      @@yaranieuwenhuis9462 yeah he went bankrupt and they had to rush the release and couldn't afford to keep him in the pen either. Sad buy true.

  • @1hunasgegi77
    @1hunasgegi77 Před 4 lety +1

    Yh u missed out the part where he died after being in the wild

  • @johnjuanda5745
    @johnjuanda5745 Před 4 lety

    RIP Keiko

  • @shizemu4108
    @shizemu4108 Před 3 lety

    Keiko is nice

  • @TabascoChipotle
    @TabascoChipotle Před 5 lety

    Orcas live in pods. Can she survive alone? Or is it possible to introduce her to a pod?

    • @IcestormTundra
      @IcestormTundra Před 5 lety +1

      They tried to locate his original pod but couldn't. he survived in the wild for a year before appearing off the coast of Norway and dying of pneumonia.

    • @GandalfTheTsaagan
      @GandalfTheTsaagan Před 5 lety

      When killer whale pods get too big they leave their original pod to form their own or join others
      Adult males are the ones that tend to leave to avoid interbreeding
      He wouldn't be alone for long (he found a pod), the problem turned out to be that he still preferred the company of humans so he ended up leaving behind the pod to hang arround a town that his pod used to pass by

  • @josephfrye8750
    @josephfrye8750 Před 5 lety

    I wonder if Orcas in captivity age quickly.

  • @christietang3985
    @christietang3985 Před 11 měsíci

    Honestly Keiko rehabilitation has spoiled him big time!

  • @chaoticbeauty016
    @chaoticbeauty016 Před 5 lety

    ♡♡♡♡♡

  • @averycheesypotato
    @averycheesypotato Před rokem

    The 2 years he had in the wild were worth 2 decades in a tank.
    I only hope that in the future, cetaceans released from captivity fare better thanks to the lessons Keiko taught

    • @Genius-ze5dc
      @Genius-ze5dc Před rokem

      My hope for the future is no captive Orcas at all. Boycott Seaworld

  • @FanFickChick1992
    @FanFickChick1992 Před 3 lety +2

    I can't help but think that he would have lived much longer had they kept him in a sea pen where he could live in semi freedom. I just don't feel he acclimated to living in the wild like they wanted him to. He didn't live long after being released, and I feel like that had a lot to do with the team being pressured into getting him out on the open ocean so quickly. He had been in captivity his whole life, and the moment he wasn't taken care of by humans he caught pneumonia and died.

    • @itsikabitch9005
      @itsikabitch9005 Před 2 lety

      He was cared for humans at some point in the wild in Norway, but I agree that he should’ve stayed in a sea pen.

    • @anastasiawinters4455
      @anastasiawinters4455 Před 2 lety +2

      im glad someone agrees he was better in the seapen but not in a tank

  • @allison9123
    @allison9123 Před 2 lety +1

    He was finally free!!

  • @Herowebcomics
    @Herowebcomics Před 3 lety +3

    OH!
    It was KEIKO who was set free!
    Not Tilli!
    I got them confused!

    • @WildeMermaid
      @WildeMermaid Před 2 lety +2

      Nope sadly Tilli wasn't released but did also die.

  • @ddawkins9713
    @ddawkins9713 Před 3 lety +2

    Just tell those kids the truth. They F keiko up when they STOLE him from his home in the wild.