Two brothers have described saving two women from the sea after the other. Dolphin Again and again forced them to underwater in different incidents Dorset
RHYS and Gareth Patterson were kaying in Lyme Bay on Thursday, when they jumped the animals about 200 meters on a swimmer’s back.
“He was like a gasp for the wind,” RHYS said. “She was nervous.”
First, the pair thought that the botalenose dolphin, which is locally known as Regi, was playing. “We felt that he was doing what he does in general – just a little fun,” RHYS said. But after hearing the woman’s scream, he saw and saw the dolphin pushing his head under the surface.
They brought her back to the land before returning to the water, where they saw the same dolphin harassing another woman who was clinging to a yellow aunt and watching “nervous”.
RHYS urged swimmers to get out of water, if they present the animal. He said: “It is a wild animal, as exciting. I think it is now up to everyone to start giving his place a little more respect. If we were not that day, I think something bad could have happened.”
The marine management organization is “rapidly worried” about loan dolphins, and reminded the swimmers that dolphins, whales and porpoise are protected by law and warned people to keep them away from them at least 100 meters away.
Regi has been a regular visitors at Lime Bay since the first appears earlier this year. While their presence thrilled tourists, marine experts have warned that human contacts may lose their natural war and behave aggressively.
Charity Marine Connection said that the animal was “fickle” instead of hostile, but still dangerous. Co-founder Liz Sandman told the BBC: “The more people enter the water, the more he will be fickle and excited. I have seen the dolphin doing this before turning to swimmers where they will sink them under water.”
He said: “I think it will help if they walk a quarter miles below the coast. He is not yet an adult, so he will grow up in the coming months, he will become more powerful.”