
Humpback whale that swam to Circular Quay, delighting ferry passengers, has left Sydney Harbour
The sub-adult whale had left the harbour, with no sign of it on Thursday morning, a government source told Guardian Australia.
The whale delighted onlookers and experts after it was first spotted swimming at Circular Quay on Wednesday morning before moving east on what experts tracking the mammal called its 'full harbour experience'.
Dr Vanessa Pirotta, a whale expert on board a New South Wales Maritime boat on Wednesday, confirmed the whale was 'not in distress, quite the opposite'. It appeared to be inquisitive and relaxed, visiting various harbour-side locations, she said.
The whale's appearance was a 'reminder that Sydney Harbour is very wild'.
It was last seen at Rose Bay on Wednesday evening, Pirotta said on Thursday.
The founder of citizen science project Wild Sydney Harbour, which works with organisations including the NSW government, said ordinary people who spotted the whale throughout the day helped experts know where it was. The process was 'citizen science at its very best'.
There have been no sightings of the whale on Thursday to her knowledge, Pirotta said.
Pirotta said while the whale may have left the harbour, she cautioned it could resurface.
'It was just all over the place [on Wednesday]. So just when you think that it's probably had enough, maybe it hasn't, and maybe it could pop up where we least expect it.'
She encouraged anyone to report sightings to NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service.
Sign up to Morning Mail
Our Australian morning briefing breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what's happening and why it matters
after newsletter promotion
'Because it was sometimes conspicuous and sometimes inconspicuous, it wouldn't surprise me if it's still in the harbour, but surely by now, it must have done so much exploring,' Pirotta said.
The Port Authority of NSW also had cameras monitoring the harbour and they were an 'incredibly important part of yesterday's mission,' the whale expert said on Thursday.
Humpback whales usually travel the 'humpback highway' which runs up and down Australia's east coast. It is not unusual for them to briefly leave it, with four humpbacks having been seen in the harbour this migratory season.
But Pirotta said this week's visitor was unusually explorative, coming as far as the harbour bridge.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
15 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Tiny corgi spotted pacing on filthy balcony and then surrendered by his owner is officially up for adoption
A 16-month-old corgi spotted pacing up and down a filthy apartment balcony for hours on end is one step closer to finding his forever home. Video taken from a high-rise building in Melbourne 's CBD earlier this month showed Harry, formerly known as Trump, trapped in dire living conditions. In the footage, the dog was seen racing back-and-forth on the narrow balcony, which had only a small kennel with no bedding. The glass sides of the balcony were smeared with filth and the owner seemingly only cleaned the dog faeces once a large amount had accumulated. On July 11, Acting Lord Mayor Roshena Campbell told Daily Mail Australia the owner had surrendered the dog to council that morning. Harry was then taken to The Lost Dogs' Home in North Melbourne, where he underwent medical checks for one week. On Friday, the home announced Harry was officially up for adoption but would continue to need behavioural rehabilitation to 'heal' from his ordeal. 'After being left alone for months on a balcony in filthy, lonely conditions with minimal human contact, Harry came into care frightened, confused, and unsure how to be a dog,' the home wrote, alongside a slideshow of images of the dog. 'He's looking for the special person or family who can help him continue his journey toward a happy, secure life.' The home said Harry, who now weighs 14kg, has an enthusiasm for play and people, but he finds it hard to settle at times. As a result, he might urine-mark indoors and outdoors when anxious as a 'way of coping with stress', which will take time, patience and guidance to improve. 'It's important to understand Harry will need ongoing behavioural rehabilitation, and his new family must be prepared for the challenges - and the rewards - of helping him heal,' they said. 'He deserves a home that sees his potential and is willing to work with him every step of the way.' Aussies left a slew of comments celebrating Harry's recovery. 'So glad he is safe now and hopefully in a loving home soon. A shame we have such inadequate animal welfare laws,' a user said. 'I'm so happy Harry is free from that tiny space and lack of love. I hope he finds his forever home.' Harry's poor living conditions in his former home were first brought to public attention by Melbourne woman Helia Abdollahi. She made several reports to authorities, which amounted to no action, and decided to share the distressing video online in a last-ditch effort. Ms Abdollahi previously told Daily Mail Australia that she spent three months recording the lonely canine living in the block of units across from her. 'We've seen him out there in the rain, during freezing cold nights, and for hours on end. He paces in circles, shows signs of anxiety, and barks or cries for attention,' she said. 'When the owner does show up, the dog gets excited, wagging, hoping for interaction, but is completely ignored. He even seems scared to step inside the apartment, like he knows he's not allowed.' The footage and photos of the corgi, known as 'Trump', and his dire living conditions outraged hundreds of Aussies who labelled the dog's treatment as inhumane.


The Guardian
a day ago
- The Guardian
I used to be scared of being a ‘difficult woman'. Now it's a badge of honour
I remember the thrill I felt when someone would tell me that I was a 'good girl'. I understood from a young age that, as a girl, goodness would be my supreme achievement – my calling in life. But what that looked like or how I might embody its essence took time to decode. I remember being in the back seat of our brown HJ Holden when I was young, leaving a family party and being reprimanded by my parents for my 'behaviour'. I was mystified. I had no idea what I had done that had caused them such embarrassment. Had I run when I was told not to? Or had I misunderstood an instruction? Was I a 'bad girl', I remember wondering. As powerful and incentivising as the idea of being a 'good girl' was, the 'bad girl' label was probably more powerful in the way it encouraged me to avoid it at all costs. I would have done anything to never be thought of as bad. I wasn't clear in those early years on what being a bad girl entailed but the threat was powerful enough for me to remain strictly within a narrow set of ideas of how I needed to behave. I have a strong memory of some family friends having a 'bad girl' stay with them for a while. Her mother was no longer around to care for her and her father was barely in the picture. I remember the warning that came with her before she arrived, that she was a kid who had done some 'bad' things and I wasn't to get too close. This all horrified me. So grand was the image of the bad girl in my psyche that I was immediately scared of what she might try to make me do. What sort of badness would she get up to? Only days after her arrival, I heard she had weed on the front lawn. She had simply pulled her pants down and peed. No one was sure why she hadn't gone into the house to use the toilet, and everyone was confused and shocked. So I pretended to be shocked too. But I don't think I was shocked – I think I was afraid. Afraid of her wildness. A wildness that I understood and felt inside me too but that had been pushed far down. While I performed the 'good girl', I never felt like one. The mere suggestion that goodness was judged by people on the outside of me was enough to send me into spirals of doubt and self-loathing. I would watch adults closely to see if I had made them happy. Had I said 'thank you'? Had I smiled at the right time at their joke? Had I spoken sweetly enough? Had I agreed with the way they thought about the world, even if I didn't? In writing my latest book, The Wisdom of Age, I wanted to find out from the elder women I interviewed if it was true that I might be able to grow old disgracefully, as all the Hallmark cards are now suggesting. Was it going to be real disgrace? Or just a performance of disgrace? Would I be regarded as difficult if I didn't do what was expected of me as an ageing woman? Yes, I was told by many women: if you step out of line and outside our ageing woman tropes, the swiftness of 'difficult' being attached to you and its conjuring of the bad girl trope remained a powerful restraint. Who would want to be considered difficult after so many years playing the game? There had been a stirring in me since my mid-30s to stop placating the people around me, and now that I had hit my 50s, it had begun to feel as though it was shaking me to get out. I wanted to break some metaphorical plates and leave them for someone else to clean up. I spoke to artists and activists in their 70s, 80s and 90s to find out if they were comfortable being thought of as difficult. These were women who were not making it easy for those around them to violate the rights or safety of others. They were speaking up and turning up to the frontline of protests, or they were simply letting their families know that they were no longer going to put up with their shit. In every conversation, there was a glint in their eyes at the suggestion of being 'difficult'. 'Difficult' had become a rallying cry – a sign that they were on the right track, a sign that they had reconnected with the girl who raged inside them. Many of those women wanted to clarify that being difficult was not done merely for difficulty's sake. Rather, they were finally following the beat of their heart, unmoved by the social conditioning that had held them captive for so long. 'Difficult' didn't faze them – it emboldened them. This wisdom, along with so much else I received in the writing of the book, has caused me to revisit that good girl and suggest that perhaps we might consider a do-over. Get back some of those years when we kept the peace and smiled nicely. We will invite back the girl who is clear on who she is – before she was told to be something else. The girl who doesn't please those around her for the sake of pleasing but instead loves wildly and passionately when it feels right to do so. The girl who is in touch with the voice that has been calling her for her whole life. The girl who might, facing the horrors of the life she had been given, pull down her pants and wee on the front lawn. Jacinta Parsons is a radio broadcaster and writer from Melbourne. Her latest book is titled A Wisdom of Age


The Guardian
a day ago
- The Guardian
Native title win for Millewa-Mallee First Nations peoples after decades-long fight
After a difficult journey spanning more than two decades, traditional owners say they've 'weathered the storm' to finally have their native title rights recognised. The federal court on Friday awarded the historic native title determination to the Indigenous peoples of the Millewa-Mallee from northwest Victoria, for the first time granting exclusive native title rights in the state. Exclusive native title means the three traditional owner groups which make up the First Nations peoples of the Millewa-Mallee – Latji Latji, Ngintait and Nyeri Nyeri – have the right to control access to their country under traditional law and customs. Sign up for Guardian Australia's breaking news email The determination covers thousands of square kilometres including Mildura and extending through the Murray-Sunset National Park to the South Australia border. It is the strongest form of native title rights and something the Latji Latji, Ngintait and Nyeri Nyeri people have been granted over some areas included in the determination. Shane Jones Senior, a Latji Latji man and the applicant for the peoples of the Millewa-Mallee, said he was proud of the result. 'Alongside all First Peoples of the Millewa-Mallee, including the Ngintait and Nyeri Nyeri peoples, we continue to live our culture,' he said. 'With native title, our present and future generations can continue the legacy of all our elders and emerging elders.' The decision sets a precedent that may support other native title holders and claim groups to seek this same form of recognition. The native title holders also have non-exclusive rights, including the right to access the land and use its resources, and to protect sites, objects and places of cultural and spiritual significance. Nyeri Nyeri elder Wendy Brabham said the group have been seeking native title recognition for more than 25 years. 'I hear the voices of our Nyeri Nyeri ancestors, I hear the voices of our present generations,' she said. 'They weathered the storm; we are still weathering the storm.' Brabham said she hopes future generations will build on the federal court's decision to honour the ancestors by continuing to strengthen, preserve and share culture.