hi, i'm dailyorca. i yap about orcas—daily!
feel free to request an orca, come echolocate! i interact from @pawscope! here is my strawpage my favorite orca is A73 springer. i also like orkid and makani i am anti-captivity :)
POD MEMBERS ⤵
141: PTN-021 “Sheuen” 140: Earth, Japan's last male captive orca 139: Shouka 138: Ethelbert, who swam 100 miles into the Columbia river 137: L130, the newest southern resident calf 136: Toa, a New Zealand calf who stranded and was rescued 135: CR004 “Delphine”, star of Killer Whales: Up Close and Personal 134: Nalani, first inbred orca to survive in captivity 133: HW-OO05ETP-0019 “Luna”, biggest of the SoCal pod 132: Nyar
131: K21 “Cappuccino”, the oldest living southern resident male at the time of his death 130: Pascuala, youngest orca to be rescued 129: T054 “Seaforth”, lone male 128: C10 “Koeye”, matriarch of C10s 127: K40 “Raggedy”, part of a matriline known for pod-wandering 126: Gudrun 125: Junior, who spent five years alone in the warehouse 124: PTN-004 “Maga”, matriarch of the PTN-004s 123: T65A “Artemis”, matriarch of the T65As 122: A69 “Midsummer” 121: Kiska, the "World's Loneliest Orca" 120: T046B5, first calf to succumb to infanticide 119: K1 “Taku”, first orca to be radio-tagged and released 118: Winston, first orca to live at Windsor Safari Park in England 117: J27 “Blackberry” 116: Surfer Girl, who was rescued and lived briefly at Marine World Africa 115: O-1087, first orca to be caught by humans and taken to a facility 114: PTN-005 “Ishtar”, former matriarch of the PTN-005s 113: C3 “Booker” 112: AV110 "Galkin”, part of Avacha Clan 111: A72 “Bend”, who has a unique nick in the front of her fin 110: Kyara, last calf born at SeaWorld 109: T007B “Spiller”, matriarch of the Secret Agents 108: A60 “Fife” 107: K27 “Deadhead” 106: J31 “Tsuchi” 105: Bjossa, last orca to live at Vancouver Aquarium 104: Malia 103: Keto 102: B7 “Scarlet”, one of the oldest northern residents 101: OM015 “Arion”, north Indian orca who migrated 2,000+ miles 100: W008 “Aquarius”, one of the two remaining west coast community orcas 99: T002C2 “Tumbo”, Bigg's orca with scoliosis 98: SN0135 “Keiko II”, Icelandic orca bearing a resemblance to Keiko 97: ANT-A-90 “Osta” 96: Typee, a killer of Eden 95: Narnia, first successfully captured Russian orca 94: NZ15 “Corkscrew”, male with a corkscrew-like fin 93: T002B “Pedder”, 92: B13 “Yuculta”, only northern resident with fully collapsed fin 91: Bingo, most prolific sire in Japan 90: K20 “Spock”, matriarch of K13s and was thought to be male 89: Chimo, only captive albino orca 88: Female Ross Sea Orca, possible mother of twins 87: J8 “Speiden”, 80 year old southern resident 86: Sonya, captive orca in China who gave birth in March 85: Nakai 84: L88 “Wavewalker” 83: A23 “Stripe”, mother of Corky II 82: Naya, last remaining orca at Moskvarium 81: SN090 “Floppy”, one of the only Icelandic orcas with fully collapsed fin 80: Stumpy, disabled orca who is cared for by other orcas 79: Moby Doll, second captive orca 78: Kasatka, former matriarch of SeaWorld San Diego pod 77: SN0113 “Riptide”, who swam 4,970 miles 76: L129, southern resident calf born in February 75: Mamuk, who lived at Sea-Arama Marineworld 74: Orkid, smartest captive orca 73: L90 “Ballena”, one of the orcas who got stuck in Dyes Inlet 72: Ishmael, one of two orcas to be used in the Navy 71: NZ101 “Ben”, who survived stranding and getting hit by a boat 70: A12 “Scimitar”, northern resident with a sword-like fin 69: Stella (ステラ), most prolific captive Japanese orca 68: Morgan, deaf orca who was rescued 67: J50 “Scarlet”, calf who was given veterinary care 66: L22 “Spirit”, second oldest living southern resident 65: Tilikum, star of Blackfish 64: Hugo, Tokitae's last companion 63: White Gladis, orca leading attacks on boats 62: T046D “Strider” 61: K47, the southern residents' third youngest orca 60: Cuddles, England's first captive orca 59: Hooky, one of the Killers of Eden 58: J45 “Se-Yi’-Chn” 57: CA216B “Jagged”, a transient with a wavy fin 56: CA171B “Fatfin”, a transient with a very thick and triangular fin 55: CO539 “Iceberg”, a resident with white coloration 54: T011A “Rainy”, a lone transient 53: T46E “Thor” 52: Trua 51: T123 “Sidney”, matriarch of the T123s 50: T019B “Galiano”
49: Wikie, who can mimic human speech 48: Ulises, oldest male captive orca 47: J26 “Mike”, named after Dr. Michael Bigg 46: K5 “Sealth”, who has a sculpture built of him 45: CA2, part of the mysterious LA pod 44: AT6 “Egagutak”, a Chugach transient who survived an oil spill 43: L86 “Surprise!”, an orca whose birth came as a surprise 42: Sakari 41: ETP14 “Kali”, part of the SoCal pod 40: Katina, a 50 year old orca who’d been SeaWorld Orlando’s matriarch 39: W001 “John Coe”, part of the west coast community made up of only one other orca 38: J1 “Ruffles”, the first southern resident to be catalogued 37: A30 “Tsitika”, a northern resident who has many grand and great grandchildren 36: J63, born in 2025 and is the fourth youngest southern resident 35: NZ68 “Funky Monkey”, a New Zealand orca with a funky fin 34: L83 “Moonlight”, one of the orcas who got stuck in Dyes Inlet 33: Kshamenk, last captive orca in Argentina, who lived 25 years alone 32: SN0540 “Sædís”, who adopted a pilot whale calf 31: PTN-001 “Mel”, one of the first to purposely strand for sea lions 30: Shamu, SeaWorld’s first orca 29: Tyson, one of the largest captive orcas 28: Taku 27: Corky II, oldest captive orca 26: ANT-A-15 “Eclipse”, who has most of her fin missing 25: Wanda, first captive orca 24: L72 “Racer”, matriarch of the L72s 23: L41 “Mega”, one of the most prolific southern resident males 22: T046B1B “Tl’uk”, who had white coloration 21: T1 “Charlie Chin”, who had an underbite 20: J22 “Oreo”, matriarch of the J22s 19: Keiko, orca in Free Willy 18: Old Thom, lone male who only travels with white-sided dolphins 17: EA_0002 “Split Fin”, whose fin is split 16: CA165 “Lonesome George”, the biggest known orca 15: J16 “Slick”, oldest living J pod orca 14: J40 “Suttles”, who closely resembles Granny 13: Makani, SeaWorld’s youngest orca 12: L25 “Ocean Sun”, the oldest orca 11: A1 “Stubbs”, first orca to be catalogued 10: L98 “Luna”, a lost calf who spent his life befriending humans 9: Tokitae, the second oldest orca to live in captivity 8: C11 “Namu”, third captive orca 7: J2 “Granny”, who’d been one of the oldest of the southern residents 6: Port and Starboard, two males who hunt sharks together 5: T063 “Chainsaw”, who has a chainsaw-like fin 4: CA216C1 “Frosty”, who has white coloration 3: Old Tom, the most known of the Killers of Eden 2: J35 “Tahlequah”, who mournfully carried her late calf for 17 days 1: A73 “Springer”, the first orca to be both rescued and successfully returned to the wild
















