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"path": "/2026/05/29/fears-carcass-timmy-whale-explode-failed-1-200-000-rescue-28555483/",
"publishedAt": "2026-05-29T11:22:52.000Z",
"site": "https://metro.co.uk",
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"textContent": "The bloated body of Timmy, the humpback whale lying off the Danish island of Anholt (Marcus Golejewski/DPA/Cover Media)\n\nExperts have warned that the carcass of a young humpback whale which washed up on a beach after a failed rescue effort could explode.\n\nThe animal, affectionately known as Timmy, gained public attention after becoming stranded in shallow waters off Germany’s Baltic Sea coast on March 23.\n\nTimmy was initially found trapped on a sandbank in Lübeck Bay unable to free himself. He eventually managed to escape but then became stranded several more times.\n\nAfter a string of abandoned attempts in late April, two German entrepreneurs funded a major operation to save him, which cost an estimated £1.2million.\n\nTimmy was first stranded in late March and a major rescue attempt failed (Marcus Golejewski/DPA/Cover Media)\n\nTimmy was successfully lured onto a water-filled transport barge before being released into deeper waters.\n\n## Sign up for all of the latest stories\n\nStart your day informed with Metro's **News Updates** newsletter or get **Breaking News** alerts the moment it happens.\n\nHowever, the story ended in tragedy. Timmy was found dead, 20 metres off the coast of the Danish island of Anholt, on May 15.\n\nDanish authorities confirmed his identity through a tracking device attached during the earlier rescue attempt.\n\nLocals and tourists have now been warned to stay away from the carcass as gases produced during decomposition have caused the remains to bloat, raising fears it could eventually explode.\n\nGerman whale researcher Fabian Ritter said the “situation is almost inevitable”.\n\n“The pressure inside is building up more and more, and at some point the animal could explode with a huge bang,” he told Deutsche Presse-Agentur (DPA).\n\nRitter was among several marine experts who criticised the costly rescue operation that moved Timmy from the Baltic Sea off Germany’s coast towards Danish waters in a mission estimated to have cost around £1.2 million.\n\nAuthorities fear that the body could explode and have warned people to stay away (Marcus Golejewski/DPA/Cover Media)\n\nThe undertaking involved placing the whale inside a water-filled barge before towing it using a tugboat. He was also fitted with a tracker designed to monitor both his location and vital signs, although it was later revealed the device was faulty.\n\nAt the time, many experts argued the sea animal was already too weak to survive, warning before the rescue that moving it could cause further stress and reduce its chances of survival.\n\nDanish officials have now urged the public to keep their distance from the carcass due to the risks posed by both a potential explosion and infection. Beaches and coastal areas have also been restricted due to the risk of explosion.\n\nDenmark’s environmental and nature agency and coastal rescue services are set to carry out an operation to tow the whale further offshore before later transporting it to the port town of Grenaa for scientific analysis.\n\nAccording to authorities, an explosion could be avoided by poking holes into the whale’s carcass or cutting it open completely.\n\nComment now Comments \nAdd Metro as a Preferred Source on Google\nAdd as preferred source\n",
"title": "Fears carcass of Timmy the whale could explode after failed £1,200,000 rescue"
}