Humpback whale stranded in Germany released into North Sea: media

A humpback whale that captured public attention after repeated strandings near Germany’s northern coast has been successfully released into the North Sea off the Danish coastline following a last-ditch, privately funded rescue mission, a member of the operation has confirmed to AFP.

Named ‘Timmy’ by German media outlets, the large marine mammal first drew rescuers’ eyes on March 23, when it was found trapped on a shallow sandbank close to the Baltic coastal city of Luebeck. After briefly freeing itself from the sandbar, the whale became stranded again multiple times in the following weeks, leaving rescue teams scrambling to find a viable solution.

By early April, German government wildlife officials had formally abandoned official rescue efforts, concluding that the whale’s condition made survival impossible and that intervention would do more harm than good. That decision, however, sparked immediate public outcry across the country, putting pressure on authorities to reverse course. Ultimately, officials granted approval for an unconventional rescue plan put forward by two wealthy German entrepreneurs, who agreed to cover all costs of the operation themselves.

The team’s first attempt to re-float Timmy, which relied on inflatable cushions and floating pontoons to lift the whale off the sandbank, failed to produce the desired result. That setback led rescuers to pivot to a new strategy: transporting the animal on a specialized covered barge from its stranding site near Wismar Bay on Germany’s Baltic coast to open waters in the North Sea.

According to Karin Walter-Mommert, a spokesperson for the rescue initiative, Timmy exited the barge at approximately 8:45 a.m. local time (0645 GMT) on Saturday. In an update after the release, she confirmed the whale is now swimming independently in open water, and is heading in the correct direction toward deeper migratory routes, at least in the immediate aftermath of the release.

The high-stakes rescue effort was controversial from its inception. Many marine biologists and wildlife experts criticized the plan, arguing that the long transport and intervention would only subject the already weakened animal to additional unnecessary stress, and called the effort a low-probability long shot.

Timmy’s weeks-long ordeal has turned the stranded whale into a national media sensation in Germany and across much of Northern Europe. Major television networks have run non-stop live coverage of the stranding and rescue efforts, digital news outlets have published constant updates, and social media influencers have shared content tracking the whale’s status with millions of followers. The intense public interest has also come with conflict: it has sparked heated public arguments between supporters of the rescue and critical experts, and given rise to a wave of unfounded conspiracy theories about the incident and the motivations behind the private operation.