The way Nan Hauser saw it, she was either going to film a miraculous encounter between herself and a 25-ton humpback whale or document her own death.

“I’ve always said I’d be killed by a whale,” said Hauser, a marine biologist who travels all over the world but resides in Brunswick, only half-kidding. “If someone told me the story, I wouldn’t believe it.”

It happened in October, in waters off the Cook Islands in the South Pacific. Hauser, 63, accompanied by other researchers and a documentary filmmaker, was diving to search for whales, something she had done dozens, maybe hundreds, of times before.

She encountered a humpback and swam toward it. She knew not to touch the creature and was a little paralyzed when it got close to her. Then, the animal started to nudge her, almost push her with its head, in the water. At some points, the whale shielded her with its pectoral fin.

“It was trying to be gentle, but this is a 50,000-pound mammal,” said Hauser, who is president of the Center for Cetacean Research and Conservation, which documents behaviors and patters of large sea mammals, especially humpback whales. She’s been featured in numerous films that have aired on Animal Planet, Discovery Channel, National Geographic and Smithsonian.

Not knowing what was happening, and not wanting to risk angering the whale, Hauser simply stared at the animal and tried not to make sudden movements.

“His eye was so wide, I was just waiting to get whacked,” she said. “But it was clear it was trying to communicate something.”

Advertisement

For 10 tense minutes, the whale moved Hauser through the water.

“It felt like three hours,” she said. “I just tried to stay calm so he couldn’t sense my fear.”

Her research companions watched what was happening but didn’t really know what to do, Hauser said. They even turned off the drone they were using to film footage so they wouldn’t accidentally have footage of her being mauled to death.

When she was close enough to the research boat, Hauser moved away from the whale with trepidation. She spun around to look back and that’s when she saw it – a massive tiger shark that almost certainly would have torn her to shreds.

The whale saved her.

Hauser posted the video footage from her encounter, most of its shot underwater, on Monday morning. Since then her phone has been ringing off the hook. She said she was happy to oblige each interview request.

Advertisement

“We know these creatures are altruistic,” she said of whales, her longtime research subject. “We know they hide seals under pectoral fins to protect them from predators.”

But a human?

“I’ll admit, I’ve been studying whales for 28 years and I’ve published 56 papers, I think. I’ve never heard of that,” Hauser said.

Even after she swam away from the whale and started to climb onto the boat, the creature surfaced again about 20 feet away.

“It was checking on me, making sure I was safe,” she said.

Hauser, who raised a family and worked as a nurse before embarking fully on her current career, said she’s had numerous close encounters with whales. She knew enough to keep her distance and said she was trying to get away from it at several points.

Advertisement

Now, she’s glad she didn’t

The tiger shark was at least 15 feet long, she estimated. Bigger than any she’d ever seen.

Hauser suffered some bruises and scratches from her impromptu swim with the whale but was otherwise unscathed.

She came home a few weeks ago to frozen pipes at her Brunswick home. After a brief respite and some time with her grandchildren, she’s headed back to the South Pacific in less than two weeks.

Eric Russell can be contacted at 791-6344 or at:

erussell@pressherald.com

Twitter: PPHEricRussell


Only subscribers are eligible to post comments. Please subscribe or login first for digital access. Here’s why.

Use the form below to reset your password. When you've submitted your account email, we will send an email with a reset code.