Personnel from Marine Animal Rescue with the whale carcass at Dockweiler Beach. Courtesy Los Angeles County Fire Department Lifeguards
Personnel from Marine Animal Rescue with the whale carcass at Dockweiler Beach. Courtesy Los Angeles County Fire Department Lifeguards

Authorities have towed the smelly carcass of the humpback whale and video star “Wally”– which washed ashore at Dockweiler State Beach — back out to sea.

The approximately 45-foot-long sea mammal was identified by experts as a whale that first appeared off Southern California in 2015 and appeared in a couple of viral videos.

The dead whale came ashore at 8 p.m. Thursday, according to the Lifeguard Division of the Los Angeles County Fire Department.

The whale remained on the shoreline overnight, and the curious public was warned away by yellow police tape.

Authorities waited until high tide — just after 7:30 p.m. Friday — to haul the whale out to sea where it could be devoured by other hungry sea creatures.

Many beachgoers commented on the rancid stench the whale’s carcass produced.

Covina native Donnette Chavira said the smell was “pretty bad” and wondered aloud if it was going to last the entire day.

A man at the beach told ABC7 of the spectacle, “Besides the smell, it was pretty cool — it was awesome!”

— From Staff and Wire Reports

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