
Professional diver James Moskito was working alongside a team of volunteers near the Farallon Islands off the coast of San Francisco when an unusual sight caught his attention. A humpback whale lingered at the surface far longer than normal, behaving in a way that immediately raised concern. Whales typically surface only briefly to breathe, but this one remained still, its eye above water, seemingly focused on James. “I could tell it was looking at me,” he later recalled, sensing something was clearly wrong.
Trusting his instincts, James swam toward the massive animal. In a moment that felt deeply personal, he gently placed his hand near the whale’s eye and spoke calmly. “I’m here to help you. I’m not going to hurt you,” he said, hoping to ease the animal’s distress. As he moved around the whale’s body, the reason for its strange behavior became horrifyingly clear.
A 3,000-pound anchor was lodged in the whale’s tail, attached to a chain stretching nearly a mile long. The heavy metal weight was dragging the whale down, putting its life in serious danger. James and the other divers immediately got to work, battling exhaustion and dangerous conditions as they spent hours cutting and untangling the chain to free the trapped animal.
When the final piece was removed, the whale’s response was unforgettable. It began circling James in slow figure eights, then gently rubbed against him, an apparent gesture of gratitude. The rescue highlights not only human courage, but also the emotional intelligence of whales. Research shows whales share specialized brain cells linked to emotion, similar to humans and primates. Moments like this remind us that compassion across species is both powerful and real.