Watch: Tourists discover massive Pacific octopus twisting inside Washington state park
A family visiting from Vancouver, British Columbia, reported the octopus to a ranger at Bay View State Park on Wednesday. The Padilla Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve was then notified and asked to help the stranded octopus.
Massive Pacific octopus rescued from Washington park
The Padilla Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve got a call Wednesday from a local park ranger asking for help with a stranded octopus at Bay View State Park in Washington.
MOUNT VERNON, Wash. – Check out this massive giant Pacific octopus that found its sea legs shoreside in Washington on Wednesday.
A family visiting from Vancouver, British Columbia, reported the octopus that was found stranded on a Puget Sound beach to a ranger at Bay View State Park. The Padilla Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve was then notified and asked to help the stranded octopus. When crews arrived, they found the soft-bodied, eight-limbed mollusk twisting around on a mud flat.
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The three-person crew was able to get the octopus into a large bin and push it to the water, where it slowly crept out and returned to the ocean.
(Padilla Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve)
"This octopus was not making much headway as its body weight was too heavy outside its usual aquatic environment," the reserve said in a Facebook post. "Additionally, the tide was going out leaving the octopus a great distance from the water."
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A family visiting from Vancouver, British Columbia, reported the octopus to a ranger at Bay View State Park on Wednesday.
(Padilla Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve)
The three-person crew was able to get the octopus into a large bin and push it to the water, where it slowly crept out and returned to the ocean.
"We can only speculate how it ended up stranded on the beach," the reserve said. "Maybe the tide caught it by surprise!"