Kayaking brothers rescue swimmers from ‘boisterous’ dolphin at UK coastal hotspot

The two brothers described the recovery of the two women from the sea after forcing one dolphin under water over and over again.
On Thursday, Rhys and Gareth Paterson were canoeing in the Gulf of Lyme, about 200 meters away from the shore.
“He was breathing a little about the weather, Rh Rhys said. “He was scared.”
At first, the couple thought that the Darbogas dolphin, known as Reggie, was playing. “We thought you’ve normally did what he’s doing – a little fun,” Rhys said. But after hearing the woman screaming, she pulled the shovel and saw that the dolphin pushed the head under the surface.
Before returning to the water, they brought him back to the land, where the same dolphin stuck to a yellow buoy and bothering another woman who appeared in panic.
RHYS called the swimmers to get out of the water if he detected the animal. He said: “A wild animal, as exciting as it is.
The Naval Management Organization warned about Yunus, “He’s increasingly worried, and warned swimmers to keep the dolphins, whales and porpois by laws and keep people at least 100 meters away from them.
Reggie has been a regular visitor to Lyme Bay since its first appeared in this year. Although the existence excites tourists, marine experts warned that the repeated human theme could lose the natural wars of the dolphins and make them aggressive.
Charity Marine Connection said that the animal is not hostile, but still dangerous. The founding partner Liz Sandeman told BBC: “The more people enter the water, the more fun and noisy it will become.
“If they carry one quarter of the coast from the shore, it will help. It is not yet adult, so it will grow in the coming months, it will be stronger.”




