Earth Changes
As far as everyone is concerned, the huge carcass needs to be disposed of - but different hapu with roots in the harbour, its mountains and its coast disagree about who has that right and the way it should be done.
The 15m-long, male sperm whale carcass was dragged ashore at the northern end of Ruakaka Beach after being found on the sand bank near the harbour entry at Marsden Pt on Tuesday morning.
Department of Conservation (DoC) arranged for it be towed in to prevent the incoming tide floating it into the shipping channels.
It had been dead for a while, he figured, because it had already started to stink.
"I never saw anything like it, only on TV and the internet," he said later. "I didn't expect to find it there."
The location was south of Liberty State Park and north of Global Terminals and the Liberty Cruise Port.
Chen called the Bayonne Health Department, leaving a message.
"We were here doing a job and next thing we notice are bees flying to the van," Henrique Paiva told WPIX on Friday. "And we couldn't get out."
The van, just blocks away from Rockefeller Center, contained humidifiers and other equipment.
Officers are trying to identify the cause of death and find a place to bury it.
"We received reports that the body of an unidentified marine animal had washed up at about 11am. We have identified it to be a whale, but have yet to learn the exact species," said Patsorn Visudthiwatcharakul, director of Public Health and Environment at the Cherng Talay OrBorTor.
"Between April and May we generally have the kinds of temperatures we are seeing now," Paasonen noted.
The weather forecast puts daytime highs Thursday and Friday at a chilly 10 to 11 degrees Celsius, while highs in central regions will runs from six to 7 degrees and from two to seven degrees Celsius up north.
According to Paasonen, at this time of year, average daytime highs in Helsinki should be around 17 degrees, and even up north, highs should be above 10 degrees.
Meanwhile new data from the Finnish Meteorological Institute indicate that across northern Finland - from Kainuu in the east to northern Ostrobothnia in the west - temperatures in May were nearly three degrees Celsius below the long term average.
The last time Finnish residents experienced a May as cold as this was in 1969 - nearly 50 years ago.

A tornado spotted near Three Hills, Alta., was moving east at 50 km/h. Emergency officials have cancelled the warning for Kneehill County and Starland County.
Social media lights up with stunning images and video of twister
A tornado was spotted northeast of Calgary on Friday, startling onlookers and touching off a brief emergency alert.
The tornado was seen at 5 p.m. near Three Hills, moving east at 50 km/h. Other communities in the tornado's path included Morrin and Rowley.
The alert was cancelled at 5:27 p.m.
"The thunderstorm is no longer capable of producing a tornado," Alberta Emergency officials said.
Stunning images and video of the tornado were captured by Albertans living in the area.
June 1st means summer, right? Oh wait - this is Sweden after all. Bring on the snow and hail! Last month in Sweden was a month of extreme weather.
The far northern parts of Norrland saw record-low temperatures, the lowest since 1968 according to preliminary figures from the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute (SMHI).
So surely, summer should be here by now? Well, think again - this is Sweden, after all. On June 1st, snow was falling over the small village of Kåbdalis in the northern county of Norrbotten.
"June 1st! From clear blue sky (and freezing cold) to snow storm in one minute. Yes, I do like snow. And I like winter. But maybe not in June," Kåbdalis resident Marie Nygårds wrote on Instagram.
In the arctic mining town of Kiruna, also in the Norrbotten county, residents got to experience a mix of weathers: "Hail, snow, thunder, +2 in Kiruna," Ulrica Strålind wrote on Instagram.

Drone 11 footage shows the major damage in Sealy, Texas after severe weather moved through the area on Tuesday, May 23, 2017.
Many thought that the damage was caused by a tornado but NWS says that microbursts can produce similarly strong winds, reaching up to 100 miles per hour.
Mike Fisher says he and his son are lucky to be alive - they were at home when the storm hit. Fisher said the sky turned black and that hail started to fall.
"They say an old wives' tail about a tornado sounding like a train, we didn't hear no train, all we heard was some loud hail hitting, of course all the windows blew out in got pretty rough after that," said Fisher.
No fatalities were reported. However, about a dozen people had to be treated for minor injuries.
The earthquake, which struck at 1:25 p.m. local time on Friday, was centered about 112 miles (180 kilometers) northwest of Attu Island in Alaska, or 168 miles (270 kilometers) southeast of Bering Island in Russia. It struck at a depth of about 19 miles (31 kilometers), making it a shallow earthquake.
The U.S. National Tsunami Warning Center put the preliminary magnitude of the earthquake at 6.8. "Based on earthquake information and historic tsunami records, the earthquake is not expected to generate a tsunami," the center said.
Friday's earthquake is expected to have been felt across parts of the Aleutian Islands, but damage or casualties are unlikely. The closest islands - Attu Island and Bering Island - have only a small population. Attu Island is also home to Attu Station, which was closed in 2010.
The sparsely populated region of Alaska, which sits on the so-called 'Pacific Ring of Fire', is occasionally struck by powerful earthquakes. Most notably, an enormous 9.2-magnitude earthquake struck north of Prince William Sound in Alaska on March 27, 1964, unleashing a tsunami which killed at least 143 people.
Alachua County sheriff's deputies responded and were guiding morning commuters slowly through the area.
Newberry City Manager Mike New said the 3 inches of rain the city got Tuesday could have washed out soil supporting a waterline that subsequently sagged and ruptured, washing out even more soil and deepening the hole.
When deputies were called about 6:20 a.m. Wednesday, the sinkhole was about 30 feet wide and 30 feet deep near the roadway. Eventually, a portion of the road collapsed after the soil supporting it caved in.













Comment: See also: 26 cm (10 inches) of snow recorded in eastern Finland on Mother's Day
Cold weather is keeping birds from nesting and delaying blossoming of wild berry bushes in Finland's north