2024 Paris Olympics

Whale makes surprise appearance at Olympic surfing semifinals competition in Tahiti

The whale breached and gave spectators and photographers the Olympic moment of a lifetime.

A whale breaches as Brazil’s Tatiana Weston-Webb and Costa Rica’s Brisa Hennessy (R) compete in the women’s surfing semifinals, during the Paris 2024 Olympic Games, in Teahupo’o, on the French Polynesian Island of Tahiti, on August 5, 2024.
Jerome Brouillet/ AFP/Getty Images

An unlikely competitor joined the women's surfing competition in Tahiti on Monday.

With all eyes on the ocean during the final day of the 2024 Paris Olympics surfing competition, a whale breached and gave spectators and photographers the Olympic moment of a lifetime.

The whale was a safe distance from athletes Tatiana Weston-Webb from Brazil and Brisa Hennessy of Costa Rica — who were competing in a semifinal match.

It’s not uncommon for wild animals such as birds, seals and even sharks to appear while surfing around the world.

In Tahiti, where the 2024 Olympics surfing competition was held almost 10,000 miles way from the host city of Paris, whales gather around the islands during mating, birthing and migration season.

Tahiti also has several maritime protected zones. In April, Pacific Indigenous leaders — including some from Tahiti— signed a treaty recognizing whales as “legal persons,” although such a declaration is not reflected in the laws of participating nations.

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She follows in the footsteps of teammate Carissa Moore, who won the event in Tokyo in 2021, the first time the sport was an Olympic event.
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