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40,000-Pound Whale Carcass Rotting Off an Exclusive Malibu Beach -- And No One Knows What to Do With It
People look at a dead young male fin whale that washed up Monday between the Paradise Cove and Point Dume areas of Malibu, Calif. on Thursday. (Photo: AP/Nick Ut)

40,000-Pound Whale Carcass Rotting Off an Exclusive Malibu Beach -- And No One Knows What to Do With It

"...really unfortunate."

MALIBU, Calif. (TheBlaze/AP) -- On a private Malibu beach near the homes of celebrities like Barbra Streisand and Bob Dylan is a stinking, rotting carcass of washed up whale -- and no one is quite sure what to do with it.

Los Angeles County lifeguards planned to try to pull the 40,000-pound carcass out to sea at high tide, said Cindy Reyes, executive director of the California Wildlife Center.

People look at a dead young male fin whale that washed up Monday between the Paradise Cove and Point Dume areas of Malibu, Calif. on Thursday. (Photo: AP/Nick Ut)

But fire Inspector Brian Riley said that's unlikely to work.

"You would need a tug boat to drag it out to sea," Riley told City News Service in a report Thursday.

"It is entrenched in the sand and impossible to tow free even at high tide," Riley said. "Burial at low tide will be difficult as well as land removal. It's in an area with bad access."

The rotting carcass near celebrity homes is causing a gigantic cleanup problem as authorities try to decide who's responsible for getting rid of it. (Photo: AP/Nick Ut)

Check out this footage of the whale carcass with sea gulls feeding on it:

The city was not sure who would do the job, spokeswoman Olivia Damavandi said.

The Los Angeles County Department of Beaches and Harbors was not responsible for disposing of the more than 40-foot body, said Carol Baker, who represents the agency.

"It's on a private beach" controlled by homeowners down to the high tide line and the state is responsible for the tidelands, Baker said.

Something officials may or may not have considered is blowing up the whale carcass like Portland, Ore., officials did in the 1970s. A similar method was considered earlier this year for disposal of frozen cows in the mountains. Here's the footage of the footage of the infamous whale carcass explosion from its 50th anniversary coverage:

The young male fin whale washed up Monday between Paradise Cove and Point Dume, near the homes of the rich and famous.

The whale may have been hit by a ship and had a gash to its back and a damaged spine, according to results of a necropsy conducted Tuesday by the wildlife center.

Sea birds pick at the carcass of a young male fin whale that washed up Monday between the Paradise Cove and Point Dume areas of Malibu. (Photo: AP/Nick Ut)

"It's relatively common for it to happen. It's really unfortunate," Reyes told the Los Angeles Times.

Such accidents have become more common as increased numbers of migrating blue, fin and humpback whales swim to California's shore to feast on shrimp-like krill.

Fin whales are endangered and about 2,300 live along the West Coast. They're the second-largest species of whale after blue whales and can grow up to 85 feet, weigh up to 80 tons and live to be 90 years old.

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