Putrid whale carcass parts stink up street

? Getting the rotting corpse of a dead sperm whale off Oahu’s North Shore was only the start of the problem.

Then residents had to deal with the smell of decomposing whale when big chunks of the 12-ton carcass fell off a truck carrying giant whale bones to Hawaii Pacific University.

“The smell just lingers,” said Richard Kurosu, who lives near a corner in Kaneohe where several whale parts littered the road for more than two hours.

The bulk of the blubbery mass was moved to a pit near Kahuku Point, where it was buried. But the university wanted the bones to teach students about the marine mammal.

Sperm whales are an endangered species, and their bones are generally not available.

Jeff Walters of the Department of Land and Natural Resources, said it cost between $10,000 and $15,000 to remove and bury the whale.

A giant grave was dug for the whale and a prayer ceremony was held as the remains were covered.