Majestic display: massive Newfoundland blue whale makes its Toronto debut
Ever wonder what a dead blue whale smells like?
A Fossil wrist watch that Mark Engstrom wore as he helped preserve the bones of Blue, a 24-metre female whose skeleton goes on display Saturday at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto, will give you an idea.
“It’s this kind of permeating, oily smell that’s as much of a taste as it is a smell,” said Engstrom, the deputy director of collections and research at the ROM.
Engstrom gave lectures after the blue whale was recovered in May 2014 from a beach in western Newfoundland. People would line up for a whiff of his stinking watch, he recalled in an interview.


