A woman who had close relationships with one of the most clever
mammals in the world spoke out about hr relationships with the dolphin
in the 1960s.
Margaret
Howe Lovatt took part in an unprecedented Nasa-funded experiment on the
US Virgin Islands. She together with a neurologist, Dr John C. Lilly,
tried to teach a six-year-old dolphin, Peter, how to speak English.
Margaret
and Peter spent at least ten weeks together eating, bathing and
sleeping together in a villa which first floor was flooded with seawater
on the island of St Thomas. Although the animal did not really succeed
in language learning he developed strong and intimate relationships with
Margaret.Woman Speaks Out About Her Sex Relationships With Dolphin
During Lab Experiments
Both of them lived in water and only at
night the woman lifted herself onto a hanging mattress, protected from
Peter’s splashings by a shower curtain. The woman was constantly wearing
swimming costume and ate tinned food, so the couple was fully isolated.
And finally Peter did fall in love — sexual and romantic love — with
his teacher.
In the fourth week of experiment, an alarming
development occurred. Margaret confided to her diary: "Peter has become
sexually aroused several times during the week. I find that his desires
are hindering our relationship. He jams himself again and again against
my legs, circles around me, is inclined to nibble and is generally so
excited that he cannot control his attitude toward me. He presented his
tummy and genital area for stroking. Perhaps this is his way of
involving me in some form of sex play without scaring me away."
The
relationships, however, ended while funding was stopped. After a few
weeks of a separation Peter had committed suicide by refusing to
breathe, and sinking to the bottom of his tank. After Peter's death
Margaret married the project’s photographer, John Lovatt. Dr Lilly
continued his researches into communication between humans and dolphins
this time without Margaret's participation.
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