- Sukadi, Bengkulu Fishermen (2017)
Viral pope vomit caused by a fisherman of Kaur district, Bengkulu province named sukadi found 200 kilograms of floating whale vomit. Sukadi explained that at first he did not know that the floating thing was a whale vomit. He thought the scattered object was waste.
"I check the GPS, I think it is waste, then I picked up in the hope of cleaning the sea from waste," he said.
However, when the object he collected in the boat and then taken to land, only known if it is a whale vomit. Sukadi also did not know that the object is expensive. He knows after he checked in Youtube videos.
- Khalid Al Sinani, Fisherman of Oman (2016)
Khalid Al Sinani discovered the floating whales in the waters of the Qurayat region. He will stop being a fisherman and will move on to the property business.
"For 20 years since I first went to sea with my father, I always dreamed of finding a whale vomit. My dream is now a reality, "he said as quoted from the page Gulfnews.com.
Khalid then collected the 60 kg whale vomit and lifted it to the boat. It is estimated that the whale vomit found Khalid can be sold at Rp 33.7 billion. So when there is a local perfume company who bid at Rp 187 million per kilogram, Khalid refused.
- Gary and Angela Williams, Tourists (2016)
The Williams couple were traveling to Meddleton Sands Beach near Morecambe Bay, England, when suddenly they smelled a very bad smell. The odor was derived from a stone-like object, white, but very oily.
Gary and Angela have apparently read about ambergris or the whale vomit whose price could reach billions of rupiah. The Williams pair found a 1.57 kg ambergris that is estimated to be worth more than Rp 900 million.
They claim to have received an offer from several parties, but at this time Williams was asking the opinion of experts from New Zealand and France.
- Alan Derrick and his son, Tom, Tourist (2016)
Alan said initially with the child was walking along the beach. Until finally Tom saw a rock that is quite strange.
"I said to Tom if we had to keep the stone, because I a few years ago never knew a similar stone story," said Alan.
He is ready to sell objects found with a value of £ 65,000 or approximately Rp 1 billion. The weight of the whale rock found by Alan is 1.13 kg. Alan has sent samples to Italy, New Zealand and France to test the stone. Of course if true it is a whale vomit, they will become a billionaire.
- Charlie Naysmith, Elementary School Students 8 Years (2012)
Charlie Naysmith, initially did not think if the stone-like chunk that he found on the beach Hengistbury Head is a rare precious item, namely vomit sperm whale called ambergis.
The vomit hardened into stone after exposure to sun and salt. The shape is smooth and feels like a candle and smells sweet. The vomit found in Naysmith weighs 600 grams.