Woman Who Wanted To Give Birth In Sea With Dolphin As Midwife Appears On Katie Piper's Extraordinary Births Show

Mum Wants To Give Birth In The Sea With Dolphins, May Be A Bad Idea
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Katie Piper met a mum-to-be who wants to give birth in the sea and use a dolphin as her midwife.

Piper met her as part of Channel 4's Extraordinary Births which airs on 2 September, where Dorina Rosin and her partner Maika Suneagle, from Hawaii, explained their birthing plan.

The couple felt it was a "natural" birth and Rosin said she thinks her child will be able speak dolphin. However many have slammed this as being an extremely "bad idea".

Speaking of the show, Piper told The Times: "I found the dolphin people a bit out-there but they seemed so happy and the woman was so relaxed."

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Spiritual healer Rosin and her partner told Katie Piper about their plans and said they were aware of the risks of other marine life in the water, too.

The couple run a healing retreat in Hawaii and believe in the healing power of nature and dolphin song.

Before giving birth, Rosin had what she called a "38-week blessing", where she swam heavily pregnant alongside the mammals in the water. In the video (shown below), dolphins appear swimming alongside her.

Speaking on Lorraine, on 1 September, Piper added: "Dolphins are clever and [Dorina] felt really connected to them. I thought, well it isn't for me but it's right for her. You know, happy mum, happy baby."

Commenting on a dolphin-assisted birth in Discover magazine, Christie Wilcox said this was a very "bad idea", adding: "No matter how cute they might appear, dolphins are not cuddly companions.

"They are real, large, ocean predators with a track record for violence - even when it comes to humans."

Others are airing their views on Twitter.

In Rosin's blog, Song of Trust, she explained her connection with dolphins, writing: "In 2011 and 2014 I had the privilege to learn from and with wild and free dolphins and Humpback whales in Hawaii who transformed and healed me in a very profound way.

"I felt deeply called to spend two times three months in nature – mostly by myself – and to deeply connect to this magical place of beauty and transformation inside and outside which called me home."

In other extraordinary births in the show, one woman opts to keep her baby attached to the placenta until it falls off naturally.

Extraordinary Births airs on 2 September on Channel 4 at 10pm.

Thinking Like a Dolphin
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Spotted dolphins swim off the northern Bahamas, where the waters are exceptionally clear. Three generations of these social animals—300 individuals over 30 years—have been the subject of the longest-running underwater dolphin study in the world, led by Denise Herzing. (credit:Brian Skerry / National Geographic)
(02 of06)
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Relative to body size, the brains of bottlenose dolphins, like these at the Roatán Institute for Marine Sciences in Honduras, are among the largest in the animal kingdom. Scientists are attempting to decode dolphins’ complex vocalizations. (credit:Brian Skerry / National Geographic)
(03 of06)
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Intensely social, dolphins work together on ingenious feeding strategies. Dusky dolphins off Patagonia herd anchovies into neat spheres and then take turns gulping. Two birds, a Magellanic penguin and a shearwater, join the frenzy. (credit:Brian Skerry / National Geographic)
(04 of06)
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Spinner dolphins return from foraging to a bay off Oahu, Hawaii. Garrulous and gregarious, spinners gather in groups that can number in the thousands. (credit:Brian Skerry / National Geographic)
(05 of06)
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Dolphins communicate with their bodies as well as with sounds. A dusky dolphin catapulting through the air off the coast of Patagonia may be sending a signal to other dolphins: The food here is good. Come and get it. (credit:Brian Skerry / National Geographic)
(06 of06)
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See more images in the May issue of National Geographic Magazine. (credit:National Geographic)