Friday, December 31, 2010
Lots of gray whales
Today Friday 12-31 we had an awesome trip and followed a group of 6 whales for about an hour. Calm seas and a bunch of whales.
No trip on Sat due to rain but maybe on Sunday.
Thanks
KEVIN
Sunday, December 26, 2010
Gray Whales on the move
christmas break, weather and loads permiting. There are about 30,000 gray whales that migrate from the Bering Sea to Baja Mexico and have to pass through our area. Dress warmly and let's go see some whales.
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
BLUE WHALES TODAY!!
Thanks
Kevin [_O_]
Wednesday, September 8, 2010
whale update
kevin
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
Close encounters!! FRIENDLY WHALES!!
On the afternoon run we had a repeat performance with the HUMPBACK WHALES again just showering the passengers with whale breath. AWESOME! AWESOME! AWESOME!
Monday, August 30, 2010
- Capt. Kevin
Saturday, August 28, 2010
Whale Watching:August 28th
-Kevin
Friday, August 27, 2010
August 27, 2010
Thanks
Kevin
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
Wednesday August 25, 2010
Kevin [_O_]
Aug 23 and 24
August 24th Tue. We had an amazing day. It was sunny and clear and we saw 2 BLUE WHALES AND 2 HUMPBACK WHALES. The nicest day of the year. The forecast is for light and variable winds for the next several days.
Kevin \o/
Saturday, August 21, 2010
Saturday Aug 21, 2010
Kevin :=)
Aug 20,2010
Kevin
Thursday, August 19, 2010
August 19, 2010
Thanks.
Kevin
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
FIN WHALES AND BLUE WHALES
Thanks
Kevin
Tuesday, August 17, 2010
Humpback whales
On Monday August 16 We had a foggy and rough day and failed to get the whales :=(
For Tuesday Aug 17 we ran about 9 Miles to the SW and saw spouts in the distance but had to head back because we were out of time. The forecast looks good for the next few days so we are due for some great trips.
Kevin
Saturday, August 14, 2010
Saturday August 14, 2010
On the morning trip we saw HUMPBACK WHALES and BLUE WHALES. The weather was calm and we had a great trip.
On the afternoon trip we had the whales in sight at 9 miles, but sadly the whales were heading out and we ran out of time and couldn't catch up to them. Return trip passes were given out. We did have DAHL'S PORPOISES riding the bow wave for a short time. Sweet!
Kevin
Perfect day!
Kevin
Thursday, August 12, 2010
Whales, whales, whales!!
Thursday 8/12/10 9:00 am trip. We saw the spouts and were just about to the whales, 6 miles SW of Morro Bay, when the Coast Guard boat came along side and ordered us to leave the area because of a drill. We were unable to find other whales. Return passes were issued.
Wednesday 8/11/10 We saw whales on both trips.
Monday, August 9, 2010
Monday's Whale Trips
On our morning trip we went out about ten miles. We found at least a dozen humpback whales, along with a large group of sea lions feeding with the whales. Also off in the distance were a couple of blue whales feeding. The weather was great, and the water was calm. All in all, it was another awesome trip.
Afternoon Trip:
On the afternoon trip we went out about seven and a half miles. We found about twenty humpbacks, that were having a blast breaching. The crew also found a group of blue whales that were feeding with the humpbacks. The weather was beautiful, and the water was calm just as it was on the first trip. Another great whale watching adventure.
Thanks,
Kevin =]
Sunday's Whale Trips
Yesterday, while making our way south; our crew found four blue whales, and a pod of common dolphins. Also spotted during the trip was an albatross. The weather was amazing, and the water was calm and glassy. The blue whales put on a great show, as did the dolphins. Overall it was another excellent trip.
Afternoon Trip:
The weather was also exceptional on our second whale trip. The water remained calm and glassy as it had been on the first. Despite our crews effort, we did not see any blue whales on this trip. We did however see a minke whale. Still a pretty good trip overall with the beautiful weather and calm sea state.
Thank you,
Kevin :]
Saturday, August 7, 2010
Risso's, right whale dolphins and Blue whales
On the afternoon trip we saw Blue Whales outside of Estero Point.
This mornings trip we ran out to the drop off just above Church Rock and scored on 2 BLUE WHALES AND A HUMPBACK. The weather was great and it was a wonderful day.
thanks
Kevin }<,> \o/
Thursday, August 5, 2010
update for the last 3 days
On Wed Aug 4th the whales were out 9 miles to the south west. We saw both BLUE WHALES and HUMPBACKS. On the afternoon trip we got skunked on the whales and the weather was a little sloppy :=(.
Today we ran out to the sw area and up to Church Rock. We covered a lot of ground but came up empty on the whales. We did see some sea lions, sea otters, an albatross and several the sea birds.
On the 1:00 trip we ran up to the NW and saw several bait balls with birds working. A dozen common dolphins were spotted and also a shark that was either a great white or a salmon shark. Again we covered a lot of ground and came up empty.
Thanks,
Kevin
Monday, August 2, 2010
Still on a roll!
I think we saw about six blue whales and maybe a dozen humpbacks. Two more spectacular trips!!
Kevin }
Sunday, August 1, 2010
Still calm and lots of whales!!!
both BLUE AND HUMPBACK, are still milling around in front of Morro Bay feeding on krill. We ran 3 trips today and they were all awesome, with multiple whales on each trip. The weather was again calm and the forecast is for more of the same.
GO WHALES!!
Thanks
Kevin
Whales everywhere!!
Kevin \o/
Friday, July 30, 2010
Rouviashyana's Blog
June 12, it took Kevin and me (and several whale watchers) awhile to get out where some other boats had spotted whales, but once there it was obvious that there were 2 blue whales. One was a juvenile, probably 55-60' long, and the other was much larger, perhaps 75-80' long. An adult blue whale's blowhole is about a foot long, and the blow is a tall straight cloud like an Italian cypress tree, 30-40' tall. There are few words to describe what it's like to be next to such immense creatures.
June 13 was foggy. Captain David Butler and I used a technique we've used before to find whales. We'd motor along for awhile, turn the motors off and listen for about 10 minutes, then move on. The third time we listened, we heard a whale's loud huff behind us. We caught up to a humpback whale that was making repeated shallow dives. It dove 25-30 times, only raising its tail twice. At one point, we saw a huge patch of tiny krill (shrimp, Euphausia superba) just under the water's surface. The whale was evidently gorging on that. While headed back in the fog, we encountered the same 2 blue whales seen on June 12, and another one or two. It was a little hard to tell how many whales were there, because their grayish-white blow melted into the foggy background. Hearing that blue whales were seen again on June 18 makes me want to shout that You Gotta Come Along. OK, you probably figured out, I work on the boat, but really it's exciting. Come check us out.
Rouvaishyana
6/18/2010
June 19, Kevin and I were with 4 blue whales for an hour and a half! This included two 75-footers and two smaller, probably juvenile individuals. At one point two blue whales were swimming toward the boat. We know they won't hit us, but it's unnerving anyway. At another point 3 blues spouted at the same time, and as their mist was drifting away, the 4th one came up and blew. We get to spend quality time with the world's largest animals--and you can too. Trips leave at 9:00 AM, with afternoon trips if there is enough interest. We'll go if you want to and the weather cooperates!
June 26, Captain Wayne Blecha and I headed southwest toward Montana de Oro and Pt. Buchon. It wasn’t long before we saw spouts. There was a group of blue whales about 3 miles from the harbor. We came up to them, and saw that there were at least 5, perhaps 6, close to the boat, with another two whales closer to shore. Today we’d follow a whale for 2o minutes or so, then it would disappear. Overall, they put on such a show that we spent almost an hour and a half with them. Reluctantly, we headed back to shore. We’ve put this into the blog before, but blue whales are very rare in our area. They are regularly seen in summer and early fall in the Santa Barbara Channel, but very seldom off our coastline. This is a unique opportunity!
Morning, June 27, Capt. Dave Butler and I were on the boat again. We spotted whales at a distance. As we got closer, we saw that it was a large humpback whale with a juvenile—probably her offspring from last year. I say “probably” because we aren’t doing genetic studies, but it is common for young humpbacks to stay with their mother for a year or more beyond weaning. We followed these whales for 45 minutes, and while headed in, we saw 3 blue whales. Continuing in, the humpback and blue whales alternated. What a great wildlife spectacle today!
Afternoon, June 27, the sightings were so good this morning that we went out for an afternoon trip as well. There weren’t as many people, but the weather stayed calm, and we started seeing blue whale spouts on the horizon before we were even out of the harbor mouth. They were actually just beyond the ½ mile buoy where the California sea lions hang out. We saw spouts of 3 different whales, and at one point a minke whale surfaced, obviously riding the bow wave of a blue whale. The minke whale swam closely past the boat, then disappeared as this species often does. One blue whale began approaching the boat, so Captain Dave simply turned off the motors and let us drift. A large adult blue whale, 75-80 ft. long, circled the boat for 45 minutes. Time and time again it came up within 15-20 ft. of the boat and blew its enormous breath, sometimes moistening us with its mist. The sound alone startled us often, as we looked in one direction for its reappearance, only to have it surface somewhere else. The animal made repeated passes and arcs through the krill, which we could see on the fish-finder between 30 and 180 ft. down. The immense power of the whale was palpable—we could see its tremendous muscles working, see its great blowhole open and close, hear its breath and sometimes feel it. There was none of the foul smell that sometimes comes with humpback whale breath. To experience all this on a calm ocean, with the boat’s motors silenced, out of earshot of land, was to experience sea life in a powerful and full way.
2010 will be remembered as a year for curious blue whales, swimming toward the boat, and in this case circling it at close range.
Mon., June 28, I didn’t work on the boat. Melody, who usually works in the office and on the dock, went on the boat as a deckhand. I had been urging her to experience the blue whales firsthand. The whales were out there. She reported that a blue whale swam underneath the boat. Whales of various species sometimes do this, appearing on one side of the boat, then another, perhaps trying to evade us, perhaps just catching some food and coming up where it pleases them. More blue whales were seen during the week, indicating that this is no longer just a passing phenomenon. The blue whales have been here more than two weeks now, which by itself indicates how rich and productive the ocean is. We have seen great masses of krill on the fish-finder and with our own eyes. An adult blue whale can eat 4,000 lb. of food in a day, and they feed almost exclusively on krill. An engineer on a recent trip Googled the calorie content of shrimp and found it to be about 500 calories per pound. Assuming krill to be somewhere close to this, an adult blue whale eats about 2 million calories of food every day. Another way to look at the productivity of the ocean is this: If there are 10 blue whales in our area (there could be more, or fewer, but this is a starting point), they have eaten about 560,000 pounds or 280 tons of krill in the slightly more than 2 weeks they have been here. This translates to billions, if not trillions, of individual krill, which is also providing food to small schooling fishes, seabirds, humpback whales, and more. The ocean can look empty to a casual observer, but it is teeming with life, especially this year.
Sat., July 3, early morning photography tour. We found a blue whale to the southwest. Seas were calm, but unfortunately the whale kept swimming seaward of the boat. This meant that to approach it for photos, we had to drive into the swells, making for a bumpy ride. It was difficult to get photos.
On later tours that day, we saw humpback whales 6-7 miles from shore, then blue whales closer to shore.
Sun., July 4, we saw two humpback whales in the morning. During the afternoon trip, we visited the same two—which we could tell by the tail flukes and the fact that one of them had a set of shallow propeller cuts just behind its blowholes. These two whales approached the boat very closely: 5-10 feet, sometimes just below the surface as we watched them pirouette. At one point, one of the whales stuck its nose out of the water toward the boat. It could not have been more than 3 feet away. If I had had the presence of mind, I would have opened the gate, leaned out, and touched the whale. That will have to wait for some other time.
2010 will also be remembered as the year of the “friendly” humpback whales. These 2 humpbacks today were as close to the boat as the legendary gray whales of Baja California.
Mon., July 5, sorry to say we did not see whales. On one of the trips we saw a pair of harbor porpoises but no other marine mammals at sea. We almost always see seabirds, and some marine mammals inside the bay, such as sea otters, harbor seals, and California sea lions.
Sat., July 10, another early photo tour. We spent about an hour with a pair of humpback whales, which made the photographers very happy. Later that day we saw blue whales, one of which startled us by surfacing to blow behind the boat as we passed by. We ran three trips altogether, and saw whales on all of them. On one of those trips we also saw a small school of common dolphins, with a couple of Pacific white-sided dolphins mixed in.
Sun., July 11, In the morning we saw one blue whale and spent about an hour and a half with it. Some of its dives were very long: 9-10 minutes, with one dive 14 min. long. During this time it is easy for people to get distracted and forget that they are looking for whales. In the afternoon, we found at least 5 blue whales, and possibly another two. With single whales or pairs below the surface, moving large distances underwater as this species does, and surfacing away from where we had seen them last, it becomes a bit difficult to determine exactly how many whales are present.
Mon., July 12, the sea is still like glass as it has been for most of the last 2 weeks or more. There was a fog bank offshore, which we drove into as we headed seaward. Capt. Cavan Hadley and I spotted a blue whale about 7 miles offshore and we spent nearly an hour with it. During this time, however, the whale took some very long dives, the longest being 17 minutes. Fortunately, it surfaced near its dive area a few times, which made it easy to stay with it. If it had swum away in the fog, it would have been difficult to find it again.
I should mention that we have seen blue whales raise their tail flukes numerous times. Some whale-watching books state that blues rarely raise their flukes when diving, or that they do this only one about one in ten dives. It seems to us that it happens more often than this. Also, blue whales appear to have a mottled pattern of markings on the underside of their flukes that may be as distinctive to them as the fluke markings of humpback whales. Further study is needed to confirm or refute this.
Today is cause for celebration. My first blue whale blog was June 12-one month ago today. The blue whales have taken up summer residence. They have also been spotted in Monterey Bay, and are feeding in their more usual places in the Santa Barbara Channel. Come see them with us while they’re still here!
Sat., July 17, sorry to say we did not see whales today despite 3 trips, one of them a photography tour.
Sun., July 18, one blue whale swimming across our bow, and a humpback which put on a good but brief show that included a few breaches. This was welcome because seas were a bit rough today, and we went about 7 miles to find the whales. The humpback was headed away from the harbor, so we only saw it for a short (but sweet) time before heading in.
Sat., July 24, on the morning trip we saw 1 minke whale, 2 blue whales, and 3 humpbacks. Everybody was excited. In the afternoon, we again saw a minke whale, 2-4 blues (this species moves so fast while submerged that it can be difficult to tell whether one is seeing the same 2 whales later in the trip), and large number of humpback whales. There were probably 20-25 whales all around us. We’d see a spout, then 2 others, then 3 or 4 more, then another. This went on for quite awhile. On both trips today we spent nearly 2 hours with the whales.
lots of whales!!
Thanks
Kevin \o/
Wednesday, July 28, 2010
HUMPBACK WHALES!!!
Kevin }<'>
Monday, July 26, 2010
MORE Whales & Dolphins
Sunday, July 25, 2010
Still on a great roll!!
THANKS
KEVIN }< '>
Saturday, July 24, 2010
Minke Whales!!
Come check us out.
Aloha,
Capt. KEVIN (0) > (0)
Friday, July 23, 2010
We headed to the same area for afternoon run and ran into several BLUE WHALES at about 3 miles. Then we continued to the SW and found the land of milk and honey. There were lots of BLUE WHALES AND HUMPBACK WHALES IN EVERY DIRECTION. Flat calm seas breaching whales in the distance, whale tails, fins, spouts at every point of the compass!!
The weather forecast sounds great for the next few days. We will be running every day.
Thanks,
Kevin }<,>
Wednesday, July 21, 2010
Wear your helmet!!
Kevin }< ,>
Wednesday, July 14, 2010
ROUVAISHYANA'S LOG
Thanks for sharing your experiences.
Kevin }<,>
June 6 aboard Dos Osos with Captain Kevin, we saw a gray whale, about 2 months past the season when they are usually here. Normally they migrate past Morro Bay Dec.-early Feb. going south, then return north late Feb.-April. That day we also saw a minke whale several times. This was also unusual because that species often doesn't show itself more than once or twice. At one point, the minke whale was swimming in one direction, and crossed paths with the gray whale which was headed the opposite direction. An amazing day!
June 12, it took Kevin and me (and several whale watchers) awhile to get out where some other boats had spotted whales, but once there it was obvious that there were 2 blue whales. One was a juvenile, probably 55-60' long, and the other was much larger, perhaps 75-80' long. An adult blue whale's blowhole is about a foot long, and the blow is a tall straight cloud like an Italian cypress tree, 30-40' tall. There are few words to describe what it's like to be next to such immense creatures.
June 13 was foggy. Captain David Butler and I used a technique we've used before to find whales. We'd motor along for awhile, turn the motors off and listen for about 10 minutes, then move on. The third time we listened, we heard a whale's loud huff behind us. We caught up to a humpback whale that was making repeated shallow dives. It dove 25-30 times, only raising its tail twice. At one point, we saw a huge patch of tiny krill (shrimp, Euphausia superba) just under the water's surface. The whale was evidently gorging on that. While headed back in the fog, we encountered the same 2 blue whales seen on June 12, and another one or two. It was a little hard to tell how many whales were there, because their grayish-white blow melted into the foggy background. Hearing that blue whales were seen again on June 18 makes me want to shout that You Gotta Come Along. OK, you probably figured out, I work on the boat, but really it's exciting. Come check us out.
Rouvaishyana
6/18/2010
June 19, Kevin and I were with 4 blue whales for an hour and a half! This included two 75-footers and two smaller, probably juvenile individuals. At one point two blue whales were swimming toward the boat. We know they won't hit us, but it's unnerving anyway. At another point 3 blues spouted at the same time, and as their mist was drifting away, the 4th one came up and blew. We get to spend quality time with the world's largest animals--and you can too. Trips leave at 9:00 AM, with afternoon trips if there is enough interest. We'll go if you want to and the weather cooperates!
June 26, Captain Wayne Blecha and I headed southwest toward Montana de Oro and Pt. Buchon. It wasn’t long before we saw spouts. There was a group of blue whales about 3 miles from the harbor. We came up to them, and saw that there were at least 5, perhaps 6, close to the boat, with another two whales closer to shore. Today we’d follow a whale for 2o minutes or so, then it would disappear. Overall, they put on such a show that we spent almost an hour and a half with them. Reluctantly, we headed back to shore. We’ve put this into the blog before, but blue whales are very rare in our area. They are regularly seen in summer and early fall in the Santa Barbara Channel, but very seldom off our coastline. This is a unique opportunity!
Morning, June 27, Capt. Dave Butler and I were on the boat again. We spotted whales at a distance. As we got closer, we saw that it was a large humpback whale with a juvenile—probably her offspring from last year. I say “probably” because we aren’t doing genetic studies, but it is common for young humpbacks to stay with their mother for a year or more beyond weaning. We followed these whales for 45 minutes, and while headed in, we saw 3 blue whales. Continuing in, the humpback and blue whales alternated. What a great wildlife spectacle today!
Afternoon, June 27, the sightings were so good this morning that we went out for an afternoon trip as well. There weren’t as many people, but the weather stayed calm, and we started seeing blue whale spouts on the horizon before we were even out of the harbor mouth. They were actually just beyond the ½ mile buoy where the California sea lions hang out. We saw spouts of 3 different whales, and at one point a minke whale surfaced, obviously riding the bow wave of a blue whale. The minke whale swam closely past the boat, then disappeared as this species often does. One blue whale began approaching the boat, so Captain Dave simply turned off the motors and let us drift. A large adult blue whale, 75-80 ft. long, circled the boat for 45 minutes. Time and time again it came up within 15-20 ft. of the boat and blew its enormous breath, sometimes moistening us with its mist. The sound alone startled us often, as we looked in one direction for its reappearance, only to have it surface somewhere else. The animal made repeated passes and arcs through the krill, which we could see on the fish-finder between 30 and 180 ft. down. The immense power of the whale was palpable—we could see its tremendous muscles working, see its great blowhole open and close, hear its breath and sometimes feel it. There was none of the foul smell that sometimes comes with humpback whale breath. To experience all this on a calm ocean, with the boat’s motors silenced, out of earshot of land, was to experience sea life in a powerful and full way.
Mon., June 28, I didn’t work on the boat. Melody, who usually works in the office and on the dock, went on the boat as a deckhand. I had been urging her to experience the blue whales firsthand. The whales were out there. She reported that a blue whale swam underneath the boat. Whales of various species sometimes do this, appearing on one side of the boat, then another, perhaps trying to evade us, perhaps just catching some food and coming up where it pleases them. More blue whales were seen during the week, indicating that this is no longer just a passing phenomenon. The blue whales have been here more than two weeks now, which by itself indicates how rich and productive the ocean is. We have seen great masses of krill on the fish-finder and with our own eyes. An adult blue whale can eat 4,000 lb. of food in a day, and they feed almost exclusively on krill. An engineer on a recent trip Googled the calorie content of shrimp and found it to be about 500 calories per pound. Assuming krill to be somewhere close to this, an adult blue whale eats about 2 million calories of food every day. Another way to look at the productivity of the ocean is this: If there are 10 blue whales in our area (there could be more, or fewer, but this is a starting point), they have eaten about 560,000 pounds or 280 tons of krill in the slightly more than 2 weeks they have been here. This translates to billions, if not trillions, of individual krill, which is also providing food to small schooling fishes, seabirds, humpback whales, and more. The ocean can look empty to a casual observer, but it is teeming with life, especially this year.
Sat., July 3, early morning photography tour. We found a blue whale to the southwest. Seas were calm, but unfortunately the whale kept swimming seaward of the boat. This meant that to approach it for photos, we had to drive into the swells, making for a bumpy ride. It was difficult to get photos.
On later tours that day, we saw humpback whales 6-7 miles from shore, then blue whales closer to shore.
Sun., July 4, we saw two humpback whales in the morning. During the afternoon trip, we visited the same two—which we could tell by the tail flukes and the fact that one of them had a set of shallow propeller cuts just behind its blowholes. These two whales approached the boat very closely: 5-10 feet, sometimes just below the surface as we watched them pirouette. At one point, one of the whales stuck its nose out of the water toward the boat. It could not have been more than 3 feet away. If I had had the presence of mind, I would have opened the gate, leaned out, and touched the whale. That will have to wait for some other time.
Mon., July 5, sorry to say we did not see whales. On one of the trips we saw a pair of harbor porpoises but no other marine mammals at sea. We almost always see seabirds, and some marine mammals inside the bay, such as sea otters, harbor seals, and California sea lions.
Sat., July 10, another early photo tour. We spent about an hour with a pair of humpback whales, which made the photographers very happy. Later that day we saw blue whales, one of which startled us by surfacing to blow behind the boat as we passed by. We ran three trips altogether, and saw whales on all of them. On one of those trips we also saw a small school of common dolphins, with a couple of Pacific white-sided dolphins mixed in.
Sun., July 11, In the morning we saw one blue whale and spent about an hour and a half with it. Some of its dives were very long: 9-10 minutes, with one dive 14 min. long. During this time it is easy for people to get distracted and forget that they are looking for whales. In the afternoon, we found at least 5 blue whales, and possibly another two. With single whales or pairs below the surface, moving large distances underwater as this species does, and surfacing away from where we had seen them last, it becomes a bit difficult to determine exactly how many whales are present.
Mon., July 12, the sea is still like glass as it has been for most of the last 2 weeks or more. There was a fog bank offshore, which we drove into as we headed seaward. Capt. Cavan Hadley and I spotted a blue whale about 7 miles offshore and we spent nearly an hour with it. During this time, however, the whale took some very long dives, the longest being 17 minutes. Fortunately, it surfaced near its dive area a few times, which made it easy to stay with it. If it had swum away in the fog, it would have been difficult to find it again.
I should mention that we have seen blue whales raise their tail flukes numerous times. Some whale-watching books state that blues rarely raise their flukes when diving, or that they do this only one about one in ten dives. It seems to us that this happens more often than this. Further, blue whales appear to have a mottled pattern of markings on the underside of their flukes that may be as distinctive to them as the fluke markings of humpback whales. Further study is needed to confirm or refute this.
Today is cause for celebration. My first blue whale blog was June 12-one month ago today. The blue whales have taken up summer residence. They have also been spotted in Monterey Bay, and are feeding in their more usual places in the Santa Barbara Channel. Come see them with us while they’re still here!
We are still seeing blue whales!
For Tuesday 7/13 we missed the whales in the morning but had a great BLUE WHALE show in the afternoon.
Thanks for reading
Kevin }<,>
Sunday, July 11, 2010
Blues and Humpies sighted in Morro Bay July 9 - 11
Thanks
Kevin
Thursday, July 8, 2010
Wednesday, July 7, 2010
Kevin ;=)
Monday, July 5, 2010
Saturday, July 3, 2010
Kevin
Wednesday and Thursday we saw BLUE WHALES again. On both days they were just right out front about 2-3 miles! Sweet.
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Monday, June 28, 2010
-Capt. Kevin Winfield
Sunday, June 27, 2010
On SUNDAY we had full limits of BLUE WHALES and HUMPBACK WHALES less than 2 miles from the entrance. We did an afternoon trip and the BLUE WHALES, HUMPBACKS AND A MINKE WHALE were right where we left them. AMAZING!! We are planning to run the trips every day through the summer.
Captain Dave Butler
Thursday, June 24, 2010
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
| show details Jun 18 (4 days ago) |
June 6 aboard Dos Osos with Captain Kevin, we saw a gray whale, about 2 months past the season when they are usually here. Normally they migrate past Morro Bay Dec.-early Feb. going south, then return north late Feb.-April. That day we also saw a minke whale several times. This was also unusual because that species often doesn't show itself more than once or twice. At one point, the minke whale was swimming in one direction, and crossed paths with the gray whale which was headed the opposite direction. An amazing day!
June 12, it took Kevin and me (and several whale watchers) awhile to get out where some other boats had spotted whales, but once there it was obvious that there were 2 blue whales. One was a juvenile, probably 55-60' long, and the other was much larger, perhaps 75-80' long. An adult blue whale's blowhole is about a foot long, and the blow is a tall straight cloud like an Italian cypress tree, 30-40' tall. There are few words to describe what it's like to be next to such immense creatures.
Sunday, June 20, 2010
Friday, June 18, 2010
Kevin
Thursday, June 17, 2010
Tuesday, March 30, 2010
Monday, March 29, 2010
On the afternoon trip the weather was still sunny and calm. We found a couple of gray whale cruising up the coast about 3 miles out front. We stayed with them for 45 min. until we ran into a pack of common dolphins. We played around with the dolphins for about 30 min. and had them riding the bow wave. Very cool!!
We are planning to go out on Tue March 30 at 9:00.