When
I crest Hannah Heights, I get my first view of the water on the west
side of the island, and I instictively look left along the southern
part of the shoreline to see if I can spot any whale-watching boats.
I see a cluster of boats right off of False Bay, all facing the same
direction. That split-second look is enough to tell me that the
whales are in a tight group heading north, right towards where I plan
to be.
I'm
the only car in the north pullout at Land Bank's Westside Preserve. I
know that will change as soon as the whales come into view, but for
now I seem to be the only one anticipating what's to come. I grab my
backpack which doubles as a camera bag, my handheld VHF radio, and my
hat out of the trunk before walking down the sloping hill with
yellowing grass towards one of my favorite perches on the rocks about
twenty feet above the water. It's officially a few weeks into summer,
but this is one of the first days it's warm enough to be out by the
water without a sweatshirt or a jacket. The rest of the country has
been experiencing record high temperatures for weeks, but here it's
finally reached 70 degrees and to me, it feels plenty warm.
It
doesn't take long for the boats to start coming into view as they
make their way around the point to the south. I'm a strong believer
in eco-tourism and a full supporter of whale-watching, but I must
admit that the sight doesn't please me. There are more than twenty
commercial whale-watching boats from both the US and Canada clustered
around this group of whales, each trying to edge in right to the
agreed-upon quarter-mile buffer they give the whales along the
shoreline on this part of the island. The fact that so many people
want to see whales in the wild is a good thing, especially
considering the education that's provided by naturalists on nearly
every boat in the fleet, but it looks a lot like celebrities being
mobbed by their paparazzi. I see the boats a good fifteen minutes
before I see the first sign of any whale.
|
"The Fleet" rounds the corner |
By
the time the first whale is approaching my spot on the shoreline,
other people have figured out that a whale encounter is imminent. I
turn around and am surprised to see that thirty or forty people crowd
the shoreline above me.
|
Shore-based whale watchers |
Many are eagerly pointing or taking pictures
as the whale passes us by. She surfaces right in front of me about
200 yards offshore, and the half-moon shaped notch in her dorsal fin
tells me its J2 Granny, often in the lead when J-Pod travels through
Haro Strait.
|
J2 Granny leads the way |
I
described the whales as being in a tight group, which in this case
meant they were all within about half a mile of each other, though
still somewhat spread out. Some animals were further offshore, too
far away to ID in the harsh afternoon sunlight, but after Granny
another group swims in closer to the kelp. I'm not surprised to see
its J8 Spieden, J19 Shachi, and J41 Eclipse, three whales who often
travel close together and never roam too far from Granny. Like
Granny, the trio is moving north at a good clip, by they have a
little bit of a more playful attitude. Shachi tail slaps, and her
daughter Eclipse rolls onto her side at the surface, swimming
sideways with her pec fin in the air for a moment.
|
A pec slap from Eclipse |
I'm always
overjoyed to get a good look at “my girl” Eclipse, a whale who is
special to me since I saw her shortly after she was born in early
July 2005. She's just turned seven, and has grown so much that soon
it will be more difficult to tell her apart from her mom who she
still swims beside. I notice Eclipse's dorsal fin has started to take
on the same curve along the top as Shachi's.
|
J19 Shachi and J41 Eclipse |
There
are 30 whales present – all 25 members of J-Pod and five L-Pod
whales that have taken to traveling with them. This is about a third
of the total Southern Resident Community of killer whales, probably
the most heavily-watched group of whales in the world. I take a
moment to watch and listen to all the people watching the whales.
“Are
these orcas?” Somebody above me on the rocks asks.
“Yes,
but I didn't think this was the right time of year to see them here.”
“I
think they're migrating north right now,” a third person responds.
“I
wonder if Ruffles is here?”
“Look,
that group of whales is turning around. I bet they're turning around
because there are so many boats here.”
The
onlookers clearly don't have their facts all straight, but in the
moment, that doesn't seem to matter. I look out to the boats to
survey the scene on the water. I know from experience it always looks
worse from shore than from the water, and that the whales don't
obviously change their behavior regardless of how many boats are
present, but today it does look bad. I count 37 motorized boats
around the whales – more than one boat per whale – and on top of
that are more than a dozen kayakers in shore. One group of whales has
indeed turned around, and as the whales spread out, the boats do too
and the marine radio at my side flickers to life. The jargon of the
whale watch captains takes a little bit of deciphering to understand.
“They've
stalled out at the Light,” reports one captain, meaning one group
of whales near the lighthouse has stopped traveling north.
“I've
go the leaders at 14, still northbound,” responds another, using
the numeric code the whale watch companies have agreed upon to
indicate his location.
“There's
a nursery group back here off the point just milling. The big guy
offshore is doing some fishing.”
“Good,
it's shaping up to be one of those nights. I've got a turn-and-burn
at 6 o'clock. How're the seas at the waterfront?”
“Threes,
the occasional four, nothing bad. It's flat between here and there.”
“Has
anyone seen Blackberry?”
“We've
got him up here with Onyx, about 350 off my starboard bow.”
Over
the course of the next hour, the whale watch boats peel off one by
one and head back to their home ports: Friday Harbor, Orcas Island,
Port Townsend, Victoria, Cowichan Bay, Vancouver. The people
clustered on the shoreline begin to head back to head back to their
cars, too. There are still whales in front of us, but the boats have
reached the end of their trip times and the shore-based whale
watchers, having seen the whales, are ready to move on. I recall a
passage in a children's book I read recently that described a field
biologist as someone who spends hours of their days and years of
their lives watching animals. I realize by definition I fall into
that category. Experience tells me not to leave – for whatever
reason, it seems 9 times out of 10 the best moment of a whale
encounter comes when almost everyone else has tired of watching and
leaves.
The
vision of the fleet of whale-watching boats clustered around J-Pod is
still in my mind, but it hasn't taken long for the scene to totally
change. Some anti-whale-watching agencies paint pictures of the
whales constantly mobbed by boats, unable to feed or travel or play
away from their adoring public and the loud engines that accompany
them on the water. The actual impact of large numbers of
whale-watching boats on whales is still being studied and is
debatable, but in more than 10 years of observation I haven't seen
anything drastic to indicate that boats are the reason this
population of whales isn't increasing. The facts also show that for
half the year, there are no boats with the whales, and even now,
during the peak season, the large quantities of boats are condensed
over just a few hours of the day. It's late afternoon on a Friday in
July, and we've gone from more than 50 boats on the water with the
whales to just two boats in an hour's time. Some of the whales I see
surfacing out in the middle of Haro Strait don't have a boat within a
mile of them. Gone, too, are the tourists on the shore who flocked to
see them. A mom and calf surface with nothing but the Olympic
Mountains behind them. I turn around to look above me, and the only
other observers are three women sitting on the guard rail by the
road, binoculars in hand.
|
Just a whale and the Olympic Mountains |
A
moment later a loud “kawoof!” breaks me out of my reverie.
I'm surprised to see a whale in Deadman Bay swimming back south
towards me. I turn around to see if the women are going to come down
closer to the water to get a better view, but they're gone.
Amazingly, I'm the only one who is going to see this. “Where did
you come from?” I ask out loud.
It's
J34 Doublestuf, one of the first whales that passed heading north. I
figured he would be heading back this way at some point, because his
mom and younger brother never went all the way north, and if the pod
split, he wouldn't go north without them. He surfaces again, right in
the sun track across the water, and I can only look in his direction
because I'm wearing my polarized sunglasses. Somehow, completely
silhouetted, it's easier for me to appreciate the size of his dorsal
fin. He's only 14, but he's well on his way to having the tall dorsal
fin of a fully adult male. As he glides by underwater, he's close
enough that I can make out his gray saddle patch through the
gray-green water and follow his movements from above the surface.
A
few more whales pass back by, all going south. Two whale watching
boats bob near the tide rip about a quarter-mile offshore. I see
whales all around them, but one pipes up on the radio, “I think
they've pulled a disppearing act on us.”
“I
think they're just going on super long dives,” the other responds.
“I think I see a male about 800 yards off my 3 o'clock – I'm
going to head out there.” Both boats slowly motor a little further
offshore, somehow oblivious to the three or four whales quietly
foraging not far from where they were just idling.
More
than three hours have passed since I got out here, and I'm starting
to think about heading home. I think most of the whales have ended up
heading back south, and I figure the small group way offshore to the
north of me probably accounts for the rest of them. I put my camera
and bincoulars away, but take one last look close to the shoreline to
the north before I get up. My timing is perfect: I see a large
splash. There are a couple whales porpoising back south. One of them
is Granny. She's come back to rejoin the rest of her pod, but as is
often the case, she's traveling with a purpose. Other whales have
been lollygagging about, not really traveling anywhere in particular.
In the meantime, she's been several miles further north and come
straight back, perhaps surveying a little further for salmon.
Two
whales break off from Granny and slow down. They head towards the
cliff where I'm sitting. It's L72 Racer and L105 Fluke. Racer swims
under Fluke and pushes him partway out of the water, and he's upside
down looking up at the sky. I wonder what he thinks of the view. It's
a tender bonding moment between mother and son.
After
they pass by, I walk back up to my car where there is only one other
vehicle parked in the pullout. An older couple is standing there,
having spotted the whales and pulled over. They also just saw Fluke
and Racer swim by together. The woman stands there, smiling as the
whales continue south. “What a special thing,” she says to me. I
try to think of something to say, but nothing comes to me. She's
described the moment perfectly. I just smile back.