July 13, 2021 - A full day of humpback whales! We encountered Slate and calf and in the morning and 4 more animals in the evening!

It was another beautiful sunny day as our boats set off in search of whales at 10:30. After traveling southeast for awhile we encountered two familiar faces - humpback whales Slate and her new calf!

On our afternoon tour we departed from Nanaimo at 3:30pm on our boats and found FOUR humpback whales! They were demonstrating all sorts of behaviours from milling, traveling, feeding, and even breaching and tail stands!

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July 9, 2021, 3:30 PM - So many Humpbacks!

Woah… we found so many humpbacks on this trip! While we counted 8 individuals near us, there were quite a few surfacing way off in the distance as well. The waters were mirror-like (extremely flat and calm) during our afternoon trip so you could see almost all the way over to Vancouver from Gabriola!

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July 6, 2021 - Killer whales hunting in the north arm!

Our semi-covered vessel left Nanaimo at 10:30am on July 6th and headed out into beautiful conditions. We ended up near Vancouver, near Point Grey at the north arm of the Fraser River. The water here carries a lot of silt and so has a much lighter, milkier colour. We spotted some contrasting black fins and blows pop out of the water! A pod of killer whales/orcas, at least 3, who were busy traveling and foraging.

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June 28, 2021 - 3 humpback whales and a grey whale!

June 28th was an eventful day for our boats Kula and Cascadia. Both of our boats headed north in search of whales. Kula first found a surprise Grey Whale near Blueback beach! It took a second but we were able to tell this was a Grey Whale from the lack of a dorsal fin and the 6 to 12 “knuckles” they have on their hump and tail.

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June 24, 2021 - The T49A Brothers Again

The sun was hot and we welcomed the small splashes as we traveled around Jack point and went through Dodd’s Narrows. As we traveled we thought it may be a long day, as there had not been any recent reports of whales, but we were only out half an hour when we came upon a tall dorsal fin sinking into the waves. After a few good photos we realized our first whale was Judy, T49A2 and the second fin was Noah, T49A1.

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