Ok, readers, today was my last day of the season out on the water in the Pacific Northwest and we were duly rewarded with wonderful sea conditions and one of the ocean underdogs: Minke Whales! Sure, it was a little overcast but the sea responds well to this. As we made our way out from the harbor and towards Cattle Pass, we saw twenty to thirty harbor porpoises and numerous swimming harbor seals and steller sea lions. We even saw a bald eagle--my first in about two weeks! Passengers were constantly on the lookout for appearing and disappearing wildlife as we watched six to eight steller sea lions pop up and disappear off Whale Rocks.
Just between Whale Rocks and Salmon Bank, as we headed out, Naturalist Laura spotted a small--juvenile--minke whale being very surface active. This minke was not foraging under the usual cloud of swarming sea birds, but rather finding its own dinner. A little further out we saw two more minkes and continued to watch them in the flat calm perfect conditions that the Salish Sea rarely doles out. They were hanging out with hundreds of sea birds and a few hungry seals.
Hoping to see a glimpse of the orcas, we continued around San Juan Island with a jaunt through Mosquito Pass by Roche Harbor and a stop for some young harbor seals at Sentinel Island. We even checked out the strange wildlife at Spieden Island, finding many mouflon sheep that appeared to already have their darker winter coats. Two adult bald eagles and a juvenile all sharing a salmon on the shore topped off our adventures. Time for me to migrate myself... Back to Maui!
Serena, Naturalist
San Juan Safaris