We were in a Glassy Strait of Georgia then K’s & L’s at Salmon Bank in the afternoon. My pics start off with a Black Oystercatcher seeming to be teaching the chick how to seek out morsels from the crevices within the rocky shore. Mom finds a morsel, chick is saying what you doing mom?, mom sets morsel down and chick picks it up and eats it, then follows mom around again.
Harbor Porpoise are hard to capture with the lens but I did get one shot good enough to see what it was. Then Patos Lighthouse with Mount Baker in the background. A Harbor Seal pup at Skipjack Island and then K and L pod whales south of San Juan Island. There are a few other critters in the mix including a Cormorant with its towering nest, a Stellar Sea Lion, and a Rhinoceros Auklet with a few fish for the days catch.
I am including a few pics of the Center for Whale Research senior scientist Ken Balcomb at work with the whales. If you have seen the movie ‘Blackfish’ and or ‘The Whale -The Story of Luna’ you saw Ken advocating for the whales. Ken is far and above the most knowledgeable person when it comes to knowing our Southern Resident Killer Whales.
NOAA Fisheries has been squandering millions in Endangered Species monies every year. They were entrusted to bring back the resident whales from endangered status and all they have to show for it is 20 years of studies and directly killing one of our resident whales and indirectly killing others by their inaction. If they would just follow one piece of Ken’s advice and breach the four Snake River dams, that alone would bring back enough salmon to sustain the southern residents.
In my pics, you also see another boat right in with Ken. I captured a breach that Ken missed seemingly because he was distracted by another boat next to him that should not have been.
I was able to see L97 Onyx for the first time this year. One shot of him has Mount Baker in the background. He started porpoising for a couple of miles to catch up with his family that was starting into San Juan Channel.
Check out some of my other photoblog pages at Whale Tales.
Follow us on Facebook.
Follow us on Instagram.