Whale watchers prepare for the cetaceans’ return
Lolita Harper
After a banner year of phenomenal sightings, marine life enthusiasts
are gearing up for this whale-watching season.
Franci Carpenter was on a shark fishing boat in early summer when
she was privy to an unprecedented whale sighting. The manager of the
Newport Channel Inn, who often helps guests book various charter
tours, was on such a tour when she was confronted with “the largest
living thing she has ever seen.”
“Have you ever seen one?” Carpenter asked. “It is absolutely
phenomenal.”
Many who have seen whales up close have the same reaction and are
looking forward to this year’s whale-watching season, which began in
late November and runs through mid-April.
Don Moseley, who charters his small boat out of Newport Harbor for
whale-watching tours, echoed Carpenter’s admiration for the gentle
giants.
“It is really spectacular,” he said. “I’ve seen some blue whales,
and they are the largest living mammals on Earth. ... To see his eye
and the ripples in his skin and the muscle tissue -- and then the
tail raised up. The fluke was wider than my boat.”
Moseley usually specializes in sailing charters to and from
Catalina, but when the temperatures drop, he caters to the
whale-watching crowd. In Newport Beach, people catch the whales on
their migration route from Alaska to Baja California, where the
whales go to give birth, he said.
The fathers make their return trips anytime from late February to
mid-March, and the mothers come back with their calves around April.
The whales got a rest from Newport whale-watching charters because of
the boat parade, he said, but they can expect to be studied, pointed
at and photographed in the upcoming weeks and months.
“It really just depends on the weather, the food supply, the
strength of the whale -- tons of factors,” Moseley said. “But for the
most part, you can catch them from now until April.”
And catch them is exactly what Carpenter, a longtime fisherwoman,
said she would do.
“I have to see it again, this time in a larger boat,” she said.
She described the mixture of awe and terror that ran through her
body as the enormous creature, which their captain had said was a
blue whale, moved closer to their tiny boat. The whale would come to
the surface, at which time Carpenter said she could look into its
massive eye, which was bigger than she. Then it would dip down into
the water, leaving the boaters wondering where he may pop up again.
“I was scared, I’ll admit it,” she said. “It’s like, ‘Oh, its so
beautiful, but I hope it’s not coming over here.’”
Carpenter said she is hooked. This year, she and her friends --
one of whom just bought a 50-foot Pacemaker -- are in hot pursuit of
migrating whales.
“Oh, I’ll see it again. I have to,” she said. “After that
experience with whales, I will see it again. We’ll do whatever it
takes. We are basically going after them.”
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