Tour #5 Laguna San Ignacio

Hello whalewatchers,

Today was an incredible day here in Lagina San Ignacio. The weather was great with sunny skies and light winds which made for a great day in the pangas. We were able to get four whalewatching trips in today–two in the morning and two in the afternoon. All four trips had close encounters with cows and calves.

We also were lucky to have cows and calves visiting the Searcher most of the day. At times, three pairs were next to the boat. We had our own close encounters today from the Searcher. We were able to scrub their heads with deck brushes and they seemed to like it. There were plenty of bottlenose dolphins around as well.

Heather Snookal–mom and dad are having just a little fun and they send their love. Wait til you see the photos!

Looking forward to tomorrow,

Capt Art

p.s. Dear family and friends: We are happy and safe and getting very wet from gray whale breath and kisses!

2012-04-11T07:19:07-07:00April 10th, 2012|Trip Reports|

Tour #5 : Isla San Benitos

Hello whalewatchers,

It was another great day here in Baja. We had sunny skies and calm seas. We saw a fin whale before arriving at the island this morning along with black-footed and layson albatrosses. After getting ashore half the group stayed closer to the coast and the other half did the full tour around the island and to the light house. Celia and I did the full tour. It was great with good looks at osprey on the nest, Guadalupe fur seals and lots of northern elephant seals. There are mostly females with a few weaners still ashore. Later this afternoon, we saw a few Pacific whitesided dolphin and loads of seabirds– Cassins auklets, black-vented shearwaters, and more.

Looking forward to arriving at Laguna San Ignacio tomorrow.

Capt Art

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2012-04-11T09:29:45-07:00April 9th, 2012|Trip Reports|

Tour#5: Islas Todos Santos and offshore

Hello whalewatchers:

Happy easter to everyone! We had a great day today with really good weather, light winds and calm seas. We did a quick visit to Isla Todos Santos and saw all three pinnipeds hauled out and all the usual suspects on south island–harbor seals. Calif sea lions and elephant seals. We left and headed south. It didn’t take very long before we saw four humpback whales including a cow and calf. Lots of life just south of Isla Todos Santos with plenty of sooty, black vented and pink footed shearwaters, cassins and  rhino auklets, Xantus murlets and red phalropes.

As lunch was being served we came across five blue whales in a 2-mile area.Two of the whales were fluking. We had some great looks at these whales. It is great to see blue whales this far north. The prospects for our wildlife weekend at the end of May should be great for blue whales and plenty of space available.

There was a group of humpbacks in the same area that were tail lobbing and thrashing around that made for good photo opportunities. We continued south and came across a large herd of common dolphins. We were able to spend about a half hour with them before heading further south.It was a great day that ended with a wonderful sunset.

Looking forward to going ashore with Celia tomorrow at Isla San Benito.

Capt Art

2012-04-09T13:21:21-07:00April 8th, 2012|Trip Reports|

Dave Povey’s recent pelagic report from San Diego

We departed Shelter Island after dawn for a run down to the lower (U.S.) end of the Nine Mile Bank. We found that  the amazing numbers of Common Murres, and Rhinoceros Auklets are still present. After the wind storms of the last two weeks, I say they are doing well enough to tough it through some pretty wild weather. We also had very good numbers of Xantus’s Murrelets, and a fair sprinkling of Cassin’s Auklets for an overall  nice alcid show.
We were surprised to find a small flock of Red-necked Phalaropes decked out in their summer plumage, and got to see a couple of additional groups (with at least two birds still in basic plumage) as the day went on. These  at the early end of the migration with many more to come.
The center of the Nine Mile Bank had a slow but steady stream of newly arrived, north bound Sooty Shearwaters. Black-vented Shearwaters were nearly absent with only three seen. Likely they are already heading for the breeding islands in Baja.
The north end of the Nine Mile was quiet, but “Eagle Eyes” Paul saw a distant dark storm petrel. We gave chase but a small bird like that can move over the swells with ease, and lose itself in any number of troughs.
We headed to La Jolla, picking up more alcids in twos and threes and fives and sixes. Sometimes in mixed groupings, which is always nice for comparisons. We passed a good sized group of south bound Common Dolphin( 200+), of course they had to show off, as Common Dolphin are want to do. We saw three pods of Common Dolphin for the day
La Jolla was a bit disapointing. We worked all the way to the canyon, but never had much to show for it. That area was alive during the Bird Festival trips in early March.
We swung out to the west and then in a big lazy loop. Out here we found one of the better concentrations of Bonaparte’s Gulls, though thin compared to earlier in the month.
This area produced our only whale of the day a smallish, but cooperative Minke Whale. The whale actually paced us for several minutes, and maybe 6 or 7 breath cycle. I think we were being checked out as it stuck it’s rostrum, and eye out of the water each time it surfaced. That gave us a chance to see the white on the pectoral fins. The whale stayed within 30 ft and was not much longer than my 21 ft boat.
We bee-lined south and east to Pt Loma running passed one of the two Jaegers on the day. This one a Parasitic, the other on the outbound, a little further from the Point, a Pomarine.
We took a quick look at Zuniga Jetty, and found a nice mix of rocky shoreline birds, with a Wandering Tattler first, a couple of Black Turnstones, and Tom got a nice  group photo of four alternated plumaged Surfbirds. The Surfbirds likely already in northward migration from points south.
Nice day overall. Good numbers of birds,  pleasant company onboard. What more could one ask for? Would be nice to have a rarity, but  any day at sea is better than staying home. The sun even broke out for us as we arrived home.
The following is a list of birds seen on the outer reaches of San Diego Bay, and the ocean to about 10 n. miles. 1st number on or over the bay, 2nd the ocean.

Brant   20, 0                                                                                                        Bonaparte’s Gull    0, 50
Surf Scoter   15, 10                                                                                           Heermann’s Gull    1, 2
California Gull    0, 12
Common Loon    3,  4                                                                                     Western Gull   40, 50
Pacific Loon    1, 30
Red-throated Loon   0,  1
Elegant Tern   10,  23
Eared Grebe    1,  3                                                                                          Caspain Tern   4, 1

Sooty Shearwater    0, 44                                                                              Common Murre   0,  30
Black-vented Shearwater  0, 3                                                                    Xantus’s Murrelet   0, 48
Cassin’s Auklet   0, 18
Brown Pelican   40,  14                                                                                    Rhinoceros Auklet   0,  170
Double-crested Cormorant   10, 1
Brandt’s Cormorant   350, 25                                                                        Pomarine Jaeger   0, 1
Parasitic Jaeger    0, 1
Great Blue Heron    1,0
Snowy Egret   1,0

Willet   1, 0
Wandering Tattler   1, 0                                                                                  Barn Swallow   2, 0
Whimbrel   1, 0
Surfbird   6, 0
Black Turnstone   5, 0
Red-necked Phalarope   0,  32

Marine Mammals list;

Common Dolphin    0, 300+
Minke Whale     0, 1
California Sealion   5, 12

Observers; Tom Blackman, Barbara Carlson, Paul Lehman, and Dave Povey.

Time;  6hrs   0700-1300

Distance travel;  63 n. miles

Conditions; Heavy overcast to partly cloudy, visibility hazy to 10 n.miles, air temp low  to mid 60’s, south swell at 3-4ft, west swell at 3-5ft. Winds light to near calm. Sea surface temps 57.3 F to 58.3F. Note we saw a couple of areas of dense pea green algae south of La Jolla.

Dave Povey
April 1, 2012

2012-04-05T06:53:25-07:00April 5th, 2012|News|

Tour #4: Isla San Jose and Islas Los Islotes

Hello whalewatchers,
Today was our last full day of the trip and we made the most of it! We had a little bit of wind to content with so we went into the mangroves at Isla San Jose before breakfast. Then we did a skiff ride and snorkel with the sea lions at Islas Los Islotes.
What an incredible trip–lots of whales, great weather and great guests!
Capt Art

p.s. Many thanks to Fran Carman for the photo

2012-04-03T07:35:53-07:00April 3rd, 2012|Trip Reports|

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