Today's excursion was the "Resurrection Bay wildlife cruise" out of
Seward booked through the cruise line. "Booking thru the cruise line"
means among other things, "you are NOT alone". In fact, you are a small
part of a large herd. In this particular case our herd was two school
buses and a 25 passenger van strong.
We boarded the buses and were taken all of 3 blocks (large blocks I
grant you but only 3 nonetheless), to the marina in Seward where several
hundred boats of all shapes and sizes are docked. As we rolled along I
was taken with the number of RV's parked in several RV facilities along
the way. A bunch of people come here in the summer as a part of an RV
vacation and it is clear why once you look around. The mountains on all
sides of Seward (meaning on all sides of the fjord at which Seward sits
at the head) are lush with green and capped with snow. Waterfalls
tumble down to the sea on all sides and the water of the fjord (which IS
Resurrection Bay) is teaming with life of all sorts... birds, fish and
mammals.
We boarded our tour vessel the Kania Explorer, found a seat on the upper
outside deck (the boat was approx 80ft long, has an enclosed lower deck
with galley and 4 heads and an upper deck with outside and inside
seating) and were already glad we had worn long johns and multiple
layers ... it's becoming apparent that warm clothes are fairly key when
visiting Alaska during the summer ... I cannot imagine what winter
months must be like here.
Shortly after we began our voyage into the bay the boat captain pointed
out a sea otter basking on his back in the early day sunshine grooming
himself and looking quite please with his situation. He was actually
bigger than I would have guessed these animals get. We slowly motored
around him at a respectful distance and he was unperturbed ... casting a
jaundiced eye at the boat clearly thinking "... damn tourists ... "...
Shortly after leaving the otter to his own devices, the captain
announced on the intercom that he had just been notified of a 45 ton
treat coming up on the port bow ... and ... "thar she blows!!" .. a
mammoth humpback whale was blowing and gracefully breaching the surface
of the otherwise calm water. We only got a couple of pictures of this
creature before it dove deep and vanished but I did catch one "tail
shot" I will post in the gallery ... not the best picture I ever took
but the 1st humpback tail I ever shot.
It wasn't long before the captain again excitedly announced whale siting
... this time a pod of Orca whales (about 7 in this pod). These whales
stayed well within our visual grasp for a long while offering plenty of
photo opportunities. Some of these too I promise to post to the web
gallery.
After getting more than our share of Orca sitings we moved further into
the bay where literally thousands of birds roosted in the rock face
walls. I can't begin to tell you all of the types of birds we saw but
the one of most interest was the Puffins ... two types, "tufted" and
"horned" and both entertaining to watch as they dive up to 300ft for
food. Very colorful heads on these birds, We saw birds that looked
like miniature penguins and thousands of sea gulls many with chicks in
the nest (nest of rock ledge).
Just past these thousands of rock dwelling birds were several "islands
of small rocks" on which dozens of sea lions lounged, slept, and barked
at each other. We were told that sea lions are nocturnal feeders and
used the day to rest on these small islands. The majority were tan to
dark brown. Carolyn got many good photos of these animals.
All too soon the captain turned the boat around to head back to Seward
... but that didn't mean the excitement was over ... shortly after
turning we encountered a small pod of Dahl Porpoise cruising out to sea
... these are very fast and basically gone as soon as they were visible
... so no pictures.
And finally to make the trifecta complete ... the captain announced
siting the rarest of all ... a Minke whale off the starboard side ...
this animal is apparently very shy and rare to see ... he breached the
water several times to our delight but was too far off to catch with our
18x camera.
The waters in this part of Alaska host only 3 species of whale ... and
we saw all of them in our short 3.5 hour tour ... the weather was
splendid with sunshine and calm waters... we had a very good day.
Next up ... Kodiak .. and hopefully some really BIG bears ... let's see
... no bacon, sweetrolls, candy in the pockets ... plenty of deet spray
... yep ... we are ready!!!
Bade