Whale-watching from your room. (Northern California inns)Finnegan, LoraFish, Peter
Newport Landing Whale Watching / Facebook Frosty has gained a certain level of celebrity since first being seen near Monterey Bay, in Northern California, in 2019, according to the Pacific Whale Watch Association. At the time, Frosty was just a newborn. The whale has since been sighted as f...
Want to go whale watching in San Diego, California? These top-rated tours offer a chance to see humpback and finback whales, bottlenose dolphins and more.
They thrive in cold northern waters, and it gets pretty darn cold on the White Continent. I was mid-pancake when an announcement sounded through the ship's dining room that a pod of orcas could be spotted from the deck. I dropped my fork and rushed outside to watch several of these ...
On our whale watching tours you’ll get a once in a lifetime educational experience. We have the most experienced skippers in Northern California. Our renowned…
Killer Whales (best time is mid-April through mid-May), Risso’s Dolphins, Pacific white-sided dolphins, Northern right-whale dolphins, Dall’s porpoise, harbor porpoise, bottlenose dolphins, Mola molas (giant ocean sunfish), jellies, sea otters, California sea lions, harbor seals, and local ...
Experience the best Victoria Whale Watching & Wildlife adventure with Eagle Wing Tours. See Vancouver Island from our safe, high-performance, luxury boats.
Whale Watching for San Diego Visitors During the Winter and Spring, Whale Watching visitors from San Diego will be able to view the annual Gray Whale migration. Thousands of Gray Whales travel along the California coastline each year, heading to the warm, salty lagoons of Mexico. They make ...
On this Seward day tour and whale-watching cruise in the Spring, witness the incredible annual migration of California Gray Whales, traveling over 5,000 miles from Baja California to the nutrient-rich waters of Alaska’s Bering Sea. This 4-hour Alaska...Browse itinerary ...
The Indian Ocean has a northern coastline, while the Atlantic and Pacific oceans do not, thereby preventing the humpbacks from migrating to the pole. The long black and white tail fin, which can be up to a third of body length, and the pectoral fins have unique patterns, which enable ...