Spent the evening in a badger hide at Cropton Forest in North Yorkshire. It was a bit difficult to take photos through the glass window of the hide, but we got great views of the badgers.
Wednesday, 12 July 2006
Sunday, 19 March 2006
Caribbean Sperm Whale Nursery
In March 2006 I travelled to the Caribbean island of Dominica where the deep but sheltered waters on the leeward coast provide perfect conditions for female sperm whales to give birth and raise their calves.
My old film camera struggled a bit with taking photos of grey whales and dolphins in grey-blue water, but here are a few pictures from the trip.
Most of the sperm whales we saw were mother and calf pairs, with a few males hanging around in the hope of mating with a receptive female. Some of the 'calves' were quite large because the females only give birth every three to six years, and youngsters can continue to take milk for as long as 13 years.
We were joined on occasions by lively pantropical spotted dolphins who loved to bow-ride in front of our catamaran...
...and also by the occasional bottlenose dolphin.
My old film camera struggled a bit with taking photos of grey whales and dolphins in grey-blue water, but here are a few pictures from the trip.
Most of the sperm whales we saw were mother and calf pairs, with a few males hanging around in the hope of mating with a receptive female. Some of the 'calves' were quite large because the females only give birth every three to six years, and youngsters can continue to take milk for as long as 13 years.
We were joined on occasions by lively pantropical spotted dolphins who loved to bow-ride in front of our catamaran...
...and also by the occasional bottlenose dolphin.
Sunday, 24 July 2005
Bimini Dolphins
In July 2005, I visited Bimini in the Bahamas where I snorkelled with wild dolphins. I flew into Fort Lauderdale, Florida and had an overnight there before we caught our seaplane to the island the next morning.
Bimini has some lovely palm-decorated beaches and our resort was in a great seafront location. Our boat was a comfortable catamaran.
On our first trip out to sea, we saw only bottlenose dolphins which are not as curious or friendly as the spotted dolphins we'd gone to swim with. These animals spent most of their time foraging in the sandy seabed for hidden prey, but they didn't seem to mind us snorkelling on the surface above them.
On subsequent boat trips we encountered Bimini's famous spotted dolphins. These animals are renown for their special relationship with humans. They actively seek out boats and love to bow-ride, but when the boat stops they don't get bored and swim off like other dolphin species.
When snorkellers get into the water, the dolphins usually hang around and seem quite entertained. The encounter is strictly 'hands off' and, although the dolphins swim amongst the snorkellers at speed, they are incredibly agile so they don't touch the humans either!
Bimini has some lovely palm-decorated beaches and our resort was in a great seafront location. Our boat was a comfortable catamaran.
On our first trip out to sea, we saw only bottlenose dolphins which are not as curious or friendly as the spotted dolphins we'd gone to swim with. These animals spent most of their time foraging in the sandy seabed for hidden prey, but they didn't seem to mind us snorkelling on the surface above them.
On subsequent boat trips we encountered Bimini's famous spotted dolphins. These animals are renown for their special relationship with humans. They actively seek out boats and love to bow-ride, but when the boat stops they don't get bored and swim off like other dolphin species.
When snorkellers get into the water, the dolphins usually hang around and seem quite entertained. The encounter is strictly 'hands off' and, although the dolphins swim amongst the snorkellers at speed, they are incredibly agile so they don't touch the humans either!
Saturday, 11 September 2004
Restaurant for Whales
The Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary off Massachusetts is a magnet for hungry whales. The Bank is an underwater plateau that forces nutrient-rich waters from the depths towards the ocean surface and, when these combine with late summer sunlight to cause plankton blooms, there's an explosion of life with whales at the top of the food web.
In September 2004 I travelled all the way to Massachusetts for a whale-packed long weekend. We went out on three whale-watches to Cape Cod Bay and Stellwagen Bank and saw over 100 whales and dolphins.
On our first whale-watch the fin whales were much more numerous than the humpbacks. Being less blubbery and buoyant, fin whales don't need to lift their tail flukes when they dive and also 'sit low' in the water, so they're more difficult to photograph than the humpbacks.
The 'star attractions' in late summer and early autumn are the humpback whales which lunge-feed on the shoals of small fish. They often dive, showing their tail flukes, to the delight of the whale-watchers.
Many individual animals are known to the researchers on board the whale-watch boats, who recognise the distinctive markings on the underside of the whales' tail flukes. We saw one animal - 'Buzzard' - on every trip, and also 'Eden', 'Circuit' and 'Polevault' plus some unknown individuals, although I confess I don't know who's who in these photos.

In September 2004 I travelled all the way to Massachusetts for a whale-packed long weekend. We went out on three whale-watches to Cape Cod Bay and Stellwagen Bank and saw over 100 whales and dolphins.
On our first whale-watch the fin whales were much more numerous than the humpbacks. Being less blubbery and buoyant, fin whales don't need to lift their tail flukes when they dive and also 'sit low' in the water, so they're more difficult to photograph than the humpbacks.
The 'star attractions' in late summer and early autumn are the humpback whales which lunge-feed on the shoals of small fish. They often dive, showing their tail flukes, to the delight of the whale-watchers.
Many individual animals are known to the researchers on board the whale-watch boats, who recognise the distinctive markings on the underside of the whales' tail flukes. We saw one animal - 'Buzzard' - on every trip, and also 'Eden', 'Circuit' and 'Polevault' plus some unknown individuals, although I confess I don't know who's who in these photos.
We weren't really expecting to see pilot whales, in fact I'd just been to get a mug of hot chocolate from the galley when they appeared. There were around 50 animals including a calf which was so recently born that it still had its foetal folds - the marks made when a calf is scrunched up in its mother's womb. It was quite an experience standing in the bow of the whale-watch boat drinking hot chocolate and watching so many whales in a calm, blue sea!
Thursday, 9 September 2004
Formby's red squirrels
Flying from Manchester to Massachusetts tomorrow for a long weekend of whale-watching, so diverted to Lancashire's Formby Point to see the red squirrels. After sitting quietly in the woods with my monkey nut bait, I was rewarded with close encounters.
Saturday, 4 September 2004
Saturday, 31 January 2004
Gentle Giants in Mexico


From December to April, small wooden fishing boats called pangas - just half the size of an adult grey whale - take tourists out on the lagoons.
The animals approach the boats and appear to seek human contact.
These are some photos from a short trip to Laguna Ojo de Liebre - the most northerly of the breeding lagoons - in January 2004.

To reach the lagoon we made a long journey by road which took us through some extremely arid landscape. The cacti along the route were amazing in terms of both their size and shape.
At the lagoon, the baby grey whales are around 4.5 metres (14.5 feet) long at birth, but this one (just visible on the left of the first picture below) looked tiny next to its mother who was probably about 14 metres (46 feet) long.

As well as close encounters with mothers and their babies, there was lots of other activity to observe, including breaching, flipper-slapping (right) and spyhopping, fluking and mating (below).
The mating groups typically comprise one female and two to five males. This one involved three whales and was fairly chaotic!
The bones of a whale that had been washed up dead on the shore of a lagoon had been reconstructed into a full skeleton. This gave visitors a rare chance to 'see inside' a whale and appreciate the similarities and differences between cetacean skeletons and our own. The upper part of a grey whale skull had also been washed up on another shore.

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