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Volume 5, July 2003 |
ISSN 1538-893X |
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Exploring Nature: Black(fish)Magic by Matthew Davidson, Sea Kayak Adventures, Inc. |
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Luck
was with us so far at least in regards to the weather: clear sky, no wind, calm
water. We
set our course and headed for the island, focusing on our paddling. After
about an hour, within 10 minutes of reaching sheltered Sunset Beach and our
first night’s encampment, we saw them in the distance. Thin mists were popping up from the surface of the water – Orcas expelling
breath from
their blowholes and taking a breath before submerging again. After a few more
minutes we heard the sounds of the spouting. One of our Canadian guides, Tim,
instructed us to point the bows of our boats towards the oncoming whales and
stop paddling. The
pod consisted of about seven or eight animals and was heading right for us. The
excitement and anticipation was palpable. How close would we get to them? At
this point, the Orcas would be deciding that. We sat motionless, watching the
huge black fins rise up and then plunge beneath the glassy surface. Within
moments they were passing right through our group, to the left, to the right,
and directly beneath us. My heart was in my throat as I saw the six-foot dorsal
fin of a male adult about 20 yards in front of me disappear beneath the water.
I looked down and to my left as the huge black silhouette of the Orca glided by.
I could have reached down with my paddle and touched him. Matthew Davidson is a free-lance writer/cartoonist living in Sandpoint, Idaho. |
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