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​Half Moon Bay Gray Whale Watching Update: March 2018

Home / Blog / ​Half Moon Bay Gray Whale Watching Update: March 2018

March 22, 2018 • Trip Reports

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In the course of the gray whale migration off the coast of California, there are 2 distinct legs of the journey. Whales begin by heading south, typically from Alaska down to Baja California, and then they make the reverse trip back north. Usually there is some overlap with the earliest gray whales heading north while the late comers have just begun traveling south. This year (2018) we’ve witnessed far less overlap among north- and southbound whales than in years past. Here is a quick update of what we’ve seen so far in Half Moon Bay (as of March 21, 2018).

Southbound gray whale flukes 9 miles offshore. © Chris Biertuempfel

Southbound:

In January and February, Oceanic Society whale watchers saw 25 gray whales, all traveling south along the California coast. The furthest sighting took place nearly 10 miles offshore, while the closest was within a few hundred yards of shore. The last southbound gray whale we spotted was on February 11th. Since then we have seen only grays traveling north on their way back from Mexico to Alaska.

Acrobatic breaching gray whale. Photo taken on March 17th. © Peter Winch

Northbound:

In the past few weeks, we have seen a dramatic uptick in sightings with more than 30 northbound gray whales spotted in just our last 6 trips. In addition to spotting more whales, we’ve seen an increase in charismatic behavior as well. Breaching, fluking and even what our naturalists describe as “amorous behavior” are becoming more common as the season goes along. Soon, we anticipate cow-calf pairs to begin passing through Half Moon Bay.

Gray whale descending from a mighty breach. © Austin Newton

Come join us on a 3-hour long whale watching cruise to view the gray whale migration as the weather and the whale sightings start to heat up. Our trips depart at 9:00am on Saturdays and Sundays. You can sign up here.

Chris Biertuempfel

Chris Biertuempfel manages Oceanic Society’s California-based operations, including their long-running Farallon Islands Program as well as the Critter Scholars Program providing educational field-trips for students from underserved communities. Chris also works extensively as a naturalist and guide on offshore trips to San Francisco's Farallon Islands and multi-day wildlife expeditions to Mexico and Indonesia.

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