BajaNomad

Gray Whales

Ken Bondy - 2-27-2007 at 01:50 PM

Since it's whale time:






Natalie Ann - 2-27-2007 at 02:46 PM

Once again, Ken, ya made my day. I'm sitting in Ensenada in the rain, thinking how my annual trip to see the whales will this year be replaced by one heck of a race... and how one does not make up for the other. Then you post these wonderful photos and I feel better.

So.... how did you come by these shots? Were you under the water with the whales, or.......... :?:
However it happened, they're way cool. Thank you so much.

Nena

Ken Bondy - 2-27-2007 at 03:19 PM

Thanks Natalie Ann. YOU always make MY day!! The third photo (the eyeball) I made in Laguna San Ignacio a few years ago just by holding a Nikonos V camera underwater from the side of a Kuyima panga and firing blind. The first two.....well, this is from something I am writing:

<<In August of 1995 I spent a week on the dive boat TRUTH out of Santa Barbara with Howard and Michele Hall and their crew while they were making an episode for their video series “Secrets of the Ocean Realm”. We made stops at Santa Barbara and Anacapa Islands. One morning we were anchored near Cat Rock on the ocean (south) side of Anacapa. Here Howard and the crew were filming the interesting “mouth-flaring” territorial behavior that male sarcastic fringeheads exhibit when they get close to each other. Howard and Bob Cranston were underwater when those of us still on deck noticed a young gray whale very close to the boat. This was extremely unusual. The gray whale migration takes them southbound by the island in December and January, northbound in about March and April. A gray whale at Anacapa in August was extraordinary. But there he was, big as life (so to speak), and he hung around the boat for hours before rounding the east end of the island and disappearing in the channel. He gave us all the opportunity to get some very rare underwater photos of a gray whale in relatively clean water. Howard wrote a terrific article about this incident which was published several times and appears on his website at http://www.howardhall.com/stories/greymorning.html<<

[Edited on 2-28-2007 by Ken Bondy]

Wow

KenS - 2-27-2007 at 03:42 PM

Just "Wow"

Bajagypsy - 2-27-2007 at 03:48 PM

You absolutely amaze me everytime you post a picture.

Ken Bondy - 2-27-2007 at 03:52 PM

KenS and Bajagypsy, thank you very much, you are very flattering!

Ken Bondy - 2-27-2007 at 03:59 PM

Quote:
So.... how did you come by these shots? Were you under the water with the whales, or.......... :?:
However it happened, they're way cool. Thank you so much.

Nena


If it wasn't clear from my last post, I was in the water with the whale when I made the first two images. Michele Hall, standing on the deck of the TRUTH, took a picture of me and the whale. I am the one with the red drysuit, the whale is the one with the big gray back:


fdt - 2-27-2007 at 04:36 PM

Beautiful!

Outstanding photos

pangamadness - 2-27-2007 at 04:55 PM

Ken, What do you know about Bob Cranston now? Is he still with Howard Hall? I lived near his family & new them well. Back when Bobby lost the boat at Morro bay.



[Edited on 2-28-2007 by pangamadness]

whale pics

tehag - 2-27-2007 at 04:58 PM

Again Ken, way too cool.

SDRonni - 2-27-2007 at 05:06 PM

Beeeyooootteeeefullll!! I am so jealous!

pacside - 2-27-2007 at 05:15 PM

those are the best whale pics i've ever seen. thanks for posting. was it scary swimming so close to the whale?

Ken Bondy - 2-27-2007 at 05:39 PM

Gracias pacside, SDRonnie, tehag, pangamadness, fernando! Your comments are much appreciated.

@pangamadness - to the best of my knowledge he is still living in San Diego and working with Howard. I see him in the credits of all the Howard Hall films, I think Bob is Howard's primary photographer.

@pacside - there were lots of emotions flowing but fear wasn't one of them. It was magnificent being that close to a gray whale in the water.

Wiles - 2-27-2007 at 05:49 PM

Ken....

Thanks for sharing the photos.

Double thanks for sharing the passion.

Mexitron - 2-27-2007 at 06:12 PM

Years ago in South Laguna a young gray whale was hanging near the shore in about 10 feet of water so my friend and I got our mask and snorkel and swam out to it and floated around for awhile with the whale--I'll never forget the look in its eyes when it checked us out...your picture reminded me again--thanks!

BigWooo - 2-27-2007 at 06:22 PM

I often read this site anticipating that you will post some new pictures....no matter what you shoot, it turns out great. These are really cool.

[Edited on 2-28-2007 by BigWooo]

shari - 2-28-2007 at 07:47 AM

Awesome Ken...I'm surprised the gray's stuck around with you in the water. We find that grays are the least tolerant to having humans beside them in the water and they generally swim away. IN the early days whenever we got in the water with them, not only did they swim away but they and all their pals wouldn't let us get near them for several days...they knew which panga we jumped out of and avoided us like the plague so we learned NOT to get in the water with them at all...a Japanese film crew took our advice and devised a long boom with the camera which they could lower beside the boat which got the first great underwater pics in the lagoon....these pics showed us that when the grays "spy hop" they are actually standing on their tail on the bottom with the flukes tucked under kind of stretching their back...yoga? We were so amazed! The first two pics look like a small whale, perhaps a ballenato or yearling as the snout is very short like the calves...or perhaps it's a distortion thing but they look like calves which may explain why they let you photograph them. Sometimes when the mom was asleep we would quietly slip into the water with the calf and he sometimes would try to wake mom up...for me it was pretty scary as I have seen what moms do with their tails!! Anyway...thanks amigo

Ken Bondy - 2-28-2007 at 08:44 AM

shari mil gracias for the very kind words. I agree, we were all surprised that this whale hung with us for so long, he/she (I will use "he" for brevity) was in the area for hours. The whale was completely disinterested in us. He would surface for a breath in roughly the same place, allowing us to position ourselves on snorkel for close photos. There was some interaction on the bottom with Howard and Bob Cranston as described in the article. The whale was young, Howard called it a yearling, my estimate was about 25 feet in length. It is possible it was disoriented or ill, remember this was in August at Anacapa Island in Southern California. He did not appear to be injured, there was no visible trauma to the body. This whale should have been porking up in Alaska. The whale was in fact eating, the area we were in (Cat Rock) has a sandy bottom at about 60fsw. Howard Hall observed the whale dredging sand in the normal gray whale feeding behavior, so he was in fact hungry. Howard, who is a trained marine biologist and an expert in gray whale behavior, said that strays like this are occasionally seen in places they shouldn't be, and there is evidence that they eventually rejoin the herd. But he may have said that just to make the rest of us feel good.

[Edited on 2-28-2007 by Ken Bondy]

[Edited on 2-28-2007 by Ken Bondy]

Bob H - 2-28-2007 at 11:13 AM

Again, outstanding photography Ken. I just set up my new computer system and your photos on my new digital flat panel wide screen look just amazing!
Thanks,
Bob H

Ken Bondy - 2-28-2007 at 02:44 PM

Bob H I am honored to be on your new monitor!!! Thanks very much for the kind words.

tripledigitken - 2-28-2007 at 04:37 PM

The shot of the whales eye is wonderful. You can't help but feel a connection with the animal when youre staring at each other.

We had the same experience on the whale watch last year in GN. The mother piggy-backed the baby up to the boat and the baby stared us down. Fantastic experience.

thanks for the photo's again Ken!

cpg - 3-1-2007 at 10:13 PM

Wow!! Thank you

Cypress - 3-2-2007 at 12:19 PM

Unreal!:bounce:Thanks!:D Fantastic!:bounce: Ken, you're spoiling us!:tumble: