Transient sightings 2010


Transient sightings 2010 weergeven op een grotere kaart

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

T49s near Race Rocks


Transient Orcas
T49's
Race Rocks, B.C.
April 28, 2009
Photo by Andrew Lees

April 28
Today reports first came in around 11.30am of Transient Orcas near Sheringham Lighthouse. We headed out on a 2pm trip and caught up with the 5 Transient Orcas just North of Race Rocks. The Orcas were later identified as the T49's by Ron Bates, MMRG. Whilst we observed the T49's we did see signs of a kill underwater and the Orcas milling around after the kill.
Andrew Lees, Marine Naturalist, Five Star Whale Watching

T20 through Seymour Narrows


Transient Orca
T20 southbound
through Seymour Narrows
April 28, 2009
Photo by Matthew Ellis


April 28
Transient killer whales T20 and T21 and 7 other small fins (T23's?) came through Seymour Narrow's on a big ebb tide yesterday (4/28) and swam past Campbell River at about 5pm southbound.

Monday, April 27, 2009

T20, T21, T2s, T123s

No calls but orcas nearby

Today, two faily sizable transient groups travelled into Johnstone Strait from the west. Jim Boprrowman managed to get IDs. Here is a list of some of today's orcas:T20, T21, T2, T2C, T2C1, T2C2, T123 and T023D
Helena
27 Apr 2009 17:40:34 PDT

Sunday, April 26, 2009

T49s

April 26
It was a great encounter with the T49's (5 Transient orcas) yesterday April 26th on our Ocean Magic trip at 12.15pm. These animals were confirmed by Mark Malleson. We came across them off Secretary Island, Sooke, Vancouver Island. They were frolicking close to shore. They were encountered again on a later trip east and south of Race Rocks. They were very active with tail slaps and spyhops. Beautiful conditions on the water. Spring is here at last.
Marie, Orca-Magic, POW


April 26
So we headed out at 1:00 today with the familiar questions, "Do you know where the Orcas are?" And the too familiar response, "Not right now - " Then about 45 minutes later came the call and we headed out toward Victoria.We encountered a group of Transient Orcas, still unidentified (see photo).
Thanks,
Capt. Jim and Mrs. Capt. Jim Maya,
Maya's Westside Charters, San Juan Island


Transient Spyhop
Strait of Juan de Fuca
off Victoria, B.C.
April 26, 2009
Photo by Capt. Jim Maya

April 26
Jim Maya's pics from the 26th are the T49A's and B's again. The spyhopper (the photo included in yesterday's whale report) is T49A with her slightly funky jawline.
Dave Ellifrit, Center for Whale Reserch, San Juan Island


Transient Orcas
T49A's & B's
Strait of Juan de Fuca
off Victoria, B.C.
April 26, 2009
Photo by Capt. Jim Maya

Monday, April 20, 2009

T40

On Monday April 20th, my classmates and I were heading into Mitchell Bay after our first full day at sea when our Captain, Todd Shuster, noticed a collection of whale watching boats off in the distance. We took the opportunity to turn around and were rewarded by seeing a group of transient killer whales by Sidney Island. There was one male orca, which we later identified as T40, with four females or juveniles. We have not identified the other four whales yet. Males are typically easier to identify because they have larger dorsal fins, but T40 is especially easy to pick out because the tip of his dorsal fin is bent over. It was a very exciting hour watching the whales and the boats around them. A few times the whales took a view of the world above them by spy hopping and jumped into the air a couple of times as well. After the initial exhilaration, we began to confer about the behavioral state of the whales. We were unable to deploy the hydrophones in time to record any sounds. It was a good learning experience to enable us to be more proficient in organizing equipment so that next time we come across whales we will be able to record all forms of data. I feel fortunate that on our first full day at sea we came across orcas.
There are many more comments and pictures about sightings of this group of whales at orcanetwork .org. I will be able to post a picture or two of the experience when I get on land and have a more reliable internet connection.
The Beam Reach students onboard the Gato Verde

T40, T124's and T90's in Haro Strait

April 20
Encounter 12 was conducted by Ken Balcomb and Dave Ellifrit on April 20 with T40 (Captain Hook), T124's and T90's in Haro Strait. They came in past Race Rocks in the morning and travelled up Haro Strait past Moresby Island by evening, making at least two kills enroute.

T40 (Captain Hook)

April 20
Mark Malleson of Prince of Whales called to report 7 - 10 Transient orcas at 9 am, east of Race Rocks heading east.

Friday, April 17, 2009

T103 east of Sooke park

April 17
Mark Malleson of Prince of Whales called to report Transient orca T103 off E. Sooke Park, S. Vancouver Island at 12:30 pm, heading east. It happened to be the exact same place & date he had observed T103 alone last year!

April 17
I was on the Ocean Magic 12.15 pm sailing today and this lone Transient was seen at Beecher Bay, Metchosin, Vancouver Island. It was identified by Mark Mallerson,POW, as T 103. Mark was already out in a Zodiac when we arrived. A good looking male who was fairly illusive, and taking long dives. A good day to be out again in the sunshine, even with the wind and choppy seas.
Marie, Orca-Magic, POW

Saturday, April 11, 2009

April 11
Encounter 10 was conducted by John Durban and Dave Ellifrit on 11 April 2009 with T123's in Haro Strait. An adult male was seen with them when first sighted from shore, but was not with them when encountered at 1218 PM.
Photo & report at Center for Whale Research

Photograph by Dave Ellifrit, Center for Whale Research

April 11
Encounter 11 by Center for Whale Research was conducted by John Durban and Dave Ellifrit and Meghan and Katie Mckillop with T14 and the T49's near Gooch Island, BC on 11 April 2009 around 5:30 PM. T14 may have been the male seen but not encountered with T123's earlier in the day. He seems to be wandering from group to group of transients, and is often by himself.

Photograph by Dave Ellifrit, Center for Whale Research
T14

Friday, April 10, 2009

T14, T30a and T11a sighted near Swartz Bay

April 10
Mark Malleson's 10 am Zodiac trip caught up with the big group of Transients near Swartz Bay today. He encountered the same ones reported yesterday, 9th April. I saw three big males T14, T30A and T11A along with many females. Great day seeing all those Transients together. All we needed was more sunshine. Happy Easter to you.
Marie, Orca-Magic POW

April 10
Orca Network received a call from Rob Lawson of Powell River, B.C, reporting 3 orcas in Malaspina Strait at 12:45 pm today. There was a male, female & young calf - the male had a vertical white line on his fin (more description below). They were in the N. end of Malaspina Strait, heading SE.
he then sent this update: The male is not in the photo groups (ID Guide), very big, vertical white strip on dorsal fin is about 1/3 to 2/3 of the ways to the top. Cute baby, very small, must be this years?? thanx from the best coast,
Rob Lawson, Powell River B.C.

Thursday, April 09, 2009

Transients are save

April 9
Mark Malleson of Prince of Whales called this afternoon with some good news - they found all the Transients that were in the Strait of Juan de Fuca on April 7th when sonar was used in the Strait, were present today! At about 3:10 pm, off the Dungeness Lighthouse heading east, they ID'd these Transient orcas: T30s', T172,
T49A's. T14, plus T11 and T11A (who were not present on the 7th).
He also had a report from the Mill Bay Ferry of Transient orcas T123, 123A, & 123B heading into Saanich Inlet this morning, then heading back out toward Goldstream early this afternoon.

Tuesday, April 07, 2009

T30s east of Sooke

April 7
Jeff LaMarche called Orca Network at 11:20 am to report ~ 6 Transient orcas 2.5 miles SE of East Sooke Park, S. Vancouver Island, taking a Steller Sea Lion. So far, ID's included 4 T30's, T172 & possibly T38. Mark Malleson was with them, hopefully we'll have more photos for tomorrow's report!

April 7
At about 11 AM Tuesday, April 7, While working as Lighthouse Keepers for a week at New Dungeness Spit Lighthouse, Karla Harrison saw a group of four orcas in Dungeness Bay at approximately N48.17974 W123.10975 (datum is that used by NASA's Worldwind. I've been trying to find it without success), directly south of the lighthouse and about 100 yards off the beach. They were moving West when first seen, but turned back to the east after rolling, blowing and displaying their dorsal fins several times. Several of us observed them from the lighthouse tower and Karla took the appended pictures with a Canon Powershot 590 camera. I thought they might be useful in identifying the individuals. In the picture with the male's fin showing, the whale in front of him seems to have a white spot near the tip of her fin. They did not appear to be feeding. After turning to the east to leave the bay and blowing three or four times, they were not seen again. Apparently they moved away without surfacing. After the whales left, we saw two groups of harbor seals quite close to shore, and wondered if they were taking refuge from the orcas, but the latter were not seen. I would appreciate hearing from you if you are able to identify individuals.
Mike Marsh

We forwarded the photos sent with this report on to researchers, and heard this back from Mark Malleson:
My guess is T14 with the T49A's as they were headed that direction last night. The fin shape is right for T14.
Mark Malleson, Victoria B.C.





Transient Orcas
T30, 30B, 30C and T172
E. Sooke Park,
S. Vancouver Island B.C.
April 7, 2009
Photo by Mark Malleson



T30 leaping during
Steller sea lion attack
SE of E.Sooke Park,
Vancouver Island, B.C.
April 7, 2009
Photo by Mark Malleson

April 7 w/Correction
The morning departure out of Victoria started out as any other normal wildlife tour, but that all changed at 1115 hrs. when I lucked out and found a small group of very active Killer Whales a few miles Southwest of Race Rocks Lighthouse. Upon arrival to this very active group of Orcas, I noticed that there was a large Sea Lion in the water with the whales. Whales were ID'd as T30, T30A, T30B, T30C and T172, respectively. (did not include the possible T38 included in the last report). Our location at this point was 2.5 nm SW of Church Rk. (Offshore of East Sooke Park). The five Transients were lunging and thrashing around frantically at the surface trying to stun or knockout this large Steller Sea Lion. For 25 minutes the five whales continually rammed the poor guy from all directionsuntil the Sea Lion magically caught a huge stroke of luck. Somehow the Steller Sea Lion had managed to drift right into the path of a giant floating kelp bed which he immediately took refuge in. I stayed on scene for as long as possible to see what was going to happen to the Sea Lion. At 1215, I finally had to leave the area to head back to Victoria to pickup the afternoon trip. As I left the area, the whales were still circling the kelp bed, taunting the Sea Lion. I never did see the final outcome of the encounter and the only two boats that were on scene were Mallard and myself. Absolutely brilliant Transient encounter off of East Sooke Park. Magic !!
On the afternoon trip, the five whales had moved well to the East of Race Rocks and were all grouped up in traveling mode doing long dives of 5-8 minutes. We picked the whales up at 1530 hrs. 3.5 nm SE of Race Rocks and left them one hour later at 1635 hrs. headed Southwest 3.9 nm SW of Race Rocks Lighthouse.
Jeff Lamarche, Seafun Safaris

Monday, April 06, 2009

T14 and T49s off Victoria

April 6
Mark Mallard of Prince of Whales called at 1:10 pm to report Transient orcas, including T14/Pender, & the T49's off the Victoria Waterfront. They had just made a kill. There was another group of Transients reported between Salmon Bank and Hein Bank as well - we'll hopefully have more details & ID's in tomorrow's report.



On April 6,2009, T14 came in past Race Rocks at 08:30 and appeared on the Race Rocks webcam with at least seven other transient killer whales. In the group were T123, T123A, and new calf, T123B, pictured here (see above photo). Also in the group were the T49's.
Report & more photos at Center for Whale Resarch

Transient Orcas T49s
hunting a porpoise
April 6, 2009
Photo by Monika Wieland

April 6
Today I saw my first orcas of 2009, and what a sighting it turned out to be! I was out with Captain Jim on the Peregrine this afternoon and we saw 8 transients in Haro Strait (we saw a group of 3 and a group of 5 - and there was another group reported further south). First we had the group of three including a pink little calf. I'm not sure who they were, but Ken Balcomb and others got good looks so hopefully they will report who it was. They spent about 15-20 minutes chasing a harbor porpoise around. At times it was hard to tell the calf apart from the porpoise as they both appeared so small next to the two adult females. The grand finale was a huge lunge by one of the adult females that launched the porpoise high into the air! (See first photo above.) I didn't even register it fully when I saw it but I somehow managed to click my camera and capture the proof. That was the last we saw of the porpoise, except for some lungs floating on the surface a little later. Shortly thereafter we were surprised by another group of five Ts. We knew they were in the area but thought they had headed in the other direction, so it was a pleasant surprise for them to pop up in our vicinity. The big male was T14, and I believe he was with the T49s. T49B and T49B1 were both in that group, and we left them heading south while the other group of 3 was heading north.
Monika Wieland, San Juan Island

April 6
Thought you might enjoy this pic (see photo below), with Mt Baker as a backdrop for the T49As and others. T14,' Pender ', was with this group this morning on Mark Mallerson's 11am trip. We finally found this illusive group, just off the Victoria waterfront, near Clover Point, after much searching. Marie, Orca-Magic, POW


T49s & T14 with Mt. Baker
Victoria, B.C.
April 6, 2009
Photo by Marie O'Shaughnessy

April 6
Well, looks like the first part of the trip (onboard NOAA's McArthur II Cruise) was So. Residents and then has been transient fest ever since. After Sunday'w Transient encounter we started zig-zagging south and about 4 AM (4/6) started picking up infrequent calls on the hydrophone array - we werent sure on ecotype - we were able to stay with and localize at sunrise and turned out to be another big group of Transients - at least 15 split into in several groups, including the whales we had Sunday afternoon! Candi and Dave are still working on the IDs.but at least the T11s, T46Bs, CA195 et al,. We were able to get out in the small boat and deployed two satellite tags - one on T11 and the other on a female-sized whale that ID is still to be determined. Robin Baird will have maps up on the Cascadia web site in the next couple of days. Made a swing down past Hecta Bank last night and now making the run north to be back in Seattle Thurs AM.
Brad Hanson, NWFSC, onboard the McArthur II

Sunday, April 05, 2009

Transietn CA79



April 5
I got some great looks at a few transients today in Monterey Bay while onboard the Monterey Bay Whale Watch/Sea Wolf II (my first transient sighting, which is ironic considering I've seen the southern residents here, and on my birthday nonetheless!). I believe there was a male, two females and a calf, although I was not able to get a good photo of the calf- less female. Do these look familiar at all? (see photo above) Thanks,
Jessica Riggin, California State University Monterey Bay

Reply/ID from Alisa Schulman-Janiger:
I recognize the big well-marked male in your photo (above). This is CA79, a large adult transient male that was first seen off Pt. Reyes in 1989. He is primarily sighted in Monterey Bay; I saw him there in 2000. I cannot ID the female as of yet.
Alisa Schulman-Janiger, California Killer Whale Project, ACS/LA Gray Whale Census and Behavior Project, Director

Saturday, April 04, 2009

In memory of T44

We have received more great photos and links to slide shows and photos of Transient orca T44, who was found dead on Monday. A necropsy has been performed by Dr. John Ford, Dr. Stephen Raverty and others, though no obvious cause of death was immediately apparent. It will be several weeks before results from tests of samples taken during the necropsy are available - we will update you on any further information as it comes in. We have also posted several news stories about T44 on our News Page, which we will continue to update as well.
Thanks to Chantelle and Rachael for sharing these great tributes (see below) in memory of T44 -
Susan & Howard, Orca Network

Upon second glance through my sets it turns out i have hundreds of t44 images (Ok well just short of 200 :) I am putting together a slide show (click here to view). I didn't realize till now that he is probably my most photographed whale other than J1.
here is one for trial island (pictured here).
Chantelle Tucker

Hi Susan, Here is a photo set - of T44 on flickr. he will be missed.
Rachael M. Griffin, Aquagreen Marine Research, Victoria BC
Orcanetwork report

April 4
Bob Whitney of Port Townsend called to report 2 female orcas off Pt. Wilson heading NW at 8:30 am. He only saw them surface once - possible Transients?

Wednesday, April 01, 2009

Transient calls near Race Rocks

April 1
High winds on the outer coast sent us back in to the Strait of Juan de Fuca late Tuesday. While patrolling the Straits of Juan de Fuca yesterday (April 1) we did hear hear some transient calls for a short while when we were west of Race Rocks - array bearings indicated they were to the east but we were not able to locate the whales visually - hope to head back out tomorrow night.
Brad Hanson, NWFSC, onboard the McArthur II

T44 found dead, floating near Port Hardy

Orcalab reports

A couple of days ago, the MacKays were told of a sighting of a dead orca floating near Hope Island (near Port Hardy). The DFO was alerted and with the help of a Coast Guard boat, that was in the vicinity, the whale was secured. DFO was able to identify the 31 year old transient male as T44. A necropsy will be performed in the next day or so. Finding a whale, soon after death, is a very rare occurrence and presents an opportunity to gain valuable knowledge.
Helena
01 Apr 2009 08:24:18 PST