Serendipity -
the effect by which one accidentally stumbles upon something fortunate,
especially while looking for something entirely unrelated. That's the
best description I could come up with to portray the story behind this
site. It truely has been “A Whale of an Adventure”.
Alaska Whale Watching Tours
Welcome to Alaska Whale Watching; if your looking for any of the scheduled whale
watching tours along the coastlines of Alaska you will find them
listed by region and location. If your looking for more information
on the whales of Alaska, please read through the information below
for the complete story about locations, timing and somethings related
to what you can expect in the form of weather, seas and whale species.
Find out when would be the best
times are to see the various whales found in Alaska.
ALASKA RESIDENTS: Cold Outside?
Not Over Here! Come see the humpback whales in their winter grounds off Hawaii.
Specials on Flights
from Alaska to Hawaii are available and full package
deals are waiting for you. Find us in Honolulu and see the whales
now.
Alaska Whales
No vacation to the Alaska Coastal Areas would be complete without
taking the time to view and photograph the spectacular sea life found
in the nutrient rich waters of Alaska. This is a Mecca of marine life
from our beloved whales to the prized wild salmon that thrive in abundance
throughout these waters.
Whale Watching Alaska has evolved into a information portal dedicated
to the preservation of the marine environment. Today information on
Alaska whale populations, distributions and over-all health of the
various species is being added for your pre-trip reading. We also want
to promote environmentally responsible whale watching trips featuring gray
whale, orcas (killer
whale), humpback whale and
the beluga whales. Also
being listed for the first time are some of the smaller more intimate
cruise lines that offer cruises to Alaska with an emphasis placed on
sustainable whale watching. These Small Ship
Cruises are best known as Alaska Yacht Charter or Alaska Small
Boat Cruise. Most of these tours operate within the Inside Passage.
Southeast Alaska Yacht Charters that normally have less then 100 passengers
per voyage are based out of Seattle, and Vancouver B.C.
Where and When To See Whales In Alaska.
Plan on a whale watching tour in the Seward,
Whittier, Homer Alaska area. Every spring,
Gray whales migrate through the waters off Alaska on their way to their
summer feeding grounds in the Bering and Chukchi seas. In the spring,
Seward AK Small Ship Cruises include day trips that offer Gray
Whale Watching combined with marine life & glacier tours in
Kenai Fjords National Park near Seward, AK. These are great combo trips
that the whole family is sure to enjoy. During the early spring, you
are likely to see the gray whales on their annual migration north to
the rich feeding and calving grounds of the arctic ocean. As summer
progresses, frequent observations of humpback, minke,
and orcas,"killer whales", are present
throughout the waters of coastal Alaska. Resurrection Bay in Seward,
the many bays off Kodiak AK, Whittier in Prince
William Sound, See Map of
Prince William Sound, Glacier Bay and Icy Straight, and the Inside
Passage around Juneau Alaska. These are some of the hot spots for Alaska
whale watching trips.
Alaska Whale Watching Tours listed by area.
- Southeast Alaska
Tours The area known as "The Inside Passage".
Includes Craig, Elfin Cove, Glacier Bay, Gustavus, Haines, Hoonah,
Hydaburg, Juneau, Ketchikan, Petersburg, Sitka, Skagway and Wrangell.
- South Central
Alaska Tours: Gulf of Alaska, Resurrection Bay,
Kachemak Bay and Kodiak Island Tours. Includes the cities of
Homer, Seward, Kenai, Kodiak, Valdez and the area of Turnagain
Arm.
- Bering Sea Whales:
Areas North of the Alaska Peninsula. Includes the Alaska Peninsula,
Aleutian Islands, Bristol Bay, Pribilof Islands and Yukon Kuskokwim
Delta.
- Discover the Inside Passage and
Southeast Alaska through one of the listed Alaska
Cruise Packages and don't forget to bring your camera
along! Depending upon the season there are Gray, Humpback, Orca
(Killer whales), porpoises, seals, sea lions, & sea otters
just a short boat ride from the dock. Hike the spectacular rainforest
trails of Prince of Wales Island, explore the islands during
a bear watching Eco tours by boat or vehicle. For bird watchers
there are Bald Eagles, Ospreys and Herons just to name a few.
Back on shore, enjoy some freshly made dishes from the bounty
of the seas around you. This is not just a whale watching tour
but a complete Alaskan adventure.
Coming in the Spring 2011: Gray
whales, like the Humpback
whales, migrate to Alaska waters each year. The Gray
whales migrate from their winter grounds in Baja California on
their wat to their summer feeding and breading areas in the Bering
and Chukchi seas of Northern Alaska. Each spring, an estimated 20,000 Gray
Whales will travel along the outer coast of Southeast Alaska.
If your along the coast of Southeast or South Central Alaska in late
March, all of April and well into May, plan on taking a guided whale
tour to see this spectacular event. Some of the best places to see Gray
Whales in Alaska include Ketchikan in the southern portion of
the panhandle, Sitka located on Baranof Island, both Yakutat and
Cordova as well as Seward Alaska on the Kenai Peninsula and the island
of Kodiak Alaska. Spring whale watching tours are an excellent way
to clean out the cobwebs from a long Alaskan winter and kick off
the summers excitement with a Seward Alaska Gray Whale Tour in April
and May.
See the Whales
of Alaska: May - September is great for killer whale
viewing in Southeast Alaska and June - September is the time to
see the humpback whales that return to the Inland Passage of Alaska.
If nature viewing is enjoyable to you, consider the Bering Sea
Crab Fishing Tour in Ketchikan. It's one of the best hands on tours
available with lots of marine life and the bald eagles will be
landing so close to you that their size will completely fill the
viewfinder of your cameras without the need for a zoom. Great tour
for those arriving in Ketchikan on any of the cruise ships during
the summer. This tour can be booked through your cruise line, from
your travel agent or on the ship from the travel assistant available
during the cruise.
Glacier
Bay is where whale experts first studied humpback
whales "bubble-netting" or blowing bubbles to herd small fish into
a tight ball before feeding on them. Also prevalent in the Glacier
Bay are pods of killer whales, orcas, that patrol the entrance
to the bay, while porpoises and dolphins are commonly seen inside
the bay. Best time to see whales is from June to early September.
Marine Mammals and Wildlife Cruises, view the large abundance of marine
life in the cool clear waters of the Alaska coastline. Steller sea
lions, Walrus, Harbor Seals and more can round off your whale watching
trip. Alaska Marine Mammals include Bearded Seal, Harbor Seal, Northern
Fur Seal, Polar Bear, Ribbon Seal, Ringed Seal, Sea Otter, Spotted
Seal, Steller's Sea Lion, Walrus.
What is happening to all the Beluga Whales
in Cook Inlet?
For years now the numbers of Cook
Inlet Beluga whales has been on the decline and even with all
the research being conducted, the reasons still remain somewhat of
a mystery. From the once 1300 strong, today the population has declined
to around 225 whales. Reasons for the decline are still unproven
yet it is believed that a combination of events could be a threat
to the Cook Inlet Beluga Whale habitat.
There could also be other natural or unnatural causes that are attributing
to the decline that are yet to be discovered. What they do know is
the numbers have become serious and one wrong decision or accidental
mishap could mean it's to late. The time has come to get serious
about this situation and get the trends reversed.
Cook Inlet Critical
Habitat for the protection of the beluga whales and
benefiting all species of fish and mammals in these endangered
waters.
Alaska Whales: species that you may
see include Beluga Whale, Blue
Whale, Bottlenose
Whales, Gray Whale, Humpback
Whale, Orca (Killer Whale).
The term whale is ambiguous: it can refer to all mammals in the
order of Cetacea (whales, dolphins and porpoises). For the purposes
of this web site, Whale will be interpreted as being limited to the
larger of the Cetacean order of mammals known to the Alaskan coastline.
Also we will be limiting the term Whales to those cetaceans which
are neither dolphins nor porpoises. This can lead to some confusion
because Orcas ("Killer Whales") and Pilot Whales have "whale" in
their name, but for purpose of classification, both are in the dolphins
group yet we include the Orca within the content of this site mainly
due to their popularity with whale watching groups of Alaska.
NOTE: Pilot Whales are not found in Alaskan waters.
|