We saw our very first humpback whales bubble net feeding of the
season last week aboard Ursa Major! There were six individuals working
together via social cues to collectively herd herring. Before emerging
from the water as a group, these humpback whales exhaled air from their
blowholes as they swam in a spiral formation. The trapped exhaled air
forms a roughly cylindrical bubble net, or trap. In the above photo,
the humpback whales are emerging from the water after following their
bubble net to the surface in an attempt to catch as much herring as
possible in one gulp. For more information on humpback whales in
Alaska, please visit the website of the Alaska Whale Foundation, (a
nonprofit organization dedicated to the conservation of Alaskan marine
mammals), by clicking
HERE.
Our guests on this week's trip, Scott and Joan, of Vancouver,
Washington, seen here at Kasnyku Falls, near the Hidden Falls Hatchery
on Baranof Island, Alaska.
After three weeks of hanging the hummingbird feeder on Ursa Major,
we saw our first rufous hummingbirds of the season. We encountered a
"swarm" of them in Warm Springs Bay, Baranof Island, and enjoyed
watching them battle one another and empty the feeder multiple times.
Rufous hummingbirds migrate north to southeast Alaska in the late
spring/early summer from Mexico, and usually leave Alaska by September
to migrate back to Mexico for the winter. They remain in southeast
Alaska long enough to enjoy the short bloom cycle of the wild flowers
here in the summer.
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