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Capt.
Dave’s Weekly Ocean Report
As seen in the
Orange County Register/Dana Point News
May 19, 2005
The word on
the water this week is common, common dolphin that is, a terrible
name for a beautiful animal. With over 400,000 of them off our
coast they are the most prevalent marine mammals. This week we
had several megapods of common dolphins in our area. We were
following one such pod last Friday when the whole pod of approximately
a thousand dolphins coagulated into a tight group and then began
speeding up. Suddenly they began charging up the coast tearing
up the ocean all around them. When one witnesses this you are
in awe.
Of all the things I have ever seen in the ocean, being in the middle of a mega
pod when they are all leaping completely out of the water, in full speed porposing,
stands out as one of the most awe inspiring. Photos do not do it justice, though
I am including one I took. Imagine being in a jeep, riding in the middle of
a herd of stampeding horses out on a flat desert plain and you have some idea
of the moment. I pulled out my video recorder, held it as steady as I could
and watched through the viewfinder listening to the sounds. What I saw on the
tiny monitor was so beautiful it brought tears to my eyes. Everyone on the
usually noisy boat fell silent, as for just a moment; we were part of this
stampeding herd. 
My wife asks me how I can enjoy what I am seeing if I am busy filming or photographing
it. It is difficult to explain but I really do enjoy it and I find the experience
is even more satisfying when I am able, as I did on Friday, to come home and
share this moment on tape with my family.
It is a challenge to get good photographs and footage on a rocking boat with
animals that appear and disappear quickly, and not at all where you hoped or
expected. Sometime it can be very frustrating, but overall I enjoy the challenge.
I think there is something built into us that makes us want to share our experiences
with others. It is not enough for me to experience it. I want others to know
and to experience it as well, which is why I started Dolphin Safari, and why
I make my films and why I write this column. And it is why I saw so many of
my passengers using their cell phones to tell friends and relatives who will
never really be able to properly visualize what we all witnessed.
This week we
also got a report of several fin whales about twenty miles out
and our first report of blue whales in the area seven miles out,
unfortunately we did not see them ourselves and we did not see
any gray whales this week either. We did see bottlenose dolphin
and also a Mola mola, which is a giant ocean sunfish. We haven’t
been seeing very many of the Mola’s for a while so between
them and the blue whales it’s beginning to look a lot like
summer.
Well, that is all until next week. God bless. This is Capt. Dave, over and
out.
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Capt. Dave Anderson runs Capt. Dave’s Dolphin Safari out of Dana Point
Harbor. He recently completed the award winning documentary film “Wild
Dolphins and Whales of Southern California.” Capt. Dave will be sharing
his photos and stories and letting us know what he and other skippers are seeing
off the Orange County coast. For a daily log of sightings see www.dolphinsafari.com.
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