Menu


Products

Intended use

Service

CUSTOMER SERVICE
GO TO MY SERVICE

Product & Technical Services, Tips & Care, Tutorials, Downloads, Declarations of conformity

Customer ServiceMO - TH 8:00 - 17:00 AND FR 8:00 - 12:0000800 3242 5056customerservice@swarovskioptik.com

Dealer LocatorFind dealers near your locationGo to Dealer Locator
Your language:
Flags/SwedenEnglish
Orca Dan Brown - Whale Watching /OOrca Dan Brown - Whale Watching /OOrca Dan Brown - Whale Watching /O

5 Top Tips for Whale watching from Ferries

Wild, Unpredictable, and Unforgettable Moments

Reading time: 2 min.

Wild, Unpredictable, and Unforgettable Moments

Whale and dolphin watching from ferries can be immensely rewarding and offers some of the best value cetacean watching on the planet. Whilst it doesn’t necessarily get you as close to whales and dolphins as a targeted boat trip, many ferry routes will go through very rich waters for marine megafauna and can often be found in remote areas around the planet. Examples for this are: Inside Passage, British Columbia; Bay of Biscay, France/Spain, Raja Ampat, Indonesia; The Minch, Scotland.

NL Pure 10x32 Burnt Orange
ONE FOR EVERYWHERENL Pure 32
SWAROVSKI OPTIK VPA 2 variable phone adapter
VPA 2 variable phone adapterAMAZING VERSATILITY
Dan Brown - Whale Watching /O
Dan Brown - Whale Watching /O
Here are 5 top tips for maximising your whale watching experience while aboard:
  1. Chose a ferry route which uses suitable ships; this can should be a minimum of outdoor viewing potential and ideally a slower vessel (newer catamaran ferries often travel too fast).

  2. Do your research and engage in citizen science. Many local cetacean organisations have developed recording apps. These may allow you to discover what has been seen both recently and historically as well as being a portal for recording your own observations.

  3. Be prepared for any weather be that sun, wind, rain, heat, cold or all of the above and if possible, have flexibility to pick days with calm conditions. Glassy seas always produce more sightings.

  4. Utilise any available shelter – there will almost always be a lee-side to the vessel which you can hunker down in if required. In tropical areas you might want to find somewhere out of the sun. Easier viewing means better concentration which equals more sightings.

  5. Use a pair of binoculars with a wide field of view to maximise detections and combine with naked-eye scans. Digital photography is your friend. Not only can it capture memorable encounters it can also assist in sussing out tricky identifications.

Dan Brown birding Indonesia

About

Dan Brown


Dan has been an avid naturalist and birder all his life having grown up in a botanic garden in North Wales. His passion turned into a profession having worked as an Ecologist, tour leader and lecturer around the world from the Antarctic to Arctic, Papua New Guinea to Madagascar. He has authored two books on birding and is a regular contributor to magazines. He is also scientific adviser to the BBC Natural history unit and other TV production companies and now with his wife Rachael runs Wild Discovery, an award-winning wildlife watching tour company. Together with his wife Rachael he runs Wild Discovery. They organize fully inclusive wildlife expeditions and short tours, all supporting conservation programs and sustainable initiatives and promoting green livelihoods.

Photos (c) Dan Brown

Go toOverview all Stories
Charles Post – Generation Nature – Part 3 Shorebirds and Seabirds /B/O 01Regenerative Agriculture benefits Shore- and SeabirdsSaving Our Birds Reading time: 6 min.