Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. This video will give you goosebumps: the largest animal on the planet gracefully steaming straight toward a whale-watching boat.
Blue whales are the largest mammals in the world, and they spend much of their lives roaming the deep ocean, where they feed on vast amounts of krill. Blue whales usually inhabit the open sea and are ...
DANA POINT, Calif. (KABC) -- The search for an entangled blue whale spotted off the coast of Dana Point continued Tuesday. A blue whale was spotted about six miles southwest of Dana point around 12:30 ...
Wondering where to see whales in Mexico? Mexico offers some of the world’s most spectacular whale-watching opportunities, so you’ll be spoiled for choice Each year from about December through April, ...
The City of Catoosa marked a major construction milestone Feb. 9 with a topping-out ceremony at the Blue Whale of Catoosa, celebrating continued progress on the new Blue Whale Visitor Center. City ...
Last chance to visit Catoosa’s iconic Blue Whale before it closes for a landmark renovation. See it now and join the excitement for its reopening. The famous Blue Whale of Catoosa is welcoming ...
Sonoma Coast Adventures has quickly become a favorite activity in Bodega Bay, offering ways to experience the beauty of the Bodega Bay coast and harbor. Tours are led by longtime local Captain Mike ...
What makes Monterey Bay so appealing is what you can’t see. Starting a mile off shore from Moss Landing is the start of the ...
Photo of a large blue whale with bright light on a black background. Insulation.© ARomadov/Shutterstock.com Blue whale calves enter the world already the size of a bus, yet they still face danger. A ...
The intimate family lives of blue whales, including a blue whale nursing its calf underwater, has been revealed in extraordinary footage captured in a project led by an international marine ecologist ...
It’s Whale Watching Week in Oregon, which means coastal visitors will get the chance to spot gray whales as they swim north to their Arctic feeding grounds.