The Ukiah Daily Journal

TIME TO SUPPORT OCEAN RESEARCH

An array of activities planned for this year's Whale Festival

- By Peter O'donohue

March is upon us and while winter is still making itself known with a recent series of storms, spring is right around the corner. How could you miss it? The days are getting longer and — the surest sign of all — the gray whales are visiting our shores again.

These schoolbus-size leviathans honor our neighborho­od twice each year as they circuit through on their annual 12,000mile migration — the longest in the mammalian kingdom — between their feeding grounds off Alaska and their breeding and birthing grounds in Mexico. Right now the grays are heading north, many with new calves in tow, and in Mendocino County that means it's time for the Whale Festival!

The fast-growing Noyo Center For Marine Science in Fort Bragg has prepared an array of activities for this year's festival season that are sure to inform, entertain and astonish visitors about the extraordin­ary lives and capacities of the gray whales and the many other cetaceans that visit our coast.

Putting an emphasis on education, trained docents will be guiding visitors on free “Whale Walks” along the headlands every Friday, Saturday, and Sunday between March 4 — 26. Participan­ts will have a good chance to view gray whales and their calves and, frequently, humpbacks and other whales can be spotted too.

The Noyo Center's downtown Discovery Center, which always has a variety of permanent exhibits on display, will also be hosting noted area author/artist Larry Foster who will be available to discuss, sell and sign copies of his beautiful work The Art of Discoverin­g Whales on March 18.

On March 19 whale acoustics expert Jeff Jacobsen will

play and discuss humpback whale songs he recently recorded off the Mendocino Coast. For those preferring to participat­e remotely, the Noyo Center will host a Zoom presentati­on on March 15 on Whale Safe, a technology designed to prevent whale/ship collisions; on March 23 area marine experts Scott and Tree Mercer will discuss the gray whale migration.

Marine science enthusiast­s who followed the exciting story of a Noyo Center-led effort last summer to recover the remains of a deceased juvenile sperm whale will not want to miss a presentati­on on this fascinatin­g saga by the Noyo Center's Stranding Coordinato­r, Sarah Grimes, and Jeff Jacobsen at the Slack Tide Cafe on N. Harbor Drive on March 18.

The presentati­on will include video footage of the whale's present location off Noyo Harbor, where it continues to be studied as a valuable example of “whale fall.” One of the participan­ts in the recovery effort, local vessel captain Sean Thornton, will also be offering a whalewatch­ing trip aboard the Telstar on March 16, weather permitting. Wrapping up the week on March 19 at the cafe will be Christophe­r Oates and his musical marionette­s presenting the “Ocean Commotion Show” at 11 am and 1 pm. All ages welcome — $5/ person at the door.

And there's more. The Crow's Nest, the Noyo Center's seaside facility on the bluffs, will offer a variety of exhibits throughout the Festival season. Of particular interest will be the skeleton of a beaked whale that washed ashore at Jug Handle beach last spring. This elusive and extremely rare denizen of the deep sea is rarely seen alive and only a few deceased specimens have ever been recovered. Also on display will be a baleen rack from a young humpback that stranded here last summer as well as the mandible (jaw bone) of a blue whale that died here in 2009 in a ship collision. Its death subsequent­ly inspired the establishm­ent of the Noyo Center. Docents and staff will be on hand to tell amazing (but true) tales about each of these fascinatin­g animals.

For up-to-date informatio­n about specific times, dates, and locations of each of these events please check the Noyo Center's website: www.noyocenter.org/ whale-festival-2023.

Oh, and about that gray whale migration. To honor the whales' epic 12,000-mile round trip journey past our shores, the Noyo Center is trying to raise $12,000 in March to support its work on marine science research and education. They'll track the campaign's progress by symbolical­ly showing a mom and newborn gray whale calf's progress on a map of the route. Care to join the Gray Whale Migration Challenge and make a donation to get mom and the calf to their goal? Visit https://www.noyocenter.org/gray-whale-challenge to donate today.

 ?? PHOTOS CONTRIBUTE­D ?? The Crow's Nest, the Noyo Center's seaside facility on the bluffs, will offer a variety of exhibits throughout the festival season.
PHOTOS CONTRIBUTE­D The Crow's Nest, the Noyo Center's seaside facility on the bluffs, will offer a variety of exhibits throughout the festival season.
 ?? ?? California Gray Whale
California Gray Whale

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