Eye of the Whale: Epic Passage From Baja To Siberia

By (author): "Eben Given, Dick Russell"
Publish Date: 2001
Eye of the Whale: Epic Passage From Baja To Siberia
ISBN1559630884
ISBN139781559630887
AsinEye of the Whale: Epic Passage From Baja To Siberia
Original titleEye of the Whale: Epic Passage from Baja to Siberia
Inches below the surface, [the whales] appear not so much gray as whitish blue. The immensity of these creatures is overwhelming. Fully grown they reach at least thirty-five feet in length and weigh more than thirty tons -- ten times the size of a large elephant. The mother dwarfs our little boat. The calf is nearly one-third her size. With a mere flick of the tail, either whale could overturn us. Eye of the Whale focuses on one great whale in particular -- the coastal-traveling California gray whale. Gray whales make the longest migration of any mammal -- from the lagoons of Baja California to the feeding grounds of the Bering Strait between Alaska and Siberia (nearly 6,000 miles). That the gray whale exists today is nothing short of miraculous. Whaling fleets twice massacred the species to near extinction -- first during the nineteenth century and again during the early part of the twentieth century. As they moved in for the kill, whalers claimed their prey by naming it: "Hard-Head"; "Devil-fish"; "sea-serpent crossed with an alligator."