Whale Of A Vacation
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BAJA CALIFORNIA SUR, Mexico – Would you like to take a
vacation that takes you to new places, provides unique experiences and
allows you to make a difference somewhere in the world?
Earthwatch Institute, an international non-profit organization which
recruits volunteers to help professionals with their research, has more than
130 projects available.
Whether your adventure relates to a special interest or to a new subject,
Earthwatch offers many activity levels detailed in each project overview,
and no prior experience is necessary to participate.
In March, a friend and I chose to participate in “Among Baja’s Gray Whales:
Behavioral Ecology of Gray Whale Migration.”
Our expedition was overseen by project investigator William Megill, Ph.D.,
the research director of Coastal Ecosystems Research Foundation, Port Hardy,
British Columbia, Canada, and assistant professor at the University of Bath,
England. Megill has been conducting a study off the coast of British
Columbia, Canada, since 1994 and in Laguna San Ignacio, Mexico, since 2001.

Earthwatch recruits volunteers to help Megill with the photographing and
identification of the whales. The California gray whales migrate along the
Pacific coast of North America between the Bering Sea and Baja California,
Mexico, the peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and the Gulf of California.
The Lagoon of San Ignacio, about halfway down the peninsula coast where the
project takes place, is a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve. Many whales winter near
there and have their young before heading back to the summer feeding grounds
in the Bering Sea.
Some of the whales had already started their migration back north when we
were there, and by the end of March or first week in April, they would all
be gone. The whales migrate back south in December or early January.
Earthwatch contracts with Kuyima, an eco-tourism group which runs a
wilderness camp on the beach of the lagoon, to take the group out in boats
to observe the whales. Tents are provided for the volunteers, who take their
own sleeping bags.
The area is a desert, so it gets cold at night, and the wind blows most of
the time. Electricity for the camp is provided by wind and solar power.
Fresh water is bought from a nearby desalinization plant – also run by solar
power. Drinking water is provided but water for showers is scarce, so
showers are allowed every other day – from a bucket of water.
It is amazing how well you can wash by pouring a little water over yourself,
soaping up and then rinsing off. I’ve never been a camper, so that was a new
experience for me, but it worked fine. Since it was cool and the air very
dry, having a shower only every other day was not a problem

Meals are provided on site, cooked by local people who work for Kuyima. Most
of the staff speaks English and are very friendly.
The food prepared is typical Mexican food and very good: eggs and beans for
breakfast; tacos or quesidillas for lunch; and rice, beans and chicken or
locally caught fish for supper. Vegetarian meals can be provided for those
who wish them.
Meals are served in a palapa, a palm-roofed building, which also serves the
tourists who come to “whale watch” with Kuyima.
“On the job” training is how the volunteers learn to assist the researchers.
Every morning, the boats take out six to eight people to view and photograph
the whales.
In Mexico, it isn’t illegal to touch the whales, and you are almost certain
to be offered the chance. It seems as if the whales like to be touched.
They stay by the boat for minutes at a time with the mothers allowing their
calves near the boats. It is unbelievable that these huge animals are so
friendly. We almost felt as if the whales were studying us!
The adults are from 45-50 feet long and weigh up to 80,000 pounds. The boats
are small fiber glass boats with powerful outboard motors made to carry a
maximum of eight people.
When the whales are nearby, everyone tries to get good pictures. After about
two hours of observing, the boat returns to camp for lunch.
The pictures are then downloaded into computers, cropped and enlarged, and
the cross identification begins. It is surprising to learn that each whale
has its own markings. The idea is to see how many of the same whales are
back from year to year and to get an estimate of how many are in the area.
After a day or two, even the volunteers are able to recognize some of the
whales when they come to the boat.
Free time to explore the beach areas and the mangrove swamps is available.
There are many water birds to observe, and you can hire a Kuyima employee to
take you into the mangroves in a kayak.
Visit Earthwatch.org or call (978) 461-0081 to ask for a catalog and start
planning your next unique vacation. Not only will you have a wonderful
experience, but because Earthwatch is a non-profit organization, the fee you
pay and your travel expenses, are tax deductable – a win-win for you and the
researchers.
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