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At San Juan County Park we could see the whales in the distance heading away from us. "Oh well, at least I got to see them at all," I thought. But then Jim Maya, the aforementioned whale watch boat captain, offered to take us out on his boat for a short visit with the whales. How could I refuse?!


K42 traveling with big brother, Lobo (K26)
K42, who breached dozens of times throughout the course of the afternoon, left us all with a sense of optimism as we departed to head home: surely if the youngest member of this endangered population has the spunk and energy to be so playful on this October afternoon, there's hope that everything will be all right for the Southern Resident killer whales.
Adult males don't usually play as much as calves, but K42's spirited attitude must have started to rub off on his big brother. Here, Lobo (K26), on the right, rolls at the surface with his big pectoral fin in the air while little K42 completes another breach off to his left.
While it is unknown who Lolita's mother was, we do know that she was a member of the L25/L12 subgroup. Several of her immediate family members are still alive, such as L25, L77, L94, and L41, pictured above.

How cool! I decided to go through my photos of Dall's porpoises to see if I could spot some differences between males and females. This photo to the right seemingly shows an adult female. The tail is black with white frosting and the trailing edge is more or less straight across.
reliable sexually dimorphic traits, such as the slope of the dorsal fin and the size of the hump in the caudal peduncle (tail stock) that gives the porpoise the look of having a "broken tail" when diving.
A male harlequin duck in his beautiful painted plummage, a photo I took by
The long-tailed duck, formerly known as an oldsquaw, is the only sea duck with a white head. The individual we saw was a male in winter plummage. It was too far away to get a photo, but my mom, who has recently gotten into sketching, drew this picture to show you what the bird we saw looked like.


Mouflon are thought to be one of the two original ancestors of all domestic sheep breeds, and are actually an endangered species in their native habitat. In 2001, they became the first endangered species to be cloned and live beyond infancy, a technique that, if refined, could change conservation management of endangered species. During the summer, males and females spend most of their time apart, but in the fall, males battle for access to groups of females.


