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Archive for the 'dolphins' Tag

Video: Dolphins playing with boat off Dana Point

May 18th, 2009, 12:35 pm by Laylan Connelly, staff writer

We just got this great user-submitted video in, showing a pod of dolphins cruising alongside a boat in Dana Point.

Please enable Javascript and Flash to view this Brightcove video.

 There’s tons of wildlife off the Dana Point coast, with pods that reach up to 5,000 dolphins that call the area home. In one pod, there’s a rare albino dolphin that sometimes makes an appearance. Check out video and blog about “Casper” here.

The coast seems to be waking up lately, with the spotting of the first blue whale of the season just a few days ago. There have also been some Risso dolphins spotted recently off Dana Point.

With the weather warming up in the afternoons, it’s a great time to head out on a charter boat. You can go through Capt. Dave’s Dolphin Safari or Dana Wharf Sportsfishing and Whalewatching.

If you can’t get enough about dolphins, check out these surfers paddling into a pod off Seal Beach.

Read the rest of this entry »

Rare sighting of “Albino” dolphin awes spectators in Dana Point

July 21st, 2008, 3:13 pm by Laylan Connelly, staff writer

A rare sighting of an albino or “pink” dolphin was reported off the coast of Dana Point Sunday, giving spectators aboard a charter boat run by Capt. Dave’s Dolphin and Whale Watching Safari a treat.
An albino dolphin was spotted off Dana Point on Sunday.  Photo by Dave Anderson of Capt. Dave’s Dolphin and Whale Watching Safari

Capt. Dave Anderson said he has only seen the albino dolphin once before during his years at sea, but this is the first time he’s ever been able to capture it on camera.
“We’ve never been able to get close to it until yesterday,” he said. “It got close up to the boat and was riding with us.”

In most cases, common dolphins are a sleek gray color. Anderson thinks this albino dolphin is the same one he saw before, in a group of about 500 common dolphins that swam alongside the boat.

There are about 400,000 common dolphins along the coast here, Anderson said. 

“We just never see this, it’s just a rare and unusual sighting,” he said.
His 6-year-old daughter Arielle named the dolphin “Casper.

Among the passengers were 14 students from around the USA as well as Italy, Sweden, Great Britain, Spain,  and Scotland, who were attending a summer course on Spinal Cord Injury Research hosted by the Reeve-Irvine Research Center at the UC Irvine. 

Check out this video footage taken by passenger Sheri Lowry.

Please enable Javascript and Flash to view this Flash video.

Not much is known about the albino common dolphin,  but Anderson thinks the same genetics that happen with human albinos also occur in the dolphins.
An albino dolphin was spotted off Dana Point on Sunday.  Photo by Dave Anderson of Capt. Dave’s Dolphin and Whale Watching Safari
A similar dolphin spotted in Louisiana last year made huge nationwide news, with photos of the pink-eyed, pink-skinned mammal circulated widely on the Internet. Read the story here.
Anderson said this one was with a calf. Also on the trip, the charter boat spotted a blue whale, two fin whales, and a pair of Risso dolphins.

More from the Beach Blog:

Shark attacks woman on kayak at Catalina, knocks her off in front of her kids

Blue whale spotted offshore

Great white shark spotted by charter boat 2 miles off Doheny State Beach

Great white sharks: Have you seen any? Check out our map of sightings

Rare sighting of killer whales close to coast

Tandem surfers flipping out for San Clemente’s Ocean Festival

So Cal surfing vs. Central Coast? Plus nude surfing

Skateboarder seizes 405 freeway

Another fatal shark attack

Great whites off Newport Beach: photos from 2002

Shark kills swimmer in Solana Beach just south of OC - local beaches stay open

Competitor saves dolphin before Pier Pressure event

July 1st, 2008, 2:28 pm by ahaley

dolphin.jpgJust minutes before the Nike Pier Pressure event got started Monday morning, Hawaii’s Tyler Newton was at the water’s edge getting ready to paddle out. He and others thought they saw a sand shark until the noticed how the animal was moving.

Newton had spotted a young dolphin that had beached itself.

Several ran over to help the animal and Newton swam the dolphin back out aproximately 30 feet but the animal beached itself again a few minutes later.

He swam it out a second time about 50 feet, but with no luck. Finally, surfers enlisted the help of Huntington lifeguards who located and released the young one to what was described as a frantic pod.

Thanks to Brent Hillerman for the great photo.

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