Champagne, A Flat Calm Ocean & Patting a Wild Whale…

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We were in South West Australia for my very good friend Lainy’s wedding. It is a spectacular slice of Australia and we decided to take a few extra days and head further south to visit some other great friends in Dunsborough. Most people know Dunsborough and Margaret River as surfing and wine country which it is, however the marine life that is in and around that area is always spectacular. Our friends Mark and Marina have two small daughters and we had spent a day or two catching up with family and friends and decided to take the girls out in the boat and try to see some whales on the horizon. It was flat calm, which anyone that has been to this part of WA knows that while rare at that time of the year, is spectacular. The water is so blue, the beaches are so glamorous and it seemed like an ideal way to spend the afternoon. So in goes the ski boat and out we go.

We idled around about 1 kilometer off shore for about an hour and couldn’t even see a spout on the horizon so gave up and cracked the champagne. Why the hell not hey? We had been chatting for about half an hour I guess when about 200m from the boat we saw a whale crack the surface. We were so excited. SO excited. A whale that close — OMG!

A whale tail cracks the surface on a perfectly still Dunsborough day.

Brad was sitting on the duckboard at the back of the boat and started splashing the water joking he was calling the whale. Yeah — right Brad, but whatever it was, the whale started to come closer.

He would dive down under the boat and surface on the other side looking at us and getting closer and closer every time.

Closer and closer… Closer and closer…

We were frigging beside ourselves by this time. He was clearly really interested in who or what we were and by this stage was surfacing and then turning to look at us.

Brad grinning like an idiot with a full size hump back whale about 5 meteres behind him!

So here is our whale, getting closer and closer, and then finally comes up right alongside the boat. I mean brushing the side of the boat. Mark and I just reached over and patted his nose. AND NO ONE THOUGHT TO TAKE A PHOTO!!

A whale that found us.
A whale that chose to investigate us.
A whale who chose to connect with us.

5 years later, I”m still sitting here grinning like an idiot.
I patted a wild whale.

Barnacles and growths on the nose of our hump back whale

It was and will always be one of the most amazing things that has ever happened to me.I’m the original greenie and would never ever risk an animals life by trying to interact with it, so to have this whale instigate the contact and actually approach us was, to me, one of the purest things on earth. It was absolutely spectacular.

He hung around for about another 20 mins and then decided we were boring after all and moisied off. As you can imagine we were all stunned and ecstatic at the days turn of events.

The Rest Of The Afternoon

Mark has spent his entire life on the water. He was a pearl diver, a cray fish diver and still spends every day on the water working and surfing. Driving home, he would call one of his friends, ask them if they knew anyone who had patted a whale in the wild. As soon as they said no, he replied “well you do now!” and would immediately hang up and call someone else. His exuberance at what had happened, was one of the best things that came out of this spectacular event.

Of all the people we could have been with, of all the times it could have happened, I’m so very grateful that it was Mark and Marina, Emma and Maia. The look on Mark’s face when we realised we could reach out and touch the whale. I will never forget that. To see the child like wonder reflected in Marks reaction enforced to me just how spectacular a world we really live in. No matter what we see or do, its always mother nature that blows our mind.

Grab a print of this amazing pic below on my Pixels website.

A side note:

Never ever ever risk the health of any animal by trying to force an interaction. Never corner a wild animal.
Always Always respect your surroundings and no matter what happens stay calm.
If we had of started the boat and tried to leave we would have risked the whales life and our own, and would have not have been mugged by a whale.

The perfectly calm day allowed Marina to take some spectacular photos like the whales body underwater in this shot.
A hump back whale about to dive under the water.

I’d love you to visit my website “Charge The Globe” and hear all about more fun and adventures.

NB: This story may contain affiliate links from which I will earn a minuscule commission. There is no extra charge to you and lets face it, when I say minuscule that’s exactly what I mean. It’s not going to pay for my upcoming trip to Samoa but collectively it does help me to buy coffee (from the cafe even!) while I sit and write these stories about my travels. Stories similar to the one about that time I patted a wild whale, or got my breasts fondled by a woman from the Mursi tribe in Ethiopia. You know what I mean!

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Jenny Marsden - Charge The Globe

Solo female grass roots travel. I'm the one with the frizzy hair in the comfortable shoes!