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Sports

Video: Kayaker Swims With Blue Whale

Kayaker Rick Coleman captures video footage of blue whales lunge feeding off of King Harbor in Redondo Beach.

Editor's Note: This article originally published on sister site . We wanted to share the experience with Palos Verdes readers.

A video showing massive blue whales lunge feeding and swimming underwater off Southern California is making the rounds on social media, prompting descriptions of "Incredible!" and "Amazing!"

Diver and underwater photography enthusiast Rick Coleman told Patch that he captured the footage of the blue whales while kayaking about four miles out of King Harbor in Redondo Beach on Oct. 8.

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"It was an incredible day, and now it looks like the whales have left," Coleman said, later adding, "[it] looks like it just worked out that I got that amazing, once-in-a-lifetime footage."

Coleman said that out of the Redondo Beach Marina has reported seeing fewer whales in the last week.

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Coleman's footage, shot with a Go Pro camera on a kayak in deep water, shows one of the leviathans lunge feeding for krill on the surface and swimming underwater above the deepwater Redondo Canyon.

"You could actually see the krill on the surface," Coleman said.

"When the whales pop up near your kayak, it can be heart-pounding. ... You feel all the excitement through your body as this huge whale comes up," Coleman said.

But when he was watching the blue whales underwater, "it was just complete peace and relaxation"

People who plan to go out on the water for a glimpse of these whales should follow NOAA's guidelines:

  • Vessels should not be operated at speeds faster than a whale or group of whales while paralleling them within 100 yards.
  • Vessels should be operated at a constant speed while paralleling or following whales within 100 yards.
  • Vessels should do nothing to cause a whale to change direction.
  • Aircraft should not fly lower than 1,000 feet while within a horizontal distance of 100 yards from a whale.

Generally, a whale's normal behavior should not be interrupted—actions that interrupt normal behavior constitute harassment and are against the law. A whale can show its annoyance by changing direction rapidly, or swimming faster or more erratically.

Other whale tales on Palos Verdes Patch:

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