| This is where our day began at 8 a.m.: checkin for our boat tour | 
The action started right out of the harbor with a sea otter sighting, then we were treated to humpback and fin whale sightings. A favorite is when the porpoises cruise along, swimming alongside the boat, apparently enjoying "surfing" in the wake. Here is a video I took of that:
| Poofs from whales surfacing we the biggest sign of them from a distance | 
| The back and blow of a fin whale (I believe) | 
| I believe this is the humpback whale. This is a series of 3 photos as the whale began its dive. | 
| A tail view indicates the whale is diving deeper, which means we probably won't see it again for awhile. | 
| Final view of the tail before it disappears from sight. | 
| One Stellar Sea Lion looks up, alert to our passing. | 
| Stellar Sea Lions look like giant slugs on the rocks. | 
| Gorgeous views of cliffs on this trip. | 
I caught a couple glaciers on video:
| The days for the ice are numbered: global warming is speeding the rate glaciers are retreating. | 
| Northwestern Glacier. Apparently just 10 years ago none of that rock in between the two glacier parts was visible. | 
| I saw chunks of the glacier fall off about 5 or 6 times in the hour we hung out at Northwestern Glacier, some like this, looking like a waterfall, and others calving into the water. | 
| We saw 5 orca whales a few minutes from the Seward Harbor at the end of our day. | 
Note: All photos in this post were taken by Phillip Waclawski unless noted.
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