Tom R.
Google
My wife and I took the 11:30 am tour on 9/11/25. The winds had come up by that time and Capt. Mark warned everyone who was ready to board that the seas were getting rough, we would likely get wet, we may have to end the tour early, but we WOULD see whales. He offered full refund to anyone that walked away. All six of us said "no" to the refund and boarded. He immediately requested everyone put on life jackets, insisted that no one sit on the bow while going out, handed out waterproof blankets, and informed us where the spray would come from on the way out.
Just for context, we have been on a few dozen whale watching tours, mostly in Maui. And ALL on much larger boats (holding 50-150 people). So, this was our first time on a much smaller boat.
The sea was rough...it felt like an eternity going out; however, after 20-30 minutes of plowing through the waves, he slowed the boat down, we saw 'blows', and Capt. Mark pointed out rafts of sea lions (a group of sea lions on the water is called a raft...who knew...not me) and circling birds; I'm guessing we were 3-5 miles offshore. Sure enough, within minutes, we saw the whales. And continued to see whales wherever the sea lions (and birds) were gathered. The whales would dive, with great fluke shows, and then come back up again minutes later in the sea lion rafts. That went on for more than two hours...whale after whale; we got 'mugged' a couple of times. Great show...up close and personal with the whales and sea lions. And all the while, Capt. Mark continually spoke, narrating about the humpbacks we were seeing, identifying some by name. Very informative. We had one whale breach close by, but BEHIND the boat, and none of us saw it...just heard it and saw the splash.
I highly recommend the tour. Watch the daily reports that are posted on the website, and if they report seeing them, you will probably also. If there are winds or rough seas in the forecast, I'd recommend the earlier tour. Nevertheless, Capt. Mark was great; I've already recommended the tour to out of town friends and, me, I can't wait to go out again...perhaps next time on calmer seas. Thanks, Capt. Mark, for a memorable tour. Enjoy the photos.
PS - I am an amateur photography 'nut'. Although I had a 150-600mm lens on my Nikon D7500 DSLR, most of these shots were taken at 150-250mm...in other words, these whales were close. On a couple of the photos, one can see part of the boat (or person on the boat), out of focus in the foreground.