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Ireland's Wildlife

Irish wildlife, nature and biodiversity

You are here: Home / Wild Blog / Conservation / West Cork fin whales as they should be seen

West Cork fin whales as they should be seen

August 17, 2012 by Calvin Jones 1 Comment

 

After the traumatic events and harrowing images of the  last few days I thought I’d post a few photographs of  healthy fin whales (Balaenoptera physalus) off the West Cork coast. This is how they look at their best:

Fin whale surfacing off the West Cork coast
Two fin whales on the surface in West Cork
Fin whale cruising off West Cork
Fin whale showing a rarely-seen glimpse of it's fluke just beneath the surface.
Surfacing fin whale off the coast of West Cork
A brace of fin whales on the surface with the West Cork coast in the background
A brace of fin whales on the surface with the West Cork coast in the background
Manx Shearwater crossing the back of a surfacing fin whale
Fin whale surfacing with smaller companion just off West Cork
Common dolphin bow riding a surfacing fin whale off West Cork, Ireland
Another shot of the common dolphin bow-riding a fin whale
Fin whale lunging through a bait ball off the West Cork coast of Ireland

 

Filed Under: Conservation, Featured, Miscellaneous Tagged With: cetaceans, Cork Whale Watch, fin whale, photography, whales, whales and dolphins

About Calvin Jones

Calvin Jones is a freelance writer, author, birder and lifelong wildlife enthusiast. He is founder and editor of IrelandsWildlife.com and founder and wildlife guide of Ireland's Wildlife Tours offering wildlife and birding holidays on Ireland's south coast.

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Comments

  1. Marie Louise Heffernan says

    October 23, 2018 at 20:42

    Nice pictures – amazing the size compared to the common dolphin. thanks for sharing

    Reply

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