Eschrichtius robustus MANY 2013 01-19 SB Channel-b-163
Giant Blue Whales (Balaenoptera musculus) don't fluke up very often.  It's hard to imagine that the world's largest beast is under the water here.
Photographers get some close up shots of friendly Long-Beaked Common Dolphins (Delphinus capensis).
Two feeding Humpback Whales, one lunges upward vertically, and the other has its mouth wide open sideways underwater. Tiny red dots of Krill (Thysanoessa spinifera) can be seen in the water spilling out of the upper whale's mouth.
Megaptera novaeangliae BREACH 2010 07-22 SB Channel - 163
This whale has rolled over on its back, exposing its ventral grooves and copious stalked barnacle colony.
Three wake-riding Common Dolphins (Delphinus capensis).
This Humpback Whale (Megaptera novaeangliae) is on its back gulping food.  Note the ventral pleats, left pectoral fin, and the tip of the nose with baleen hanging from the upper jaw.  A few gulls take off to escape possible danger in the background.
Eyes on the prize:  a breaching Humpback (Megaptera novangliae) looks at the camera mid-air.
Eschrichtius robustus MANY 2013 01-19 SB Channel-b-163
Eschrichtius robustus MANY 2013 01-19 SB Channel-b-163
Eschrichtius robustus MANY 2013 01-19 SB Channel-b-163
See photo in original gallery.