They're out there right now.
Salt-sprayed catamaran whale watching off the Pacific coast. Humpbacks. Gray whales. Dolphins at the bow. Sighting guaranteed — or ride again free.
From harbor to horizon
and back again.
Every Breach tour follows the same four-hour arc. Here's what it feels like.
The harbor at dawn smells like coffee and diesel and possibility.
Crew loads the hydrophone — the underwater microphone that lets passengers hear whale song live. The catamaran's twin hulls slice through flat harbor water as the volcanic cliffs blush pink. Your guide briefs you on gray whale behavior while passing around the thermos. 40 feet. 36 tons. Heading your way.
- Hydrophone briefing
- Marine naturalist onboard
- Hot drinks provided
Dolphins find you before you find the whales.
Common dolphins arrive first — riding the bow wake in shifting formations. 200, maybe 300 of them. The kids stop filming and just stare. The Pacific heaves in long swells. Your naturalist reads the surface: a slick patch, a column of vapor rising 15 feet. The captain changes course.
- Common dolphin pods
- Sea lions & harbor seals
- Captain reads whale spouts
The whole boat gasps in unison. Phones forgotten in pockets.
A dark shape the size of a school bus breaks the surface 40 yards off the starboard bow. One breath — a 15-foot spout. Then the slow roll. The fluke rises, dripping, against the volcanic cliffs. The hydrophone picks up a low moan, 16 Hz, felt as much as heard. Nobody speaks for 30 seconds.
- Average 3–5 whale sightings
- Live hydrophone whale song
- Gray & humpback species
Everyone is windburned and quiet in the best possible way.
The catamaran turns back. The conversation is different now — softer, full of "did you see when—" and "I didn't know they were that big." Your naturalist shares migration data: these same whales will travel 10,000 miles round-trip. The volcanic cliffs come back into view. The harbor smells like salt and lunch.
- 4-hour total experience
- Photo tips from crew
- Marine debrief onboard
Save your spot
before they're gone.
Gray whale season runs February–May. Spots fill 2–3 weeks ahead.
Whale Season Guide
Best months to spot each species
Free Whale Season Guide
Migration patterns, best viewing months, species ID cards. 12-page PDF, free.
