Two Great Blue Whales

in #life7 years ago

LorenzoHawaiiHelm.jpg
Lorenzo at the helm of a square-rigged ship circa 1965


I've always been intrigued by whales, even more so after reading Moby Dick in high school. Then I signed on a three masted barque that was rigged out as a Nantucket whaler. Our skipper was Alan Villiers, who at the time was one of the most famous sailors alive. Years earlier it was he who skippered the Mayflower II across the Atlantic to where it now is moored in Plymouth, Massachusetts. In the 1930s he became the last captain to skipper a full-rigged ship around the horn from West to East. That ship, the Joseph Conrad, is now berthed in Mystic, Connecticut. I've been aboard them both.

Some day I'll have to tell the story of my Pacific crossing with Captain Villiers. He ran the ship as if we were back in the 19th Century. It was a great experience but not one that I'd want to repeat.

LorenzoHawaiiBerth.jpg

Lorenzo's sleeping quarters on the Carthaginian

Although I have seen quite a few whales during my various times at sea, the grandest experience of them all was when I was the executive officer and navigator of the USS Apache, and we were towing a floating dry dock, the USS White Sands, which had the bathyscaphe Trieste berthed in it. We were several hundred miles off the coast of California.

It was a quiet Sunday afternoon, and I had just finished taking the noon Sun sight when something far ahead of us caught my eye. It looked to me like two huge logs were floating in our path. So I immediately gave the order to come to starboard. With our tow far behind us, and moving at only about four knots, I knew that we still would be lucky to not hit those logs or get them entangled in our tow line. Fortunately, we began our turn in time, and as we came closer, our forward lookout shouted out that they weren't longs, they were whales!

The timing of our turn couldn't have been better, for we were able to come parallel to two enormous blue whales and then steam on alongside them, less than fifty yards off our port side. I left the pilot house and stood out on the bridge to get a better view and discovered that we had come upon a mother and her almost fully grown calf. They were just floating there, enjoying the sun. I don't know how big they actually were, but it seemed as if they were half the length of our ship, with the mother being closest to us.

For a moment, I thought about rushing into the chart house to grab my camera and take their picture, but as we came abreast of them, the mother whale and I seemed to lock eyes. I was mesmerized by that giant eye looking straight into mine and was frozen to that spot on the wing of the bridge. I wanted to go get my camera, but I simply couldn't break eye contact with such a beautiful blue whale. That experience was, without any doubt, the greatest moment of all my time at sea.

NOTE: This is one of the stories from my new book
The Chronicles of Lorenzo - Volume 1
You may download a free copy of it at
https://lorenzohagerty.com/freebooks/
I have placed this book directly into the Public Domain.

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That sounds like an awesome experience. I think you made the right choice by not going and getting your camera. Even if you’d been able to get some photos, you’d probably have missed that moment, for which the photos would be a poor substitute.

Speaking of whales, I have some WhaleShares tokens that I want to use to upvote and promote some of your posts. But I want to use them while your posts are new, to increase the odds of catching some attention. So if you could drop me an email the next time you’re getting ready to post, and give me an ETA, I can prepare. Or better yet, if you have a Bitshares account, I can just send some to you directly and you can use them when you post.

What an absolutely enchanting story!! I think sometimes we lose precious moments in life behind a lense; I'm so glad you didn't run for your cameral. I love your description of not breaking eye-contact with such a majestic beast. You were fortunate indeed!! I also am now captivated by boat names...Joseph Conrad, who knew?? And thank you for the link to your book; I will download it for sure. Cheers!

You make me feel much better about not leaving the scene for a bit to get my camera. I hope that you enjoy my book.

aww thank you. I have it downloaded on my computer, and if I ever spend an evening NOT on steemit, I will read it haha. I have to ask you....did you write it for the love of it and decide not to charge for it? why free? I admire that immensely by the way:)

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