Research Expedition to Sea of Cortez (November 8-21)

Hello friends!

We are pleased to support a bi-national research and collecting expedition to many of the smaller and little-studied islands in the southern Sea of Cortez. In Cabo San Lucas, 25 botanists, mammalogists, herpetologiest, ecologists, conservationists, and citizen scientists boarded Searcher for the start of this exciting itinerary. Researchers came from San Diego’s Natural History Museum, universities in US and Mexico, and conservation organizations. Many aboard hope to discover and describe new species on islands not surveyed before. Stay tuned!

Captain Art will send reports from the field and photos when he can.

Lines away and ready for research!

SD Natural History Museum’s herpetology curator, Brad Hollingsworth, loads his snake traps onto Searcher in San Diego.

November 9:

Hello all,

We arrived at our first island this morning after breakfast: Isla San Francisquito. Our Searcher Natural History Tour passengers will recognize this island with the beautiful white sandy beach and steep cliffs to climb for the views .

On this trip, we anchored here to get everyone trained on boarding the skiffs safely and then everyone went ashore. The trip was a success with 10 new plant species not recorded before! Our on-board herpetologist, Brad Hollingsworth,  found all 7 expected lizard species too. Our photo is of the approach to the island with calm seas and beautiful Baja sky.

We are continuing north to our furthest northerly islands in the morning: Isla San Marcos and Isla Tortuga.

Guest captain, Jim Hughes, joined Searcher crew on this trip, including chef Geri Sue.

Capt Art and Team Searcher

Capt Art and crew loaded traps, plant presses, research equipment onto Searcher in San Diego.

2020-07-15T16:34:20-07:00November 10th, 2018|Sea of Cortez Island Research, Trip Reports|

2018 Pelagic Birding Tour (Sep 3-7), day 4

Hello birders,

We’ve had another busy morning with the highlight being a Cook’s petrel and red-billed tropicbird!

Cook’s petrel from previous trip @McGrath

There are also black-footed albatross, loads of shearwaters, Arctic terns and Townsend’s storm petrel too. Here’s a Guadalupe fur seal off the bow.

More later,

Capt Art and Team Searcher

2020-07-15T16:34:20-07:00September 6th, 2018|Trip Reports|

2018 Pelagic Birding Tour (Sep 3-7), day 3

(murrelet photo courtesy of Todd McGrath)

Hello birders,

Black-footed albatross soars past the boat.

We’ve enjoyed a very busy morning with loads of birds: black-footed albatross, Buller’s shearwater, Guadalupe murrelet, long-tailed and pomarine jeager, leach’s storm petrel, and arctic terns! In addition er had  good looks at fin whales, a distant look at a blue whale fluking, and plenty of common dolphin. Guadalupe fur seals also!

Capt Art and Team Searcher

 

 

Afternoon report:

Hello birders,

Buller’s shearwaters

A productive day today! The seas were incredible today with very little wind and sea. Starting from daylight there was a constant chatter on the leaders’ radios with sightings of birds and marine mammals. Black footed albatross, pink footed, sooty and loads of Bullers shearwaters! Jaegers, terns, leech’s storm petrels, red phalropes, fin whales, blue whales and Baird’s beaked whales and several groups of short-beaked common dolphin. We also had a brief sighting of a red-billed tropicbird late in the day. We had as many as 9 black footed albatross behind the boat at one time. The chum worked well. We are looking closer to home tomorrow starting 120 miles west of San Diego.

Capt Art and Team Searcher

2020-07-15T16:34:21-07:00September 5th, 2018|Trip Reports|

2018 Pelagic Birding Tour (Sep 3-7), day 2 (day’s end)

(Dolphin photo courtesy of Chris Earley)

Hello birders,

We had a productive afternoon with plenty of pink-footed shearwaters, and a new shearwater: Buller’s. We sighted multiple birds. We also enjoyed more common dolphin with shearwaters associated with them.

The finale was a large area of jumping, large bluefin tuna with lots of shearwaters and a masked booby that came by the boat so everyone could see it! It was an impressive show of birds and tuna. We added a few northern fulmars to the list and a single distant black-footed albatross.
We are headed to San Miguel island for the night.

Capt Art and Team Searcher

2020-07-15T16:34:21-07:00September 4th, 2018|Trip Reports|

2018 Pelagic Birding Tour (Sep 3-7), day 2 (mid-day)

Hello birders:

(brown booby photo courtesy of Tom Blackman.)

We started our day at Santa Barbara Island observing a colony of brown boobies that have made the island their home and are nesting here. There was one Nazca booby there as well. We were able to get the boat in close to the island safely to get a great look at the birds on the rock.

We have travelled west most of the morning and crossed into the Santa Cruz basin and into deeper water. So far we have seen shearwaters, storm petrels, boobies, terns and jaegers. We’ve encountered 3 different groups of short-beaked common dolphins with boobies and shearwaters associated with them. We are headed northwest now in shallower water towards the Channel Islands.

2020-07-15T16:34:21-07:00September 4th, 2018|Trip Reports|

2018 Pelagic Birding Tour (Sep 3-7), day 1

(pink-footed shearwater and Risso’s dolphins photos courtesy of Tom Blackman on previous trips)

Hello birders:

We had a good start to our annual pelagic birding trip today. The seas are calm with very little wind. We saw many expected species on the first day, with the highlight being a red-footed booby. Some of our local species seen: black-vented and pink-footed shearwaters; black, ashy and least storm petrels; pomarine and long-tailed jaegers; common tern, brown booby; and Cassin’s auklets. We saw Risso’s dolphins and a fin whale too.

Risso’s dolphin by Tom Blackman
Grampus friseus

We are looking forward to tomorrow. With this weather I’m sure we will have a great day 2!

Capt Art and Team Searcher

2020-07-15T16:34:21-07:00September 4th, 2018|Trip Reports|

Tour #6 (Apr 8-15, 2018) – offshore Cabo San Lucas

Howdy whalewatchers:

We started out on Gorda Banks this morning and found a pair of humpbacks at daylight. Shortly after we saw a group of six humpbacks who were very physical with each other. We thought it was possible that they were battling young males. We had some really good views. After lunch we headed in toward Los Frailes to go ashore and for a bird walk. A crested caracara was the highlight there.

Capt Aaron and Team Searcher

2020-07-15T16:34:21-07:00April 16th, 2018|Trip Reports|

Tour #6 (Apr 8-15, 2018) – offshore Bahia Magdalena

Howdy whalerwatchers,

We have have been traveling south all day with good sightings of shearwaters: black-vented, pink-footed, and sooty. We saw a group of long-beaked common dolphins feeding on some small fish along with pelicans, magnificent frigates, and red-footed boobies. And passengers had a chance to chill on the back deck as well!

Afternoon report: We spent some time with a a fluking blue whale this afternoon and it was awesome. We also saw lots of Cook’s petrels.

Our jokester Mike looked hard with his custom-made toilet paper roll binoculars.

capt aaron and the searcher crew

2020-07-15T16:34:21-07:00April 15th, 2018|Trip Reports|

Tour #6 (Apr 8-15, 2018) – Laguna San Ignacio, day 2

Howdy whalewatchers,

We had another great day in Laguna San Ignacio with gray whales! One panga  went for a birding trip into the mangroves and they had a magnificent look at a male mangrove warbler only feet away.

The other two pangas went out for whalewatching in the calm lagoon and got to touch whales all morning.

The weather held up and it was a great day for looking at gray whales. We’re headed south to be around Magdalena Bay tomorrow in deep water.

Capt Aaron and Team Searcher

2018-04-14T15:56:53-07:00April 14th, 2018|Trip Reports|

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