The Best Place to Watch Whales in Australia
Catalogue
- West Australia: Meeting Humpback and Southern Right Whales
- South Australia: Encountering Sharks While Watching Whales
- Victoria: Have a Chance to See Rare Blue Whales
- Tasmania Island: Taking a Cruise to Find Migrating Humpbacks
- New South Wales: The Nearest Whale-watching Place to Sydney
- Queensland: Dancing with Whales at the Great Barrier Reef
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The best place to watch whales in Australia
From late April, southern right whales will migrate to the temperate breeding waters of south Australia and Victoria. At the same time, humpback whales will also continue to migrate north and south along the east and west coasts toward warmer waters. This means you can see giant whales at tourist sites along the coast of Australia from May to November.
You can watch the humpbacks and southern right whales in Flinders Bay in Augusta from early June. Or, go to Dunsborough in September to see blue whales, baby whales and bottlenose dolphins swimming together in Geographe Bay. Humpbacks, southern right whales, and gray whales will also appear. You can watch them from Naturaliste Lighthouse, or take a whale-watching boat to have a close encounter with them. Albany's rugged coastline offers another fascinating view when going south. From July to October, you can see southern right whales and humpback whales mating and giving birth in the vast expanse of King Georges Bay. You can also get to know more about these smart animals in Albany's interactive whale museum, which was a whale processing station for many years.
Walk to the Encounter Bay trail and stand on top of the cliff nearby to see southern right whales mating from May to October. Alternatively, you can take a boat from Granite Island to see them playing with baby whales on the sea of Phil Peninsula. From Ceduna along the rugged coastline of South Australia, you can also watch whales do slow somersaults from the observation deck or on the beach. They often come here by sliding hundreds of meters from Bunda Cliff. Of course, you can also watch the Australian sea lions and great white sharks. You can take a whale-watching boat to the safe waters of a whale sanctuary to watch them carefully.
From June to September, southern right whales will give birth to baby whale in waters near Logans Beach. They will stay here for weeks before taking their baby whales back to the seas near Antarctica. At the same time, the males, one-year-olds, and adult whales will stay in the sea a little further away. You can take an amazing photo of mothers and whale calves at the viewing platform, or go to Lady Bay. Mother whales like staying in coastal waters and spraying water at people on the bank. You can take a whale-watching boat to watch them, or take a light plane and look through the window at their special white cocooned heads. If you're lucky enough, you may also see the rare blue whale at Nelsons point near Portland in May, the last month they hunt here.
Starting from May, you can see humpbacks and southern right whales streaming through the clear waters of Great Oyster Bay off the Freycinet Peninsula. You can take a cruise ship to see them spinning around on their ancient migration routes in the Tasman Sea. You will know why the southern white whales stay here for so long when you look at the landscape, forests, pink granite cliffs and mysterious white beaches. Baby whales sometimes swim through Mercury Passage off Maria Island. If you're lucky enough, you might run into them. You can also go to the beautiful and wild Bruny Island. The Adventure Bay is a famous tourist spot.
From May to late November, you can take a cruise from Sydney harbor to the cape, where the gentle humpback whales set off to the east coast. The best inland whale-watching spot in Sydney is the Rocks Area. If it's June in Byron Bay, you can see the same spectacular view of graceful whales. You'll see whales playing at 100 m to the easternmost point of Australia when watching from the lighthouse at Cape Byron. In addition, you can listen to the memorable songs of male humpback whales through a hydrophone on a whale-watching boat. At the Jervis Bay Marine Park to the south of Sydney, you can almost certainly spot whales in the calm and clear water which is also home to bottlenose dolphins.
Every year from late July to early November, Hervey Bay is definitely an excellent place for whale watching in Australia. You can also see great views from Point Lookout on North Stradbroke Island near Brisbane. After taking a boat from Mooloolaba to the Sunshine Coast or Gold Coast, it's only a 20-minute walk to the whale-watching spot. To get closer to them, you can go to Port Douglas and dive into the water at the northern part of the Great Barrier Reef to encounter minke whales. By connecting yourself to the boat with a rope, you can dive into the water to get a closer look at these intelligent beings.
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