A few months back I went on a whale shark tour
off Isla Mujeres, near Cozumel, wanting to see these
lovely animals in the wild and just watch them. Aside
from seeing the tiburon ballena (and a few mantas),
the overall experience -- safety, value, and worst of all,
harassing the animals -- was terrible.
I have found a good way to see whale sharks without
harassing them, while actually contributing to research
efforts to protect them.
The operation is called Tiburon Ballena (Spanish
for 'whaleshark') and is based in La Paz, Mexico. Dr.
Deni Ramirez, a marine biologist who has been studying
whale sharks for over a decade, leads it. Aboard her
boat, El Zorro, a 26-foot panga-type vessel, I cruised all
around Bahia de La Paz, following and swimming with
the critters in the whale shark nursery. I spent about
three hours on the water, and swam with seven or eight
different animals. The visibility was just 10-12 feet, so
keeping outside the 6-foot standoff zone meant I could
see them, but they were not crystal-clear. The GoPro
videos were OK. The experience, though, was great.
Dr. Ramirez explained whale shark biology, why
they were in Bahia La Paz, their habits, what is known, and what her research was hoping to accomplish. We
motored out not far from the main marina in La Paz,
and soon found the whale sharks. Unlike Isla Mujeres,
there were maybe six boats total, only one of which
was a research vessel. The rules state that only one
boat with a maximum of six swimmers may follow any
given animal. Since the bay is a nursery area for whale
sharks, the animals we saw were small, somewhere
between 12 and 16 feet.
Dr. Ramirez takes tissue samples (very tiny) to study
the effects of micro plastics (think abradants in facial
soaps) on whale sharks. She also uses video to study
how whale sharks react to people swimming with them.
The whole experience was both exciting and
relaxing; the whale sharks are graceful and slowmoving,
though keeping up with them as they swim is
indeed a challenge. The only thing that would have
made it even better would have been 50-foot visibility
instead of maybe 15-20 feet. But still magnificent
and all at a cost of $85 per person. If you want to
swim with whale sharks, this is a great way to do it. http://www.whalesharkmexico.com/
- Mark Majors (Oakland, CA)